Later I would learn that Uccello painted the Battle of San Romano with tempera on wood panel in 1435, a scene recounting the victory of the Florentines over the Sienese.
But walking through the Louvre that day I didn’t know any of that. Frankly, the painting’s spirited clash of metal, charging horses, flapping banners appealed little to my pastoral, peace-loving sensibilities. But it was that boy sitting there….
If it hadn’t been for that cross-legged boy sitting on the floor of the gallery, a few feet from this masterpiece that purportedly once hung in Napoleon’s bathroom, I likely wouldn’t have given the work more than a passing glance.
But when I realized what this child attempted in the circling of tourists and foreign languages and the clicking of shutters, I lingered long, intrigued.
What I witnessed brushed me, dyed me, soaked into the fabric of me.
Actually, the young boy didn’t gaze on Uccello’s painting either. I never saw him look directly at it. Instead, this boy of perhaps ten turned slightly to peer at the canvas beside him. An artist had propped up an easel in front of Uccello’s Battle of San Romano, carefully dipped her brush into the palette atop a stool, and painstakingly copied every stroke of Uccello’s unto her canvas.
And this boy copied every stroke of hers.
By Ann Voscamp
Read the rest here.
09 November 2009
Draw God
Posted by Beth at 2:23 PM 0 comments
Labels: Ann Voscamp, Art, Children, Christian Life, Encouragement, Godly Living, Kids, Life, Role Models
04 October 2008
What is the secret, Grandmamma?
(J. R. Miller, "The Duty of Pleasing Others" 1904)
"Each one of us must please his neighbor for his good,
The Duchess of Kent was universally beloved. Once the Princess Alice, herself simple, sweet and unspoiled, asked her:
"What makes everyone love to be with you? I am always so sorry to have to leave you--and so are all the others who come here. What is the secret, grandmamma?"I
It was not easy for the noble woman to answer such a personal question. But it was important that it should be answered for the sake of her who had asked it, and who was indeed hungry to know the secret. So the noble lady gave this memorable answer:
"I was early instructed, that the way to please others--was to be sincerely interested in the things which interested them, namely their own affairs; and that this could be accomplished only by burying one's own troubles, interests, or joys completely out of sight. Forgetfulness of one's own concerns, a smiling face, a sincere word of sympathy, or unselfish help, where it is possible to give it--will always please others--and the giver equally so."
Posted by Beth at 1:59 PM 0 comments
Labels: Advice, Character, Christian Life, Determination, Godly Living, Questions
09 August 2008
This really got me thinking...
Posted by Beth at 1:16 PM 0 comments
Labels: Advice, Amusement, Character, Christian Life, Encouragement, Godly Living, Self-Examination, Spiritual Growth, Trust, Wisdom