Sunday, July 30, 2017

Home Again

Our London Adventures, Part Two has come to an end. We had a beautiful time, and our love for the city has grown!

Our last day in London was relaxing; we did a little bit of shopping and then had afternoon tea again at Covent Garden Market. The same opera singer/magician was performing; he did the same routine, and it was still enjoyable for us. It was fun to watch him interact with kids and other enthusiastic audience members. We learned that he's normally part of a duo with his wife (she is Imogen, he is Jack, and together they are Imagine Jack 🙂); together they do a show that includes singing, comedy, and clowning.

After doing a bit of research on Covent Garden (the neighborhood where we stayed), I learned that street entertainment has been a big part of the culture since the 1600s. The first mention of a Punch and Judy show in Britain showed up in Member of Parliament Samuel Pepys's diary in 1662! Also, Covent Garden Market was originally a fruit and vegetable market, and the site where Eliza Dolittle sells flowers in My Fair Lady.

Below are some photos of Covent Garden:

This portrait hung in the hall right outside our apartment.
It was three or four days before we realized that he's proudly holding a drawing of a unicorn!
View of Endell Street from our bedroom window

The door to our building--doorknobs are often in the middle of doors, which we think looks a bit silly!

Endell Street

Endell Street

Long Acre Street
Our tube station! 

We had an excellent two weeks in London! We had a lot of amazing food, visited some cool places, and saw seven shows. Roughly in order of our enjoyment of the shows:

  1. The Comedy About a Bank Robbery
  2. Lady Day
  3. Half a Sixpence
  4. Twelfth Night
  5. Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour
  6. The Mentor
  7. Dreamgirls

Favorite restaurants/pubs:

  1. Barrafina (Adelaide Street is best, Drury Lane is also good)
  2. Clos Maggiore
  3. Dishoom
  4. The Barbary
  5. Great Queen Street
  6. Mamie's for brunch
  7. The Ritz for afternoon tea
  8. Duck and Waffle for the view
  9. The Mayor of Scaredy Cat Town for speakeasies
  10. Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese for pubs
 Our flight home was pretty uneventful. My window was broken, but with the help of a magazine and an airline blanket I was able to make it work:

And while we were sad for our vacation to end, it's always a treat to fly into New York City:

Thank you for reading along!

xo
Hannah and Jon

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Disco Shakespeare and Chocolate Sensation

Thursday was our final full day in London. We went to the Tate Modern in the morning before a matinee of Twelfth Night at the nearby Shakespeare’s Globe. It was a nice day (meaning it wasn't raining at that exact moment), so we decided to walk, which gave us a lovely view of many landmarks and attractions that we visited in 2015.


View from the Waterloo Bridge

Big Ben and the London Eye


By the National Theatre is a statue of Laurence Olivier:
I really like how the sculpture captures the movement of his cape.

The entrance to the Tate Modern:


Our main reason for visiting the Tate Modern was an exhibit called Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power. On our way, we stopped by a small exhibit on color.

This piece was very interesting--in person it’s actually painful to look at:
Strip, Gerhard Richter, 2011
"Gerhard Richter made a number of multi-coloured paintings using a giant squeegee (a tool with a flat, smooth rubber blade). In 2011, at the age of 80, he used computer software to divide a photograph of one of these paintings into thin strips, splitting and dividing it again and again. The digital print here creates strange effects on our eyes. The marks made by the paint when the artist painted the original picture have disappeared. The digital picture makes us think about what a painting might be in the computer age.What has happened to the role of the artist?"
Soul of a Nation featured the work of Black artists from the height of the American Civil Rights movement, starting in 1963 and continuing through the next twenty years.

Outside the exhibit were five TV monitors, each featuring video of speeches by a black activist--Martin Luther King Jr, Malcolm X, Jamds Baldwin, Angela Davis, and Stokely Carmichael.

