Showing posts with label The Death of Klinghoffer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Death of Klinghoffer. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Time in the Apple - Pt 2 - The Met and then the Met

We dawdle, typically, getting out the door in the morning. We’ve only a short cab ride to our destination, The Metropolitan Museum. Note to self: in the future try to factor in national holidays. It’s Veteran’s Day and the big parade is scheduled to start. 5th Avenue is closed and the reams of traffic that roll down that major artery most days have got to go elsewhere. And since you can’t cross 5th you can’t go east or west without first going north or south. Get anywhere quick? Not today.

Even after we get there we’re not there yet. We’ve come for the Cubism show but it soon seems like we’ll never get to it. We wander through the maze that is the Met. So many treasures from so many different ages and cultures. It’s not hard to be diverted.

We do locate the Cubism exhibit eventually. Entering we learn this is not the Met’s collection…not yet, anyway. It’s on loan from a Lauder heir.  Inveighed early on by Daniel-Henry Kahlweiler, agent to and

champion of the Cubists, to purchase a painting by the young Picasso, Kahlweiler so liked it that he decided to collect ‘em all. Not just Picasso, but Leger, Braque, Gris all made it in to his extensive collection covering decades of these artists’ work. Lauder will eventually donate the entire collection to the Met.

I found myself lingering over the pre-WW I paintings. It’s the era in which Frank Lloyd Wright designed the Darwin Martin house. In the tour I conduct there a point comes in which I must distinguish between the immutable universe of the Victorians and the Modern Age which seceded it. The new age is typified by the opening up of structure. These paintings from that period so exemplify that. They’ll make it into my tour.

And I’m reminded of George and me climbing Montmartre in the drizzling rain to find the studio where in those earliest days, the young impoverished Picasso and Braque would meet every evening to confer and, I would guess, commiserate.

A late lunch in the café, a visit to some exquisite porcelain from fin de siècle France and England, then back to our hotel. Traffic is still a mess. The cabbie leaves us off at Grand  Central Station suggesting that we will get to hotel faster by walking there than by staying in his cab.

Evening arrives and we venture out again. This time we’re headed to the Metropolitan Opera to attend the performance this whole trip has been built around, “The Death of Klinghoffer” by John Adams. I’m prepared to like it. I’m a great fan of Adams. The opera exceeds all my expectations. The beauty of so much of the music, the powerful performances, the outstanding stagecraft, the gripping narrative…it’s all so compelling. I had no idea of the depth of the work. It has so much to reveal that I know I must attend again if and when another opportunity arises somewhere, sometime.

Afterward it’s a quick walk across Broadway to Bar Boulud for a late meal. After the wretched excess of the night before I opt for the baked halibut and a coupla glasses of Tisot. Duck breast and more of that fine French champagne for Shelley

More tomorrow.