Wednesday 25 March 2015

Tudor painting

It's been a little while since my last post so I thought I'd check in. I've been experimenting a bit recently and knitting fingerless gloves but here's what I've been up to paint-wise... 

Practical Tudor painting

My seasonal part-time job involves Tudor living so I've been playing with Tudor paint-styles and skills at the moment. I have found some information about how to make Tudor paint but it's still a work in progress.I will upload some photos/videos of how I'm getting on as I go along. 

Paint pigments 

Charcoal (vine black/lamp black ) = black (add to oil)
Goldenrod/Ochre = yellow (add to chalk+water)
Woad = blue
Rhubarb leaves/madder = red/orange

Silver/Gold leaf for decoration

I've already mixed woad/vine black and oil to make a good ink but I need to play with it a bit more before I use it on my good linen fabric. The next step is then finding rabbit glue to use as a binding.

Interesting links

Tudor Monastery Farm have uploaded a video: How to make Tudor paint.
I also found some great info on YouTube of: how to make a paintbrush out of a feather . 

If anyone knows a good link to info about the practicalities of Tudor painting, please feel free to comment on this post and I'll get back to you!

Verbe de la mois

I love French so... Verb of the month. It also has a theme tune.

Gigoter - meaning to jiggle or wiggle!


Friday 6 March 2015

Back down - play review

Back Down - The Birmingham Repertory Theatre

The other night, I was explaining the plot of the play I’d just seen to my sister. The main thing she took from it was, “oh my gosh, Matt from Casualty was in it? Did you speak to him?” He was good. The way his expressions changed from character to character (as he told a story to the other people in the play) was immense. I felt completely drawn into the different spaces, times and people he was emulating and talking about.

The way the 3 teenage characters related to each other was brilliant. Sometimes screenplays don’t always implicate the characters’ back stories in general in the language so they over-explain things, but the relationship between the characters was palpable and, because this sort of coming of age/legend trip is so relatable, the play was easy to follow. 

The set was sparse, really simple. It consisted of a red ladder, which became a tent, some boxes as seats and a hillock of grass which became a car and a hill. They were really well-used by the actors and they were obviously completely comfy in the set.

This video link from The Roundhouse has Polarbear talking about Back Down so check it out, if you want.

I’m never sure if I should dress up for the theatre so I was just sitting in the togs I’d been wearing all day on the farm where I work but I love that cosy feel to a theatre, sitting in the dark, and the action on-stage made me feel like I was in Snowdonia with these 3 young lads celebrating their friendship (before one of them went off to Uni). I love that about stories and, to me, the play felt like a mixture of stories and a play. The lads recount memories on stage so it feels like they’re looking back on something that has happened and showing the fact that they survived it in a funny way.

I’d only heard a little bit about Polarbear from Twitter but he’s this spoken word artist who has worked with actors and created this play. This link to one of his pieces is really cool. I’m still not sure about the difference between telling stories and spoken word, but spoken word seems shorter, purposeful, there’s a rhythm to it and it’s like rap or poetry, something that leads to action like Jess Green’s open letter to Michael Gove: That was amazing too.

I thought the play was really fun and realistic, emotionally and with what happens on stage. I suppose it feels like that time has gone for me but it’s nice to snuggle back into those feelings again. I also like that they say they might as well have gone to Snow Hill if they weren’t going to climb up the whole of Mount Snowdon. That feeling of locality was great – because I know where Snow Hill is and I know the little places they talk about, that aren’t so little to me - BirminghamUK

50 Shades of Grey film review - The film is rated 18, so is this blog post. Enjoy!

**POTENTIAL BUFFY / TWILIGHT SPOILERS – GO AND WATCH ALL THE SERIES AND FILMS OF BUFFY AND TWILIGHT, THEN COME BACK AND READ THIS POST!**

**DEFINITE 50 SHADES OF GREY SPOILERS, AS YOU MAY HAVE GUESSED!**

50 Shades of Grey is a movie spin-off of Twilight; that famous vampire film set in Seattle.
50 Shades… is a film about a wealthy man who fancies a young English Literature MA student and wants her to be the “Submissive” to his “Dominant.” During the film she has to decide whether she wants to sign a contract agreeing to certain terms. It’s a classic will they, won’t they plotline and I’ll discuss it a bit later on.

It was with some degree of trepidation that I started writing this blog post as domestic abuse versus consensual sexual experience were high on the list of themes (and I guess I don’t like conflict). Ok, there were 2 themes. Oh wait, love - that too, healthy relationships, Seattle etc... So the film has raised a lot of eyebrows and I think some online people have been vocal without really discussing the themes brought up very thoroughly, perhaps unfairly.

The plot of 50 Shades… follows the male character, Christian Grey, as he attempts to entice the virginal, if not innocent, Anastasia Steele (we’re on a colour scheme here) into his world of S&M, which, at the start of the film, is open for a new occupant – well, his Red Room and swanky Seattle apartment where he houses his Submissives is. Anastasia is a curious female character, open to new experiences – albeit, apparently, fisting is out. Even the mention of anything beyond the norm sets the audience to giggling and I bet a few people’s sex lives will become more racy, or awkward, by the time this film goes to DVD. It’s always interesting to get an insight into other people’s worlds, so this film was like looking through a window into that world – although I’ll wait for the Channel 5 documentary before I decide whether it’s that realistic or not(!). The film was definitely in line with some of the divine Marquis’s finer work (this book is definitely worth a read - very academic).