There were no photos allowed in the exhibit, but many of the pieces can be found online--I was able to find almost all of the pieces that we took note of. I don’t have the Tate’s descriptions, but I did my best from memory and with additional sources:

Romare Bearden, Pittsburgh Memory, 1964
"In a 1969 article, 'Rectangular Structure in my Montage Paintings,' Bearden explained his approach in making collages: 'In most instances in creating a picture, I use many disparate elements to form a figure, or part of a background....I feel that when some photographic detail, such as a hand or an eye, is taken out of its original context and is fractured and integrated into a different space and form configuration, it acquires a plastic quality it did not have in the original....'"
Source

Faith Ringgold, The United States of Attica, 1972
After the Attica Prison Riots, Ringgold created this piece, documenting violence and atrocities in American history.

Elizabeth Catlett, Black Unity, 1968
Elizabeth Carlett earned the first M.F.A. in sculpture at the University of Iowa in 1940.

Betye Saar, The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, 1972
"Through the use of the mammy and Aunt Jemima figures, Saar reconfigures the meaning of these stereotypical figures to ones that demand power and agency within society."
Source
Cliff Joseph, Blackboard, 1969
Joseph: “My art is a confrontation. Among the many realities of art expression, this remains the most constant purpose of my aesthetic. It is, of course, a social art, based on my ‘gut’ perceptions of our worldly conditions; but it draws upon each viewer to confront himself in consideration of his role in affecting those conditions.”
Source

David Hammons, Injustice Case, 1970
This piece depicts Black Panther Party co-founder Bobby Seale during his 1969 trial, in which he was bound and gagged.
With the cut up American flag around the border, the piece is presented as an x-ray of America.

Wadsworth Jarrell, Revolutionary, 1972
"Here Jarrell celebrates the renowned radical activist and intellectual Angela Y. Davis, who continues to be a leader in the fight for racial, gender, and economic justice around the world. Incorporating Davis’s words, Black Power slogans, and AfriCOBRA’s ((African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists) signature vibrant colors, the portrait depicts the intensity and power of her activism."
Source

Jack Whitten, Homage to Malcolm, 1970
"A monumental black triangle, it was intended as a memorial to Malcolm X, the black activist who was assassinated in 1965. Dragging an Afro comb across the wet surface of the painting, Whitten revealed underlying red and gold flecks beneath its black surface. In 2015, US president Barack Obama awarded the artist a National Medal of Arts."
This is the first time this painting was see by the public.
Source

William T. Williams, Trane, 1969
This piece was inspired by (and could be a visual depiction of) the improvisational jazz of John Coltrane.

Alma Thomas, Mars Dust, 1972
Thomas was the first student to graduate with a fine arts degree from Howard University.
I appreciated the wide range of work that was on display. There’s also a companion playlist to the exhibit available on Spotify, featuring underground jazz, street funk, and early rap from 1968-79.


After a quick meal at the museum cafe, we walked over to the Globe. We had really good seats!


The production of Twelfth Night was a lot of fun! Set in 1979 with a disco-inspired score, there was a lot of singing and dancing, as well as the expected general silliness. The casting played a lot with gender; Fabian was an androgynous character played by a woman, Malvolio was played by a (teeny tiny) woman, and Feste was a very striking drag queen, with a full beard and show-stopping gold sequined gown. I highly recommend looking through production photos!

I read later that this was artistic director Emma Rice's last production with The Globe; she’s at odds with the board because she likes to use modern stagecraft, such as lighting and reinforced sound. The board members are a bit more purist. They were probably not huge fans of her less than traditional approach to Twelfth Night--the songs were mostly musical interpretations of Shakespeare’s text, but also included Sister Sledge's “We are Family” and spoken lines from Gloria Gaynor's “I Will Survive.” There was also a fair amount of added text for comic effect, particularly from Malvolio. I really enjoyed Malvolio's performance; she was energetic and snippy and very agile.

It started to rain pretty hard near the end of the performance--fortunately we were protected by an overhang, but those standing in the yard had to weather it out. Fittingly, the rain was still happening when Malvolio proclaimed, “For the rain it raineth every day!”

