Author: Andrew Green

  • Beacons Way, day 1: Abergavenny to Llanthony

    Beacons Way, day 1: Abergavenny to Llanthony

    I’ve had Ffordd y Bannau, the Beacons Way, in my sights for years.  I bought the guide written by John Sansom, the deviser of the Way, and Arwel Michael, but it lay on the shelf unused for a decade or more till now.  The reason I hesitated is that, as a 100-mile path across almost…

  • Miss La La at the Cirque Fernando

    Miss La La at the Cirque Fernando

    One of my favourite paintings by Edgar Degas is Miss La La at the Cirque Fernando.  As well as being one of his boldest – it’s probably one of the most audacious compositions ever painted in the nineteenth century – it has the great advantage of being easily seeable, since it’s usually on display in…

  • Saving the gannets

    Saving the gannets

    The jaunty oil sketch may look charming, but it conceals an ugly story.  It was painted by a well-known Cardiff artist, Thomas Henry Thomas, after a visit he and three friends from the Cardiff Naturalists’ Society made to Grassholm (Gwales) on 26 May 1890.  They’d come to study the bird colonies, especially northern gannets and…

  • Kathleen Jamie’s ‘Cairn’

    Kathleen Jamie’s ‘Cairn’

    The old Athenian playwrights were expected to follow their three tragedies for the festival of Dionysus with a lighter ‘satyr’ play.  The idea, it seems, was to take the edge off the horrors and traumas of the earlier dramas.  Kathleen Jamie, after publishing a trilogy of collections of lengthy essays on the large themes that…

  • Still life, still alive

    Still life, still alive

    ‘Still life’ is a paradox.  Can something that’s still or unmoving be alive, especially if it’s a dead creature or an inanimate object?  The French equivalent, nature morte, is equally stark in its self-contradiction.  But the term isn’t the only paradox.  One of the reasons why the still life has had such a long history,…

  • Delweddu pont: Pontypridd a’r artistiaid

    Delweddu pont: Pontypridd a’r artistiaid

    Mae llawer o sôn yn yr Eisteddfod Genedlaethol, a gynhelir yng nghanol Pontypridd ym Mharc Ynysangharad, am ‘bontio’ rhwng siaradwyr Cymraeg a’r mwyafrif o’r trigolion lleol sy ddim yn medru’r iaith.  Perthnasol iawn yw’r metaffor, o gofio bod Pontypridd yn cynnig esiampl wych o adeilad sydd wrth ei wraidd. Dyw’r gair ‘gwych’ ddim, mewn gwirionedd,…

  • Shakers

    Shakers

    If you live in Swansea and you’re serious about paint, then Rabart in Gendros is the place for you.  Llanelli may be Tinopolis, but Rabart is the metropolis of paint tins.  It has thousands of them, stacked high with every type and colour of paint you might feel a desire for.  You don’t need to…

  • St Illtud’s Walk, day 7: Resolfen to Afan Argoed

    St Illtud’s Walk, day 7: Resolfen to Afan Argoed

    Another nine-mile walk over hills between valleys, this time Cwm Nedd and Cwm Afan. It’s too complex and time-consuming today to take buses, our favoured means of transport, so C and I are reduced to the two-car trick, leaving one at our destination, the Afan Argoed Visitor Centre, and taking the other, via Pontrhydyfen and…

  • Cornelius Varley again

    Cornelius Varley again

    I’ve been revisiting the miraculous drawings made by Cornelius Varley when he spent time in Dolgellau in the summer of 1803.  The end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth century was an age of wonder for watercolour painting in Britain, but I think it’s a shame that Varley’s name isn’t celebrated as widely…

  • On shoelaces

    On shoelaces

    We like to think that, even if our politics and economics show few signs of movement towards improvement, we live in an age of continuous technological refinement.  Digital inventors now deliver tools like artificial intelligence that dazzle us, jaded though we are by constant stream of wonders. But back in the analogue world some of…