I’ll admit that I read only a couple of pages of the book before deciding 50 Shades of Grey was horrendously poorly written and not worth the time to read when I had a pile of great books toppling off my bookshelf to be read. After watching the film however, I have been sucked into the publicity craze a little. The way the story is doled out with teasing, anticipation and frustration – I’m at least curious about how the plot leads onto the next two films and how the plot could possibly thicken.

It was one of my old (not that old, but we’ve known each other long enough) school friends that I took to see 50 Shades… ok she dragged me along, and that was probably a mistake – too many chances to giggle like the juveniles we once were and insert names of boys we used to know as kids for comic effect.

This film was almost a parody of itself: the awkward silences, the intense looks, the close-ups on touching her arm and Ana biting her lip (apparently a very sexy gesture according to Christian – and he should know, right?). In one of the elevator scenes (guess what happens in the other one?!) the elevator doors close with Ana inside and Christian outside. Anastasia whispers, “Christian,” and he whispers back, “Ana,” – the sexual frustration is palpable. The more serious the two main characters seemed, the more steely (sorry) their glares and heavy their breathing, the more giggling seemed to issue from me and my friend.  The kids next to us (I’m thinking they probably weren’t over 18) seemed to be enjoying it too! I definitely heard the word “boobies!” at one point during the film and they held back because there were loads of opportunities to say it.

This film begs the question: Where is the line to be drawn between soft porn and Art House. Well, this definitely wasn’t Art House and parts of Lars Von Trier’s “Nymphomaniac” were far more hardcore than 50 Shades…. I think the worst Christian does is hit Anastasia with a big whip. So I’m not too sure – chick flick? Hmm…no.

I find that, when some books are made into films, what does not seem so aggressive to me on paper is really made aware in the visual. In Twilight, the idea that a Jacob Black would Imprint on a child, was completely paedophilic. The obsessive behaviour of Edward, in the book, didn’t seem obvious yet, on the big screen, it was horrifically clear. I won’t get too deeply into how Buffy and Angel had a more real and functioning relationship than Edward and Bella, but there it is – #mygeneration

Throughout 50 Shades…, Anastasia is asked to sign a binding S&M contract, a contract to consensual one-way domestic abuse. Were she to sign an agreed contract, that should be ok in the eyes of anyone, in the same way that Euthanasia should be – it’s signed, it’s agreed; you’re free to do what you want. The main societal worry is perhaps the idea that Anastasia is an innocent girl who does not know her own mind and that young women watching 50 Shades… might think that it’s ok to be abused in the name of a sexual relationship and that women now perhaps don’t receive enough education about good relationships, other than that of their parents, if they have one. I think there is a lot of sex education but not so much relationship education in Universities and schools. The fact that this film drives a discussion about this is positive.

I definitely don’t see this film as an example of how a healthy relationship should be – I hate that term “healthy relationship” but it works for this – every relationship is different, people are different. If healthy is: healthy communication, a willingness to be in the relationship, being in love, knowing what love is or should mean, fitting into someone’s life, not being abused and looking to the future as long as the couple wants to be in that relationship.
The potential S&M contract part of the film is consensual, that’s fine; do as you please, whatever. The abuse part for me is that one person relinquishes their rights and, as a woman, as a person, I would hate to be in an unequal relationship. I’d have to have an active part in that life lived together: “You’ll like to be submissive” Christian says, “you won’t have to worry about things,” “I would tell you what to do,” and “there will be no responsibility for you”. If you deskill yourself and let yourself live at the whim of someone else, who are you? What’s your point in being? Let the government tell you what to do and nanny you and what do you become but a cog in the machine with no free will to determine who you are, what you create. This film doesn’t just pose questions for a woman, but for anyone who submits themselves to the will of others and does not question what they do, how they do it and why they do it.

For me, in response to many people saying that the S&M part of the film is abuse, the real abuse is not so much the consensual beatings as the way the characters relate to each other. Ana is not allowed to tell her friends about the relationship (Christian Grey being a wealthy guy in the public eye, I kind of understand that, though). Christian is an obsessive character who wants to control Anastasia and she, curious, is willing to submit. Christian will not let her drink alcohol. He buys her a car and expects her to be happy that he sold her old car (without asking and which might have held sentimental value for her). She then gets told off by being smacked, blurring the lines between what is their love-relationship and what is their sex-relationship. These are things that cannot be separate for these two characters – they are in a relationship but Christian seems to think they are not. I think having a contract is probably a good idea on his part, as life does tend to blur lines. Christian is a man who is obsessed with wealth and the power that wealth brings him however, for the female character, she (standard genderised character) feels sentiment which he (standard genderised character) does not understand. It is up to her to change him and mould him to her beliefs. Will this happen? Why is this presented as the woman’s job? Why should the woman be looked after? If Christian was previously a Submissive, what made him want to become a Dominant? Is this the path that Anastasia will tread in future? I found myself screaming out for Ana, as the Submissive, to misbehave and maybe that’s where the sexual excitement within the idea of S&M comes from. One constantly thinks, “when is she going to stand up to him?”, but thankfully that desire was satisfied towards the end of the film.

The plotline was obvious. We knew it was a will they, won’t they but I can’t fault it for cinematographical style. One scene at night portrays Anastasia waking up and walking into the front room with a quilt draped around her like a toga in front of the apartment’s large windows whilst Christian sits at the piano, lost. I like to think that this frame is a nod to Pretty Woman because at this point in the film, it feels like she is giving sex for the wealth it brings and Richard Gere plays the piano on his own in Pretty Woman too. Not that it’s wrong to want to be with someone who can support you financially as well as emotionally. It’s not like she isn’t working for her living.

The End.

(This blog is already too long! And I am impressed if you have read this far. I probably didn’t get into half the things I could’ve done but hopefully it’s been a vaguely interesting read…)