The one thing that struck me as odd was that Malvolio seemed to commit suicide at the end of the play. After he swears revenge on everyone for tricking him, he puts rocks in his pockets and seems to fall into water (the yard). It was a very dark moment that was completely unprecedented by the raucous revelry throughout the rest of the production.

This performance was also a “relaxed” performance, which means that all audience needs are accepted--folks can get up and move around, exit and return to the theater as needed, or make noise. It seemed that the audience members benefiting the most from this policy were parents with little babies, which I hadn’t considered before as an advantage to a relaxed performance. All the babies near us appeared to be quite content, and it was also sweet to hear older children asking their parents about the plot--they were so engaged!

After the performance, we walked back to Covent Garden over Millennium Bridge:
Tiny Tower Bridge!

View of St. Paul's Cathedral

On our way home we stopped by Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese (our favorite stop from our pub tour) for half a pint and some nachos. The nachos were nothing to write home about (and yet I have, I suppose), but we really love the vibe of that old pub. There’s not a lot of bars like that in New York, partly because nothing is as old, but almost nothing is that quiet and homey either.

The man in the blue shirt facing us looked a lot like George Lucas.
Out of frame, at the table to the left, was another man who looked a lot like George Lucas.
They did not seem to know each other. It was fascinating.

Jon ducking on his way up the stairs from the basement level.

This time around we got to take a picture of the famous Polly. Polly was a parrot who was famous for her foul mouth; she died in 1926 at the age of 40. Her obituary was published in about 200 newspapers! She still lives in the pub…


We continued our walk back home, passing by the Royal Courts of Justice:
Can you imagine going to work in this building every day?!)

That night, we had a late dinner at French restaurant Clos Maggiore. We still have no idea how to pronounce the name, but it certainly lives up to its claim as the most romantic restaurant in London:


So handsome! :)
The food was outstanding; definitely one of our top two meals during the trip, if not the absolute top. All the meat was tender and juicy and flavorful, complemented perfectly with their vegetables and potatoes. Dessert was a dish called Chocolate Sensation, and it was a decadent combination of flavors--sweet, salty, crunchy, creamy, chocolate, honey, hazelnut. The service was also very friendly and attentive. We would definitely return to Clos Maggiore!

It was a perfect end to a beautiful vacation.

We are now back in New York, wishing we could have had more time in London but happy to be home. We'll write a wrap-up post later this weekend!

Xo

Hannah

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Cartoon Museum and Cartoony Menus

We started our Wednesday with a visit to the Cartoon Museum. There was an exhibit called "The Inking Woman" on female cartoonists that we were excited to see, but it turned out that it had ended a few days ago. We were disappointed, but fortunately they had a booklet on the exhibit for sale in the gift shop.

There were two current exhibits: one on the history of daily newspaper comics, and one on caricature and satire. The "Daily Funnies" exhibit included classics we were familiar with, such as Little Orphan Annie, Dick Tracy, Beetle Bailey, and Doonesbury. In addition, there were a lot of strips featured that we hadn't heard of before (no photos in the museum, so I've found examples from online that weren't necessarily the samples displayed in the exhibit):

Polly and her Pals, Cliff Sterrett (click here for a larger image):
"'Polly' ran from 1912 until 1958. It is regarded as one of the most graphically innovative strips of the 20th century. Originally called Positive Polly, the star of the strip was a pretty young girl, a flirtatious child whose liberated attitude to life looked forward to the Jazz age. It was the first of a number of strips about flirty, pretty young girls. Over time, the focus moved from Polly to those around her, and the title changed to Polly and her Pals--though the 'pals' were in fact members of her family."
The Perishers, Dennis Collins, written by Maurice Dodd (the dynamic of the characters reminds me of Calvin and Hobbes):
"The strip is about a group of urban children who live in the dull fictional town of Croynge (sometimes Crunge), which seemed to be located somewhere in South London. The main character, Wellington, a somewhat philosophical soul, is a homeless orphan who lives with his dog called Boot in a builder's yard. The strip ran for nearly fifty years, from 1959 to 2006.
Doris, Ros Asquith:
"Asquith says: 'Doris cleaned for the chattering classes but never spoke herself. To me, she represented a figure in all of our lives: that of the barely visible worker, mother, grandmother, aunt, undervalued by society whose wheels she is oiling. Doris endured many insults, but perhaps her highest praise came from a reformed convict who told me: "I love Doris. My mother was a cleaner. I used to sit in the corner while she tied little Tarquin and Amanda's nursery. I couldn't wait to grow up and rob the lot of them." Doris appeared in the Weekend Guardian from 1988 to 1998.
Dykes to Watch Out For, Alison Bechdel (I knew she was a cartoonist but didn't realize she had a comic strip):

