“To burn with
desire and keep quiet about it is the greatest punishment we can bring on ourselves.”
- Federico García Lorca
Magpie Tales has
stimulated the grey cells once again this week, adding fuel to the fire of our
imagination with a beautiful painting: “Under Windsor Bridge”, 1912, by Adolphe
Valette. Pierre Adolphe Valette (1876 – 1942) was a French Impressionist
painter who was active for a great part of his life painting the urban
landscapes of Manchester. Many of his works are now in the collection of the Manchester
Art Gallery. Born in St Etienne in 1876, he trained at the École Municipale de
Beaux-Arts et des Arts Decoratifs in Bordeaux.
Valette arrived
in England for unknown reasons in 1904 and studied at the Birbeck Institute,
now part of the University of London. In 1905 he travelled to the Northwest of
England where he began a short career designing greeting cards and calendars
for a Manchester printing company. He attended evening classes at Manchester Municipal
School of Art and in 1907 he was invited to join the staff as a teacher. His
French teaching style, painting by demonstration, was new to the United
Kingdom.
L.S. Lowry
expressed great admiration for Valette, who taught him new techniques and showed
him the potential of the urban landscape as a subject. He called him “a real
teacher … a dedicated teacher”. In 1920 Valette resigned from the Institute due
to ill health. He stayed in Lancashire for a further eight years, teaching
privately and painting in Manchester and Bolton. In 1928 he returned to Paris,
and later moved to Blacé en Beaujolais where he died in 1942. His paintings are
Impressionist, a style that suited the damp fogginess of Manchester. Manchester
Art Gallery has a room devoted to him, where the viewer may compare some of his
paintings with some of Lowry’s, and judge to what extent Lowry’s own style was
influenced by Valette and by French Impressionism generally.
Here is a poem
suiting the image that I wrote a couple of decades ago while living in Europe.
Amsterdam V
How melancholy this city
When love has died.
How tiresome the narrow houses
When I know none there awaits my return.
How slowly the canal waters flow
When I know all is over.
The sun sets and violet evenings
Envelop countless bridges,
The amber lamps endlessly reflecting
Their shimmering images,
As distant laughter mocks my waterless
tears.
How crushingly the night falls around my
heart tonight
As resignation points the way clearly
toward my duty.
How hopelessly I must await the morning
As new-found resolutions crystallise in the
falling temperature.
How dreamless the drug-filled sleep that I
must partake of
As all expectations, hopes, illusions drown
in the still canals.
A sad tale. very well told...
ReplyDeleteabsolutely love the imagery nick !
ReplyDeleteamsterdam has always been on my bucket list...both to shoot and to write about...
Wonderful word painting
ReplyDeleteAnd this poem could so be about Valette's own leaving of Manchester.
Thank you for sharing this .. your poem meshes beautifully with Valette's painting.
ReplyDeleteThis is amazing. This line kinda floored me.....I love it:
ReplyDelete'As distant laughter mocks my waterless tears'
A words are beautiful and sing a sad song so sweetly heard.
ReplyDelete