1. Entrance: Spider and Glass
I walked in unaware. The
glass panels of the cupola I had admired from the water a few days before were
even more majestic up close. In
counterpoint to the gangly bronze Spider on the entrance walkway, an inevitable reminder of the movie Arachnaphobia, they would encapsulate my
impressions as I left—artistic vision and technical skill.
2. The Water Court
I found the water court by accident, on the way to the Group of Seven
Gallery. My feet hurt from hours
of walking through the downtown, and I couldn’t resist the opportunity to sit
down and soak in the peace. I
realized that the gallery operates on two
levels (and undoubtedly more that I’m not aware of): the individual works within and the
design of the building itself.
3. Jim Revisited (Evan Penny)
I found Jim completely by accident, too, still on my way to the Group of
Seven. He suprised me as I rounded
the corner heading for the stairway. I thought of Michaelangelo’s David right away, both figures nude, peering out into the distance
at some haunting and disturbing vision.
David, young and fit, leans to the left, and Jim, a little older and
less fit, to the right, in what was for me a brilliant contrasting
parallel. I marveled at the
sculptor’s attention to detail—musculature, skin lesions, the fine hair all
over the body that had to have been inserted one at a time, and the evocative
eyes.
4. Lawren Harris
True confession. I know very
little about art. I did know of
the Group of Seven, however, as a group, not individually, and I wanted to view
the Gallery’s collection. I came
away seared by the light in the paintings of Lawren Harris.
Its translusence and pervasive radiance shone from outside the paintings
onto a particular spot, and then promised the hope of that clarity in the rest
of the scene.
5. Self-made Man
The bronze piece by Alfred Laliberté is meant to evoke a young person
making his way in the world “through his talent, labours and perseverance”
(Gallery descripion). I noticed
that the man had already carved out his tools, the mallet and the chisel, and
had used them to prepare his upper body for the job ahead. Ready to take his place in the world,
he has only to chip away the remaining stone to free himself for his life.
Later that evening, I thought about my
faves at the National Gallery, and asked myself why those particular pieces had
resonaed with me. I would have to
say, the skill of the artists to execute their vision, the connection to my
emotional and physical state at the time of the visit, and the profound longing
of the human soul I felt in the staring gaze of Jim and the determined downward
look of the Self-made Man.
I won’t let my naïveté catch me unawares on
my next visit. I’ll prepare myself.