"Alison Bechdel began drawing the strip Dykes to Watch Out For in 1983 when it first appeared in Womenews...Its take on the world, political and personal, gay and general, is highly regarded. Its cast of characters include Raffi, finance director of a charity who lives with her partner and their son, and Mo, who works at 'Bounders Books-N-Muzak' while training to be a librarian. The strip has won several awards, and has become a touchstone for both political cartoon strip artists as well as many in the gay community in the US and the UK."
And Simon's Cat, Simon Tofield, which began as "a short line drawn animation by Simon Tofield put out on Youtube. It attracted such a following that Simon's Cat was soon appearing in a variety of merchandise and in a cartoon strip":

Below are some highlights from the satire/caricature exhibit (although a lot of the things I took note of were not available online):

"Careless Talk Costs Lives" poster, Fougasse [Kenneth Bird]
"This is one of a series of six posters which Fougasse produced during WWII to aid the propaganda war. It reminded people to guard against 'careless talk' and avoid inadvertently passing on information which might be overheard by foreign spies. It is estimated that over two million of these posters were pinned up in tea shops, waiting rooms, and other public spaces."
We enjoyed the absurdity of a dozen Hitlers peaking out from behind a phone box.

Gerald Scarfe, "Prince Charles," c.1969
"Gerald Scarfe's skill as a caricaturist made him one of the most noteworthy artists of the 1960s and 70s. This lithography depicts Prince Charles around the time of his investiture as Prince of Wales in 1969."
The dragon is saying, "There'll be a welcome in the hillside for you alright Boyo!"
We encountered Ronald Searle's take on The Rake's Progress, which was a nice link to William Hogarth's series from the Picture Room of Sir John Sloane's Museum. In 1954, the editor of Punch commissioned from Searle a series of sixteen modern versions of A Rake's Progress (several of them can be found online).

We also learned about Antonia Yeoman, who went by "Anton." From the 1940s to the 60s, she was one of the few women cartoonists to appear in all the top magazines, including The Tatler, the New Yorker, Private Eye, and Punch. The comic strip of hers that was displayed featured a very pretty woman doing a provocative dance with large feathers in a restaurant, with one male customer off to the side angrily complaining to his waiter, "Waiter, there's a feather in my soup!"

There were several cartoons that took on current events:
Christian Adams, "In/Out," 23 June 2016
"The United Kingdom is at a crossroads. A colour version of this cartoon was published on the UK's big day of decision: 23 June 2016, when 33.6 million people voted in a referendum of Britain's membership of the European Union.
You know what happened."

Peter Brookes, "US Supreme Court Nominee..." The Times, 1 February 2017
"On 31 January President Donald Trump announced his nomination of Neil Gorsuch to fill the vacant seat on the US Supreme Court. For eleven months the Republican Senate had blocked Barack Obama's attempts to nominate a replacement. Though Gorsuch is respected for his intellect he is expected to face filibusters from the Democrats who question his support for big business over worker's rights, opposition to abortion, and support for capital punishment."
Apparently they didn't feel the need to update this description after Gorsuch was confirmed.
Dave Brown, cover of Independent, 8 January 2015
"On 7 January 2015, two gunmen forced their way into the offices of the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris. Armed with assault rifles and other weapons, they killed 11 people and injured 11 others in the building. They also killed a police officer outside the building. The gunmen identified themselves as belonging to the Islamist terrorist group Al-Quaeda. A further five were killed and 11 wounded in related attacks."


























