This is that Lady Beauty, in whose praise
Thy voice and hand shake still,--long known to thee
By flying hair and fluttering hem,--the beat
Following her daily of thy heart and feet,
How passionately and irretrievably,
In what fond flight, how many ways and days!
Thy voice and hand shake still,--long known to thee
By flying hair and fluttering hem,--the beat
Following her daily of thy heart and feet,
How passionately and irretrievably,
In what fond flight, how many ways and days!
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti
As you know, this blog doesn't just write itself. So a few days after a brief burst of 'Lady of Shalott' and some Dante I went to Cartwright Hall in Bradford to see their exhibition of studies that Dante Gabriel Rossetti did of Jane Morris, wife of William and the fulcrum of one of those odd set-ups that the Victorians seem to have all carried on behind closed doors. It's well worth seeing, as are the other two temporary exhibitions there at the moment.
The first, a travelling show from the British Museum, is basically just one turban, but what a turban. It's a Sikh fortress turban from the nineteenth century with a small amount of background material and other artifacts. I was sorry to see that I had missed lectures earlier in the month on Sikh troops in the First World War and one in conjunction with the Royal Armouries on Sikh arms and armour.
The third exhibition was actually the best, a number of lithographs and prints from the city's own collection. There was inevitably, and quite rightly, some Hockney, in this case 'The Rake's Progress' a series of sixteen prints from the early sixties. There are also some colourful and amusing Glenn Baxter's and a selection of prints specially commissioned to celebrate the 2012 Olympics including works by Tracey Emin and Chris Ofili. Perhaps of most interest to wargamers would be a dozen small prints by Sir William Rothenstein entitled 'Landscapes of the War', the war in this question being that of 1914-18 because Rothenstein served as an official war artist in both world wars. However, those that I'd personally like on my walls are thirteen Lowry's from the mid 1960s.
I think Mr. Graham H. would look smashing in that turban during his SYW games @ the Olicanalad housing unit. " Eyegore, take the bags!" (Eyegore) "Alright, you take the one on the left, I will take the one in the turban!" (Warning, unwanted Young Frankenstein reference!)
ReplyDeleteLovingly,
Gummy
I defer to no one in my admiration for the legendary wargames room of James 'Olicanalad' Roach. However, I'm not sure that even that splendid chamber has a ceiling high enough for one to sport a fortress turban. It is one mighty, mighty hat. Mighty.
ReplyDeleteHowever, and without wishing to give too much away at this stage, my own soon(ish) to be unveiled wargaming annexe probably does.
And no reference to Marty Feldman could ever be described as unwanted.