John McEwan
Art Writing as Gossip or Sociology?
Leonardo's Nephew: Essays on Art and Artists
By James Fenton
Viking 304pp £20
The Penguin Book of Art Writing
By Martin Gayford and Karen Wright
Viking 620pp £25
James Fenton is a poet and a hack – not just any hack; he was one of the valiant few who stayed on in Vietnam after the fall of Saigon - so you can be sure he will never be boring. In Borneo, he recalls, he and his party had to join their guides in a rain-dance to bring on a spate. 'We were instructed to get into the river and beat it with branches and shout at it at the tops of our voices. I apologised for laughing as we did so. My guide said: "No, you must laugh; if you do something funny you must laugh, otherwise the magic won't work."'
Art is magical, and never more so than in the form of sculpture, which is the subject of Fenton's first and most engrossing essay, 'On Statue'. It begins and ends with Sigmund Freud as a collector of grave goods, but shines a light on many aspects of this fascinating subject.
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Alfred, Lord Tennyson is practically a byword for old-fashioned Victorian grandeur, rarely pictured without a cravat and a serious beard.
Seamus Perry tries to picture him as a younger man.
Seamus Perry - Before the Beard
Seamus Perry: Before the Beard - The Boundless Deep: Young Tennyson, Science, and the Crisis of Belief by Richard Holmes
literaryreview.co.uk
Novelist Muriel Spark had a tongue that could produce both sugar and poison. It’s no surprise, then, that her letters make for a brilliant read.
@claire_harman considers some of the most entertaining.
Claire Harman - Fighting Words
Claire Harman: Fighting Words - The Letters of Muriel Spark, Volume 1: 1944-1963 by Dan Gunn
literaryreview.co.uk
Of all the articles I’ve published in recent years, this is *by far* my favourite.
✍️ On childhood, memory, and the sea - for @Lit_Review :
https://literaryreview.co.uk/flotsam-and-jetsam