The Cartoon Museum is really delightful; it has an almost homemade feel to its exhibits.

That afternoon we saw a matinee performance of Our Ladies of Perpetual Succour. Based on Alan Warner's 1998 novel The Sopranos, it follows a group of six Catholic school girls on a trip to Edinburgh for a choir competition. This is the warning that's posted as you enter the theater:

The man that sold Jon the tickets also warned him about "Thick Scottish accents."

The six actors also play all of the other roles in the play (many of those characters are gross dudes that they encounter in bars and clubs). There are no costume changes to distinguish the characters; they're all impressively done entirely through vocal and physicality choices.

The girls have many adventures throughout the day, and you learn about the different issues they're each dealing with, such as illness or unplanned pregnancy. It's also a musical--half the songs are the angelic melodies they sing as a choir, including Bartok, Bach, and Mendelssohn, and the other half are ELO songs. It was cool to hear these two contrasting music styles alongside each other, and the cast was equally adept at both genres. The story was funny and heartwarming, and it was also just awesome to watch an all-female cast for once (the three-piece band is also all women). We certainly didn't catch all of the dialogue through the Scottish accents, but for the most part it was easy enough to understand.

That night we had dinner at Savoir Faire, which was a favorite of ours from our 2015 trip. It's such a weird little place; the food is delicious, but you might not guess that by glancing at the menu because it looks like this:

Comic Sans font!

1990s Word Art!
The walls are decorated with a mural--the man at the top pouring the drink down into the lady's glass presented an interesting parallel with Chris Ofili's cocktail waiter in the sky in The Caged Bird's Song!
I asked Jon to duck down so I could get a photo of the walls. He still wanted to be in the picture.

And then there is a smattering of humorous (albeit kind of trite) quotes written on the ceiling:
"To err is human, to blame it on someone else, shows management potential."

Jon had the smoked salmon and beef bourguignon, and I had the goat cheese and pork fillet--all of it was excellent!

Today is our last full day in London. Tonight we're having a late dinner at Clos Maggiore, which was voted the most romantic restaurant in London! 😘

xo
Hannah

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Weaving Magic and Sky-High Dining

On Monday morning, we went to the TKTS booth to get tickets for The Mentor (which was recommended to be by a Canadian I met in our first TKTS line last week) before visiting Trafalgar Square and the National Gallery. These are both return visits for us, so we walked into Trafalgar Square very smugly indeed as we were already so familiar with it...and the first thing we saw was this:
Really Good
David Shrigley
"Shrigley's ambition is that this simple gesture will become a self-fulfilling prophecy; that things considered 'bad' such as the economy, the weather, and society, will benefit from a change of consensus towards positivity.
Really Good is the 11th commission of the Mayor of London's Fourth Plinth.
It is 23 feet tall, and it was definitely new. Apparently there are frequently commissioned sculptures in the square.

 There was another new installation that we found quite compelling:
The Mud Soldier
"The Third Battle of Ypres, commonly referred to as the Battle of Passchendaele, was infamous for the scale of its casualties and muddy battlefields...in just over three months, almost 500,000 soldiers fell or were wounded as incessant rain turned craters and trenches into a sea of mud, leaving them and horses to drown, and tanks stuck in the quagmire.
This soldier, made of sand and mud taken from Flanders Fields, commemorates the bravery, struggle, and sacrifice of all the men who fought in the Battle of Passchendaele. Don't let their memory fade."

The sculpture sits under a water rig, and as the water falls on it, the soldier gradually dissolves.


Our main reason for visiting the National Gallery was to see the temporary exhibit on Chris Ofili's The Caged Bird's Song. Ofili created the painting in three sections using watercolors, and then weavers recreated the piece as a tapestry. The exhibit is aptly called "Weaving Magic."

