Showing posts with label Hellenic Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hellenic Museum. Show all posts

Monday, December 5, 2016

ART

One of my great loves in life is to go to Art Galleries. I have been doing this for years. I do not proclaim to know much except what I like and appreciate. Over the years I have read about Art and Artists and spoken to people who are knowledgeable about Art and of course have picked up much. As a side-bar I love to read about Art theft, I find it fascinating.
 
My love of Art started basic – Monet, I was a teen, I loved the swirls and romanticism of Impressionism, and in particular the shades of colours that the great man used.
 
I went to many exhibits at the NSW State Gallery, including ones on Surrealism and Warhol – their cleverness and humour and irony sucked me in, I have expanded from the basics there. Whilst there I would look at their regular collection. For the most part this has not changed that much over the years.
 
Last year I took time to really look at this collection, my faves were familiar to me but there was so much more I’d previously whipped past. Here are some thoughts about this collection with pics of my faves.
 
NGV in Melbourne has the best, well-rounded collection of any gallery I have been to. And spending many a wet Melbourne afternoon there I have learnt much about Art. They do special exhibits like no other too, so I try to get down for most of these. One of my favourite paintings is Picasso’s Weeping Woman, this – many years ago – led me to read and look at more Picasso...oh my. And to this day, any visit to NGV without seeing this lovely lady seems very wrong.
 
 
Of course in recent years, I have been lucky enough to see some of the key galleries in New York and Paris and Rome – The Met, MOMA, Guggenheim, The Louvre, The L’Orangerie, Musee D’Orsay, Rodin Museum, and The Vatican. AND visited Monet’s house and gallery at Giverny.
 
Of course Art is more than paintings – although great paintings are my preference, I do love a sculpture. And then there are installations, digital art, craft art and on and on and on.
 
I’ll always love a Monet or any impressionist. I adore Picasso and worship Kahlo. I love Whiteley and Preston and Olsen and Olley and Cossington-Smith. Rodin and Kandinsky and Pollock and Dali. Van Gogh and Cezanne and Munch and Klimt. Warhol and Botticelli and Turner and Bacon and Magritte. Klee and Miro and De Kooning and Mondrian. And many more, my interest is varied.
 
But mostly I just like to wonder and ponder in an Art Gallery, sit and really look at the layers of the piece. Think about what i enjoy, note down a particular artist so I can go and research them a little. Art is for everyone, anyone can do this. You don’t have to be an expert, you just have to have an open mind. In fact, I think the less you know, the more informed a decision on what you like can be made.There is much I see I gloss over or don’t like, but there is much more I see that just brings me to my knees with their beauty. And beauty is in the eye of the beholder!
 
So in the recent trip to Melbourne I was particularly lucky to see amazing Art.
 
First up was Bulgari Jewels – whilst not traditional art, you can see how artistically the jewells are arranged and displayed.
 
And Kylie Minogue costumes display – this I would also call artistic!
 
I also re-visited the Hellenic Museum – which is full of stunning Greek artefacts and art.
 
Next up was John Olsen, this was supremely amazing, and one of the best and inspiring exhibits I’ve seen.
 
Banksy is another fave, and we were lucky enough to see a great exhibit of his work.
 
VIktor and Rolf were a quirky addition to the Art World.
 

And Hockney the grand master.

So loads of lovely pics, a few patterns emerge, pastels, unique use of colour, floral and nudes. The strange, unusual, weird, and unique!

Sunday, December 4, 2016

HELLENIC MUSEUM

I discovered the Hellenic Museum last year, in the old Mint Building on William Street, near the Flagstaff Gardens.

It has an amazing collection of figures, art, jewells, and much more from Greece and is swapped regularly. These are all originals, no replicas, and simply stunning.

Not only is the exhibition swoon worthy, the building itself is a treasure.

And this year, the top floor was open with additional exhibits, one with jewells, one with photography by Bill Henson including some of the jewells.

Plus they had decorated the building with many tall Greek statues!

At a cost of $10, this little known gem is well worth a visit next time you are in Melbourne.
























Sunday, October 18, 2015

MELBOURNE 2015

It's taken me a while to get this blog on my trip to Melbourne up, I've been busy.
 
