Sunday, 12 April 2015

Milan, MiArt, blood

There are a lot of dodgy facelifts here. One of the facelifts tilts back its head and lowers a strip of Parma ham into its mouth. It looks as if it is eating itself.



Air that dries your throat as you breathe in. Front-of-house girls with that estate-agent glaze in Prada, ripped white linen, mini bell skirts, gold stilettos. Two men in zebra onesies.

Repetition makes fire extinguishers and bottles of water the dominant images.

This is MiArt, the annual contemporary art fair in Milan. I've got some drawings here, under the counter at stand C01. I think you need permission from the Vatican to see them.



I stop at a pair of reverentially framed brown trousers and am probably the only person in this vast exhibition complex thinking of Major Bloodnok. If you understand that last sentence you are probably dead or Prince Charles.

I go to the Pinacoteca Brera. Mantegna, Bellini, Veronese. I stand in front of them and inhale. In a glass-walled chamber sponsored by Pirelli, The Martyrdom of St Catherine of Alexandria by Gaudenzio Ferrari is being restored.

I can't face the Duomo crowds so I drink crimson blood orange juice in the Mondadori bookshop and go to the Biblioteca e Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, a superb collection which has undergone pilfering by Lord Byron. I get whole tracts of the building to myself.

An architectural oddity here is Bramantino's Enthroned Madonna and child with Saint Ambrose and Saint Michael. The supine victims in the foreground are a heretic and a man-sized frog which represents evil. Harsh, but webbed feet get you a bad name.

The Raphael cartoon of The School of Athens is being restored in a cordoned-off gallery. The double-decker-bus-sized canvas is side-on and yards away, but it's exciting to see it standing in a workshop as it started out, even if it now faces rows of X-ray prints stuck to the wall.

On the train to the airport, a man asks me to wake him at the destination and falls asleep. My eyes fill with tears at this simple trust in my competence.

More pictures if you scroll down. My exhibition at Pinsent Masons in Broadgate closes on 17 April.


















Wednesday, 1 April 2015

The Violet Crab at DRAF, part 5

I could do with an eclipse. The lights go down, the spotlight hits me in the face and I have to look away. My drawing paper is in shadow. I'm drawing the cabaret as part of the cabaret - the performance centrepiece of The Violet Crab exhibition at the David Roberts Art Foundation in Camden.

As there are bondage performers around I've been bound with a rope chest harness over my dress.  It leaves me free to move and breathe, but is good for posture and the tightness is consoling. The rope has been oiled and smoked so my dress takes on a barbecue-y smell.


Adam, stunning in shiny black stilettos and Thatcher-blue eye shadow, hurls out pain and power ballads to an accordion he got in a car boot sale. Javier, elegantly simian, tears off his tie and does a funny, abandoned striptease. Celia, in motorcycle leathers, punches a man in a hoodie who remains unconcerned.



Nina ties Ayumi in a mesmerising display of Japanese rope bondage, having already tied the legs of the faithful little sewing table which holds my art kit. Toilet roll, sheep's wool, tip of a white man's dreadlock - what's in yours? Then Ayumi dances on the golden pole, a romantic world away from Spearmint Rhino.

Offstage, Maria is reading Tarot. I pick a card. Judgement. The dead awakening at the last trump. I'm preoccupied with the past and need to make adjustments for the future. I think of my drawings stored in softly collapsing piles of Hunter Wellington boot boxes, smelling faintly of rubber.






Subjects in this post - there were other performers - include Javier Aparicio, Jean Capeille, Adam Christensen, Anja Dietmann, Chiara Fumai, Than Hussein Clark (designer/director of exhibition and cabaret), Ayumi LaNoire, Maria Loboda, Fion Pellacini, Nina Russ, Adrien Schmitt,  Tojan Thomas Brown, Sarah de Winter, Taylor Yates, members of the audience. The photographer in the drawing is Josh Redman; the dim photos are not his fault. The cabaret is over but the exhibition continues until 2 May.

More pictures if you scroll down.

My exhibition of Supreme Court drawings continues at Pinsent Masons' Broadgate office until 17 April.















Thursday, 26 March 2015

Supreme Court art: unbottling the spider

A good day to bury a bad king.

Lord Neuberger reads today's judgment in Court 1, where there is a wooden carving of Richard III, Shakespeare's 'bottled spider'. His alleged remains are being buried today in Leicester, arguably the last place on earth where he'd want to end up. The Times Literary Supplement tweets excitedly that he is being 'reinterned', an interesting concept.

Meanwhile, as a result of this judgment in R (on the application of Evans) and another v Attorney General, we will learn just how interesting or otherwise are the confidential 'black spider' memos penned by the Prince of Wales to government ministers. I blogged about the hearing here.





