In a recent post (here), I pointed to Anita Brookner's prolific, largely uncurated journalistic output. Serendipity presents me today with a piece on Géricault from September, 1983 (here).
The date, as will become clear at the end of this post, is significant.
Like many of Brookner's art-history reviews, this New Criterion essay is less a review of the book under consideration than a wider discussion of the artist, his work and his life. Géricault is familiar ground for Brookner: her essay collection, Soundings (1997), begins with the text of an excellent lecture Brookner gave on the artist at the Courtauld.
But anything of Brookner's, however repetitious, is of value. Indeed it may be argued that in her repetitions, and the variations they allow, Brookner is most truly herself.
Only Brookner could make this arresting, novelistic observation of a sketch (Retour de Russie) by Géricault in the National Gallery of Art, in Washington, DC:
Here are two veterans of the Napoleonic campaigns; they wear the brave moustaches made popular by that elite and the great gauntlets and the heavy breastplates; but they are young men grown horribly old, and around their sleeves and collars there winds a wavering line of pigment with a curious life of its own, like automatic writing.
To read Clément is as steadying an experience as taking a restorative sojourn beside his native Lac Léman.
Comments