Melbourne...I adore it, it's my favourite place to holiday in Australia. It is my touchstone, if I don't get there at least once a year I feel lost. I love it's cosmopolitan and European ways, it's stunning architecture, it's extreme cultural happenings, the trams, the cafes and restaurants, and it's laid back lifestyle. If I didn't love to travel there so much, I'd probably live there.

 
Usually I stay in a little private apartment on Collins Street, but this time I couldn't as the owners had sold it, so I turned to air bnb for something new and I found a little gem on Manchester Lane, right in the heart of my favourite part of the city, off Collins Street, and right near Degreaves Street and Flinders Station.
  


My friend C came with me for the first few days and we were excited to find the apartment exactly as it had been online. Phew!
 
This trip was to see The David Bowie Is exhibit at the ACMI, something I had waited a whole year to see and it was superb. Additionally there were other Bowie things to do whilst there.
 
 
Also at the ACMI was the fabulous Orry-Kelly exhibit and I saw the documentary film based on his life. Orry-Kelly was a famous costume designer in Hollywood, who came from Kiama but is little known here in Australia. He had a remarkable career with many ups and downs. Three Academy Awards - for An American in Paris, Les Girls, and Some Like it Hot. Some Like it Hot is one of my all time favourite films, so to see the costumes he designed for Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis was a thrill, let alone the Oscars. There was so much to find out about this interesting man, in the exhibit and in the film, but the most confounding was his first relationship in Hollywood was with Cary Grant (when he was still Archie Leach). This part of Cary is not new to me, I am a fan, but I prefer to stick to the fantasy man-about-town suave Cary, lol! Of course hearing how Cary abandoned Orry and only contacted him when he heard Orry was writing his memoirs was a little shattering to my fantasy.




I caught up with my wonderful friend M, and we had a day out in the Yarra Valley, lunching at Healesville, and heading to the Tarrwarra Vineyards via a stunning rainforest. The vineyard had a very sleek and modern Museum of Art and specialises in Modern Art. We checked out the Pierre Huyghe exhibition which featured installations, videos etc and was amazing.



I also 'discovered' the Hellenic Museum on William Street, a museum dedicated to Greek artefacts, on loans form the Benaki Museum in Athens. It's a ten year exhibit, commencing in 2014 and is changed over regularly. It was full of the most beautiful pieces, all of them incredibly old and with amazing stories attached.








I also caught up with other friends, B, L, and S while I was there.
 
This trip I visited a few Melbourne institutions I had never been to. On our first night C and I had dinner at the Young and Jackson pub, a great meal and we visited the stunning Chloe in the upstairs bar. S and I had morning tea at the amazing Hopetoun Tea Room. And I finally visited The Athenaeum Theatre, not the library, but I will get there some day.





As always the food was to die for. Perk Up Bugers on Degreaves was easily the best burger I have ever eaten, their sweet potato fries perfection too. Ferdyduke, a rooftop bar, served funky sliders, I had a pork one called the Little Lebowski. Directly across from my hotel was Maccaroni Trattoria Italiana, and they made the best, authentic pizzas. Il Pom on Fed Square had great Italian and cocktails, Taxi at the Transport Lounge, also on Fed Square - great snack food and drinks and a place at the window to watch the passing parade. I rediscovered the Thai on Flinders in a little arcade, the best I think I've ever had. And we found an authentic French Creperie, Roule Galette, in Scott Alley. An average looking cafe with an ambivalent French waiter, french radio station playing, and amazing food.





 
Of course I visited some of my favourite places, 333 Collins Street, The Royal Exhibition Building and Carlton Gardens, Hill of Content Bookshop, Minotaur Books, Dr Seuss Gallery, Cathedral Arcade, State Library of Vic, Federation Square, both the Ian Potter Centre and the National Gallery of Victoria, and St Kilda.











The weather was all over the shop while I was there - which is so Melbourne, but mostly overcast and cool, but the day C and I headed to St Kilda was a stunner. We walked and walked, checked out the markets, shopped, and an amazing tapas lunch at Big Mouth...and of course, indulged in cakes!



And some random photography: