Last Friday was
the start of the German winter festival known as ‘Yule’ and was also Friday the
thirteenth - Teutonic darkness and spookiness combined. I know this because ABC’s
Vanessa Hughes announced as much when I was on my way back from a meeting to
discuss how our writers' group will survive un-funded for another year. Her
choice of Grieg’s March of the Trolls was apposite but my sense of unease was
not dispelled as I mused on the non-funding situation and the proximity of
Christmas.
So far my life this December has been uncluttered by tinsel and baubles. My new year resolution of not trying to force the ‘jolly’ has inhibited me from making any seasonal accommodations whatsoever. The only mince pie I have tasted was an organic one my spouse purchased from the local produce market with dry pastry and burnt filling that I deposited in the compost bin after one bite. Let’s hope the $1.50 individual Christmas puddings from Aldi are more edible!
Extent of my Xmas preparations so far |
As far as gift shopping goes, all I have bought so far are a couple of calendars and a Spike Milligan CD from a bric-a-brac shop in Coolamon. One of the calendars, Ugly Medieval Cats, was a gift for my friend of many years whom I caught up with in Sydney at the weekend. She is a fan of medieval illumination and a cat fancier (though currently cat-less). Our main gift to ourselves though was dinner, conversation and seeing the Melbourne Theatre Company’s production of Sunday at the Sydney Opera House.
We ate at one of the restaurants that line the foreshore where, true to our grumpy older women demographic, we challenged the waitress about the volume of Riesling in our glasses. She pointed out that we had mistaken a line in the restaurant’s logo design for the standard drink line level and laughingly pointed to the rim of the glass saying that’s where she’d pour up to ‘in my country’. Dinner, salmon fillets baked in banana leaves in spicy coconut cream and served with ample firm broccolini spears, was delicious. Not so the overpriced, over sweet, but still bland gelato we purchased en route to the Opera House. Thank you, Saxenda for letting me bin this ice cream like I did the mince pie!
Arriving at Circular Quay |
Set in the 1930s-40s, Sunday traverses Sidney Nolan’s initial naïve meeting with the
Reeds, his passionate affair with Sunday, his creation of the iconic Ned Kelly series
and his eventual estrangement from his patrons. Coincidentally I had seen the Ned Kelly series
the weekend before at the NGA and had again marvelled at their skilful
combination of iconography and truthful landscape and their penetrating evocation of
the contradictions of the Australian psyche. Weigh’s writing about art is exceptional.
Sunday’s description of The Slip (1947) Nolan’s
painting depicting troopers in procession, outlaw tracking, on a steep incline with a huge foregrounded horse that has lost its footing and
fallen but remains suspended inverted for all time becomes a metaphor for the
limbo, suffering and cruelty she and he
are experiencing in their doomed relationship.
Sydney Nolan's The Slip (1947) from his Ned Kelly series |
This is only one of the many amazing translations of visual art qualities into dialogue that Weigh achieves. I have never experienced writing that so vividly conveys the concepts and impact of visual art. If I have any qualms about the play they relate to the eccentric casting and costuming of the Joy Hester character and the underutilisation of both her and Sweeney’s character in the drama, but these are minor quibbles. Sunday was a wonderful (un-Christmassy) gift to ourselves!