The exhibit features a video explaining the process, and it's absolutely fascinating. Watercolor is, as the name implies, a very fluid medium, and it was an enormous challenge to interpret Ofili's work using wool. The major color changes were mapped out and then enlarged 877%; the weavers recreated the watercolor pigments by utilizing multiple similar colors to give the image depth (kind of like pixel art! 🙂)

Ofili explains: "The Caged Bird's Song is a marriage of watercolour and weaving. I set out to do something free-flowing in making a watercolour, encouraging the liquid pigment to form the image, a contrast to the weaving process. With their response, which is an interpretation rather than a reproduction, the weavers have paid a type of homage to the watercolour that I gave them as well as to the process of weaving."

The beginning of the exhibit features Ofili's completed watercolor:
"On either side of the central panel, a man and a woman draw back curtains to reveal an Arcadian scene. Beneath a waterfall, beside lapping waters with the sea behind, a couple recline, their bodies intertwined. As the guitar-playing man serenades his companion, she drinks a sparkling liquid which is poured into her glass by a figure hidden above. Oblivious to our gaze, the couple appear absorbed in their actions, but the thunderous sky to the left suggests that there is a darkening to come."


The exhibit also includes several sketches and early work that revealed Ofili's process:




"This series of studies explores the figure of footballer Mario Balotelli, the source for the magical cocktail waiter in the tapestry. Appearing in the sky, he pours down a liquid which is imbibed by the woman below. Beginning with sketches that incorporate a cut-out photo of Balotelli's head, turned sideways and adorned with a large bow tie, Ofili gradually abstracts this image and then experiments in colour. The footballer has long intrigued the artist, both for his prodigious skill and for the struggles he has encountered as a black footballer with Italian nationality."

Finally, there is a large room dedicated to the display of the completed tapestry, and it is absolutely breathtaking:






Here are some close-ups of the weaving:





Olifi also painted the room that displays the tapestry:

"The tapestry is hung against a painted mural, designed by the artist especially for its installation in the National Gallery. A sequence of swaying, monumental temple dancers entices the visitor towards the richly coloured, hand-woven wall-hanging."



"Weaving Magic" was probably one of my favorite art museum exhibits ever. After the exhibit ends, the tapestry's permanent home will be Clothworkers' Hall. We'll have to visit next time we come to London! :)

Before leaving the museum, we passed through the impressionists and Turner's section. Below are the paintings that caught our eye this time around:
Berthe Morisot
Girl on a Divan, about 1885
"The sitter was probably a paid model, but her frank and direct gaze suggests a friendship between sitter and artist."


Edouard Manet
Corner of a Cafe-Concert, probably 1878-80
"This work was originally the right half of a painting of the Brasserie de Reichshoffen in Paris, begun in about 1878 and cut in two by Manet before he completed it. A join where a new piece of canvas was added can be seen here in the man's blue smock. Manet subsequently repainted the background, adding the dancer, musicians and, on the left, a conductor's baton."


Arthur Streeton
Blue Pacific, 1890
"One of the most important Australian Impressionist painters, Streeton was admired for his ability to capture the unique character of the Australian landscape. He was a precious twenty-three and on his first visit to Sydney when he painted this vivid scene of a windy day on clifftops along the coast at Coogee."


Henri Rousseau
Surprised! 1891
"A tiger crouches in the foreground, surprised by man's arrival. Rousseau's jungle is imaginary, derived from specimens of tropical plants in Paris's botanical gardens. By placing the trees along a diagonal axis, he has conveyed a sense of the wind, in spite of the painting's static and naive style."


John Russell
Les Terrasses de Monte Casino, about 1889
"This is thought to have been painted during a stay in Cassino, south of Rome...but also recalls the landscape near Antibes, south-east France...He portrays the sun-bleached landscape with a bold use of such colours as pink, yellow, and turquoise."


Vincent van Gogh
Two Crabs, 1889
"After his release from hospital in Arles in January 1889, Van Gogh embarked on a series of still lifes, including crab studies. This painting may show the same crab upright and on its back. Parallel strokes sculpt the creature's form on an exuberant sea-like surface."
The crabs creep Jon out, but I think they're cute.


