Showing posts with label Botticelli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Botticelli. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2015

DEAR GRANDFATHER:



PLEASE LET GIMPS IN THE DOOR 

 by heidi johnson-wright


As a wheelchair-using gimp girl, I sometimes hear folks say the reason a place is not accessible is because it’s historic. Statements like “It’s one of those older buildings constructed under standards in force years ago.”

What they mean is it was built back when gimps were safely tucked away in institutions or kept hidden in the back bedrooms of family homes. You know, like the simpler, gentler era depicted in Norman Rockwell’s art: a time when families sat down together every night at the dinner table and the worst trouble little boys got into was dipping girls’ pigtails in inkwells. Page through Rockwell’s illustrations in a book or online and you’ll be hard-pressed to find gimps included in his rosy vision of an America that never was and never will be.

Perhaps you’ve heard someone say that a building doesn’t have to be accessible because it’s been “grandfathered.” When I hear that word, at first I picture a kind, gentle older man who loves to go fishing and hands out candy to his grandkids.

But then I remember it doesn’t mean that at all. It’s really an excuse to avoid letting gimps in the door. And a pitiful excuse, at that. The ADA is a civil rights law, not a building code. You can’t deny folks their civil rights simply because you’ve been denying their rights for so long, it’s magically okay to keep denying them. To follow that twisted logic would mean allowing racially segregated lunch counters to remain segregated because that’s how it’s always been.

Creating access in older buildings is often a matter of a couple factors. Are the decision makers in charge truly committed to creating an inclusive community and are the architects and engineers up to the task?

Take for example, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy. It’s one of the most celebrated art collections in the world. It includes masterpieces by da Vinci, Michelangelo and Botticelli that will make you drunk with joy. And it’s really, really old. It was completed in 1581 for Cosimo I de' Medici, who was not exactly known for being a proponent of disability rights. And yet, the Uffizi is exquisitely accessible to wheelchair users, and proud of its touch tours for people with visual impairments. The elevators and ramps are not big, ugly and awkward. They fit seamlessly into the structure, never taking away from the beauty all around.

How can this be? Shouldn’t they have told gimps, “Sorry, you’ll never see Botticelli’s Primavera because, like, the Uffizi is just too old. And, oh yeah, it’s grandfathered.”
Am I ever glad they didn’t. I’ll take Botticelli over Normal Rockwell any day.

http://earthboundtomboy.blogspot.com/2015/07/dear-grandfather-please-let-gimps-in.html  

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

THE UFFIZI GALLERY- BY SAMUEL HILT -- PART 5


THE TOP 30 PAINTINGS TO VISIT IN 
FLORENCE'S GREATEST ART MUSEUM



Hilt brilliantly brings life to Da Vinci's Leda and the Swan, Michelangelo's Doni Tondo, Raphael's Portrait of Pope Leo X, Vasari's Forge of Vulcan, Fra Angelico's Coronation of the Virgin and dozens of other Renaissance classics that hang in the fabled Uffizi.

When he is not helping us differentiate between the traits of Adam and Eve by Albrecht Durer vs. Lukas Cranach, Hilt is a longtime tour guide who splits his time between Siena and California while operating Tuscany Tours.

This book can be purchased for $12.95 by contacting:


WWW.TUSCANYTOURS.COM

Monday, October 8, 2012

THE UFFIZI GALLERY- BY SAMUEL HILT -- PART 4


THE TOP 30 PAINTINGS TO VISIT IN 
FLORENCE'S GREATEST ART MUSEUM



Hilt, who layers in plenty of expert detailing in such a brief, easy to carry book, cannot resist engaging the common man by being a little cheeky in the following sentences about the much-visited Primavera and Birth of Venus:


"Another thing we know about these two paintings is that they were intended for the edification of the adolescent nephew of Lorenzo de' Medici, ruler of Florence."

"We know something, even today, about teenage boys and pictures of beautiful naked women, so we can be fairly sure that he was not unhappy with this gift."

"But we also know that Lorenzo was the patron of the Florentine Platonic academy and that he and his cousin, Lorenzo di Pierifrancesco, probably had a more complex agenda in mind when they commissioned the work from Botticelli."

The Uffizi Gallery book review continues tomorrow Oct. 9
 
This book can be purchased for $12.95 by contacting:


WWW.TUSCANYTOURS.COM

Sunday, October 7, 2012

TTHE UFFIZI GALLERY- BY SAMUEL HILT -- PART 3


THE TOP 30 PAINTINGS TO VISIT IN 
FLORENCE'S GREATEST ART MUSEUM



Why can't more people write as conversationally as Sam Hilt?


On Botticelli's Birth of Venus and Primavera, Hilt notes:

"One of the first things worth noting about these two paintings is that they were among the first large-size paintings during the Renaissance to depict mythological subjects."

"Mythological themes were common on decorative platters and household furnishings, but, before Botticelli, painting on this scale was reserved for altarpieces with Christian themes."

"Simply by working on this scale Botticelli invites us to treat these images with a degree of seriousness not usually devoted to mythological topics."
 
The Uffizi Gallery book review continues tomorrow Oct.8
This book can be purchased for $12.95 by contacting:


WWW.TUSCANYTOURS.COM