After the judgment I sit in on Starbucks (HK) Limited and another v British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC and others. It's about the use of a trademark; Christopher Wadlow is repeatedly cited as an authority.


At the launch of his book The Law of Passing-off some 25 years ago, I was given a glittery brooch from Simmons & Simmons' black museum of passing off - I never established whether it was real or fake.

He will forgive me for saying that on launch day he was keyed up about giving an interview on Radio 4 and, after a moment's carelessness, the ink in his fountain pen stained his shirt so he had to pop out to buy a new one. Watching paint dry (a comparison sometimes unfairly made with the Supreme Court) is not as much fun as watching ink spread, or watercolour. My new toy in court today, the Kuretake Little Red Gift Set, keeps paints and water carefully contained - no need for a new shirt.

As today's appellant is Starbucks, readers may visualise the coffee shop logo, even though it's a different company. The legal profession itself has no satisfactory logo. A gavel? Not if you're referring to England, where it has no place. I am worryingly pleased to be a spotter for http://inappropriategavels.tumblr.com

More pictures if you scroll down. There is currently an exhibition of my Supreme Court drawings at Pinsent Masons' Broadgate office.






Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Shibari rehearsal at The Violet Crab

Shibari stars Nina Russ and Bruce Esinem kindly agree to tie the legs of my gallant little sewing table, a rescue job from Portobello.

I cleared out the rusty pins under its floral lining, and now it holds the art clobber which I need for drawing-the-cabaret-as-part-of-the-cabaret. This isn't strictly speaking bondage - it doesn't change the shape of the table or restrict its movement.



We are at The Violet Crab, the cabaret-themed exhibition at the David Roberts Art Foundation in Camden. Nina is rehearsing with Ayumi LaNoire.

As they are not performing to amplified music, I hear for the first time the sound of bondage rope being played over bamboo. It is like breathing.







Tuesday, 17 March 2015

The Violet Crab at DRAF, Part 3

I forget to put the memory card into my camera so these snaps are taken in low light with the steampunk BlackBerry.

I'm drawing the progress of The Violet Crab, a cabaret-themed exhibition at the David Roberts Art Foundation in Camden directed by Than Hussein Clark.

Multi-tasking is on the cabaret agenda here but I draw the line at playing the piano, even though it's an easy Minkus transcription with some mildly amusing wrong notes printed in the first online version I find. I can't take the stress, I say. I'm stressing about whether the lines of my thermal underwear will be visible under my cabaret dress. I'm aiming to look like the mysterious essence of the Venetian lagoon, not something corrugated.





The poet CAConrad reading on the main stage

The bag I'm into

Wednesday, 25 February 2015

Unforgettable, that's what you are

I'm on the floor sketching a cardboard cut-out and a Warhol drawing, Head of Boy with Fingers and Heart at Lips, from 1956. Is he guarding a secret or about to divulge one?

The monochrome cut-outs are here (at The Violet Crab - see previous post) for three days while Canadian-born designer Edeline Lee's autumn/winter collection is on display. Luke Leitch, fashion journalism's Mr Handsome, is being shown around.

Then I hop on a bus to the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies in Bloomsbury for the launch of the Centre for Law and Information Policy, directed by the strikingly alert Judith Townend.

Your private life drama baby leave me out. The theme is privacy law. We're here for a workshop and a lecture from Timothy Pitt-Payne QC - recently seen acting for the Information Commissioner in the Supreme Court case about the Prince of Wales's confidential memos to government departments.

Should you protect yourself by keeping your entire life private, or by having no private life at all? I refer you to Henry James's short story The Private Life in which he sticks it to Lord Leighton and Robert Browning while examining drastic privacy measures.

Drones are on the agenda - flying cameras which can see round corners. It's reported on the news that five mysterious drones confounded the gendarmes this morning, snooping around sites in Paris including the US embassy. Who, and why? Bertie Wooster's Drones Club members would have flown drones for fun. Dr David Goldberg reminds us that news chiefs are going to have to get to grips with aviation law, and that the Kodak Box Brownie caused consternation - a cheap spying tool in public hands.

In the tea-break, I sell a house, kind of. Somewhere in the house is a blue-barred jay's feather which I picked up when I was about nine. I can't hang on to everything. Never mind the right to be forgotten, I could do with a right to forget. Sadly, there is no right not to forget. I forget Egon Schiele's name today. The best I can manage is: 'You know, not Klimt, the other one.'

While I remember, my exhibition of Supreme Court drawings continues at the Broadgate office of Pinsent Masons LLP.

More pictures if you scroll down.