This evening we went to an art exhibition at a small gallery in Kitsilano. Art - paintings, interpretation of what we see in paint and other media, is quite beyond me, just as poetry is. Beyond me in the sense that I can't do it myself. Other people's art, as other people's poetry, fascinates me. It allows you to look at something you may have seen before, quite differently. And I was privileged this evening to be with other people who also had interesting insights into the art we saw, and to be able to talk to the artist. And yet it was what she wrote about her own work that had most impact on me. Speaking my language I suppose.
Afterwards we went to eat with the two friends who had come to the gallery with us. We talked, we realised afterwards, for three hours. This was a treat for me because for one rare evening I wasn't the outsider, three of us were Brits. They asked me how I was coping with the impending departure from office of Tony Blair. Badly is the answer to that one.
So part of my job is to educate urban kids about nature and the natural world. Today I asked a group what they thought they might eat if plants could not produce fruit or seeds because there were no bees or other pollinating insects.
'Orange juice,' said one.
'How do we get orange juice?' I asked, predictably she answered,
'We buy it in the supermarket.'
'How does the supermarket get it?'
'We get it from the shop.'
'Ok, well, orange juice is made from oranges,'
'But we buy it,'
'Yes, but we can buy it because someone has made orange juice from oranges.' This continued until I gave up after about ten tries.
Next I tried meat. None of them could recognise that meat came from certain animals. They somehow didn't even tie the food called 'chicken' with the farmyard animal that they must have seen pictures of.
Someone suggested that if we didn't have any fruit or veggies because there were no more bees and pollinating insects, that we could eat honey.
This kind of undermined their previous enthusiasm for the play. They are wowed when we come out afterwards, no longer dressed as bees. Super-excited, 'I like your water bottle, I like your sunglasses, I think you're a really good actor,' all came out in one rush.
This was nice, sometimes they say, 'I love your accent,' which seems very random, but not as much as some comments. It's days since someone asked me what part of Australia I was from. Beth and Dave, the Brit friends we went out with this evening, both reported the same thing.
'The law-abiding part,' suggested Dave.
Well, the clock has moved past the witching hour so it's Sleepy's birthday. Happy Birthday me old mucker. Get your arse over here !
Sleepy has promised to help me celebrate my own birthday in exactly four months. That could be one HELL of a celebration.
Nothing new under the sun
3 years ago
9 comments:
Happy birthday simmi. Mucker must be a typo :)
-k
Thank you guys!
I will be there with bells on in september.
Well, not literally bells, that would be Morris Dancing, and that is just wrong!
Amazingly, my hero Patrick Kavanagh was born in the townland of Mucker, Co. Monaghan. Hmmm!
Great post. I loved the movement from the gallery to the kids to your own natural gallery.
This sense of disconnect from nature is very troubling. Do kids (those of them who are allowed to eat the stuff) really think ground chuck comes in neat square or round patties, and that animals do not have to be butchered? Fruit is something one gets at the grocer's. Lord!
Change is certainly in the air. It's looking like Bertie Ahern won't survive here either. Gerry Adams and Ian Paisley formed a government in Stormont, and now they're speculating that Adam's could become the next Tánaiste. I dread the thought.
lenten.. I promise, when Schnee and I were at Mayhem, there was a yr11 girl how didn't know milk came from cows!
I had to explain it to her. Her reply?
"Eeeuw, that's fucking mank, that is Miss!"...
That's ludicrous!
I wonder if our survival as a species will be dependent on the eradication of such ignorance? Or does it even matter?
Lenten... people get a little bit ansty when a 'red sea pedestrian' starts putting forward their Eugenics program!
Mine has been a long time in it's formulation and I think Mendel would be proud!
Let me preface this by saying I'm all-wise now, near the age of a half century, but I will admit the following. When I first went off from the city to college, I spent one of my breaks early on with my roommate. We went to her home farm. Note, I was an A (grades) student. I was amazed to see her mother picking apples off trees. Well, I did remember I'd eaten crab apples off little trees once, but they were sour. Then, I was totally blown away when her mom cooked up some applesauce in the kitchen from the apples she'd just picked. I exclaimed, I didn't know that's how you got applesauce! Really. I just hadn't made the connection before. I knew milk came from cows. Just had to block that out when I drank the stuff. D---
Quite some time back dairy farmers in this country were in a financial bind and not getting the gov't support they thought they should have. Some of the farmers poured their milk out on the ground in protest. When a NYC woman was asked what she thought about farmers dumping the milk. She replied that it was ok with her, she got her milk from the grocery store! There are even adults who don't make the connections.
I fear much of Tony's downfall has been listening to Bush. Sorry to see what that has come to.
There is no downfall, Tony has resigned because he said right from his moment of victory at the last election, that he would not fight another. I think he's left it until the last possible moment.
It's just sad for me.
I can remember being fairly horrified the first time I stayed with a family in France and we went out in the VW van and bought a load of live chickens. I wasn't horrified until maman Andreo wrung their necks in the kitchen. Normally Sainsburys does that for me.
Post a Comment