Vincent van Gogh
A Wheatfield, with Cypresses, 1889
Cypress trees reminded Van Gogh of 'Egyptian obelisks.' These dark trees were in a wheatfield close to the St-Remy mental asylum near Arles where the artist spent a year as a patient."

Andre Derain
Madame Matisse in a Kimono, 1905
"Derain spent the summer of 1905 at Collioure, a French seaside town near the Spanish border, working side-by-side with his friend Henri Matisse. Both artists painted Madame Matisse wearing this brilliant Japanese robe. Derain was a leader among the Fauvre painters, notorious at the time for their experiments in painting with intense, unmixed colours."

My dad's favorite Turner is still doing well!
Joseph Mallord William Turner
The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her Last Berth to be broken up, 1838

 In this visit, I also found this Turner very compelling:
JMW Turner
Rain, Steam and Speed - The Great Western Railway, 1884
"A steam engine advances across a bridge in the rain. In front of the train, a hare runs for cover. The scene has been identified as the railway bridge over the Thames at Maidenhead. The picture demonstrates Turner's ability to capture atmospheric effects in paint."

We then went to a late lunch at Duck and Waffle. This is the 40th floor restaurant that we dined at in 2015 during a very rainy day. This time, skies were clear, and we were able to fully appreciate the view:



It's funny how flat and sprawling London is; it reminds me a bit of Los Angeles in that regard. During our pub tour we learned that while Manhattan was built on granite, London was built on mud, so it doesn't do so well with very tall buildings.

Our lunch consisted of a few small plates and some excellent homemade bread; I made the mistake of ordering the "Earth" cocktail, which took its name a little too literally and tasted exactly like dirt. But then we had very tasty desserts:

Baked Alaska

Salted Caramel Choux Bun

That night we saw The Mentor, a new play with F. Murray Abraham (heads up, this recap will have plot spoilers, if that matters to you). The Mentor was a quieter, drier comedy, which made it a good companion to The Comedy About a Bank Robbery and Half a Sixpence.

The premise is that an arts foundation has set up a mentorship between one-hit, washed-up playwright Benjamin (F. Murray Abraham) and young, up-and-coming playwright Martin. The mentorship is to take place over a period of five days in the Italian countryside. The program is coordinated by arts administrator Irving, and Martin brings along his wife Gina.

The first section of the play was essentially the two playwrights, both very certain of their own talent and importance, expressing competing ideas on what constitutes good writing and the subjectivity of art. Benjamin wrote traditionally structured, realistic narratives, while Martin is a bit less traditional (references to his first play mention a choir, 35 extras, and a cement mixer). We found this dialogue compelling as well as humorous, and we wish the play would have continued in this vein. However, after Benjamin tells Martin that his new manuscript is garbage and he should consider another profession, it soon became about Martin's relationship with Gina (turns out she also doesn't think Martin is very talented). Then, in a very annoying development, Martin and Gina seem to break up, and Martin storms off while Gina stays in the countryside. Benjamin and Gina have a few drinks, and then it's ambiguous as to whether or not they spend the night together.

I am beyond over the trope of elderly men getting with beautiful young women (this play was, of course, written by a man). Ultimately, Benjamin and Gina let Martin believe that Benjamin only pretended to hate Martin's play to drive him away and have a go at Gina. If this is true, then this play is not really an exploration of the subjectivity of art or the writer's ego--it's just a story about a lecherous old man pursuing a hot young blonde. It's much more interesting if Benjamin (whose last success was at the age of 24) felt threatened by a young writer acclaimed as "the voice of his generation," or if he actually hated Martin's play because of the generational divide between them.

Overall, we enjoyed the play for its dialogue and performances (we especially liked the awkward, skittish Irving). And I always appreciate any play that's 80 minutes, no intermission!

We ended our day at yet another (delicious) tapas restaurant, this one called Condesa. We had solomillo sliders, salmon avocado tartare, and a very tasty oxtail/mashed potato dish.

We are sad that our vacation is only two more days, but we are very glad that we had the opportunity to spend so much time in London!

xo
Hannah