Our lovely Sunday in Brittany (for those of us NOT in Paris!) was a day almost entirely devoted to insects - with a couple of exceptions. our plan to while away the day was to have a picnic and then head to one of those oddball local museums that make living in a relatively out-of-the-way place so much fun - the Insectarium in Lizio.
The room the kids liked best was the "reversal of scale" room!
The Insectarium is always paired in the travel literature with the (very) nearby Musée du poète ferrailleur which I think translates loosely to the museum of the blacksmith poet - in other words, quirky and winsome kinetic sculptures made from recycle junk and cast-off metal - not usually one of my favorite art forms. The clown paintings of the post-industrial age. Nonetheless, I did by best to promote it to the kids, who were much less enthusiastic about this than they were about the insectarium. But I have to say that I was charmed by it, maybe because of the extensiveness of the site and its pastoral setting, or because of the mechanical ingenuity of a lot of the work, or the seemingly genuine and unaffected child-like quality of a lot of the imagery; little beings, innocent of their own fragility, chasing the stars. There's actually a Don Quixote figure who tilts at a little windmill, and St. Exupery in his airplane. And there was a good deal of genuine craft involved. Then there's the fact that he makes automatons, the tradition in which I've been interested in for a long time).
The kids' favorite was the House of the Hermit, where they would have gladly spent the rest of the afternoon (you can watch a little video of its construction on the website).
But we needed to get home and eat the lasagne I had bought from the so-called "cute butcher," and eat the Sunday evening tarts. On the way home, I thought about the fact that if Robert Coudray, the backsmith poet, had been born in America instead of Brittany, he would be considered an "ousider artist" - a term, coincidentally, that was used aout Otto Dix in an essay written in 1923, that is, the English word "Outside." He - Coudray - has all of the hallmarks, including a certain care for his own image (he's trademarked the term "poète ferrailleur," for example) and the extensive park setting of his own structures, like a little hand-made amusement park. But that's not at all how he presents himself, or how he seems t be received here. But I wouldn't begin to know where to sort that out.
Back home, Iris set out to research insects some more on line - searching things on the internet has been a new habit since we've been here. She pretty quickly came across some very cool little animated films featuring comically bug-eyed little bugs, from the French film maker Thomas Szabo, "Minuscule - The Private Life of Insects," and combines computer animation with real settings. The insect protagonists have funny little misadventures resulting from their desires to achieve something beyond their reach (this is the kids' analysis, and I think they've nailed it). The endings are happy, and there's some melancholy music. You could argue that it's as French as the poète ferrailleur, yet it's pretty much the opposite in both message and material aesthetic form, and the kids love it.
Mac
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