31 December 2023
Spinach Omelette
So Christmas is over now, and we welcome the New Year, and like most people I call into my dear, and close extended family of friends to say hello.
One of them is Bernard Tessier (AKA Poussey K.) who owns the Châteaunoir just outside of Aix. I check in with him every few weeks and because he’s an analogue kind of guy he doesn't have a mobile phone. I have to call his old telephone at home and catch him around lunch time when I know he’ll be there. When we chat I ask about everyone which invariably leads to general gossip and secrets which he freely passes on to us all because the one thing you can say about gossip is that it cannot be hoarded. In Provence they say that a secret is something you can only tell one person at a time. Naturally, this gives us a broad lattitude for our dicussions. He not only knows everyone in and around Le Tholonet, but also in Aix too. Who’s suing who, who’s sleeping with whom? That sort of thing. “Are the nightingales there yet?” I ask timidly ,,, “and how are those wild boars? and the deer?” "and how are your small mésanges?" which he feeds and are chickadees in English. What we both love about them is that apparently mate for life.
The other night when we spoke I pushed him further back in time towards his family connections which often I like to do. He’s coming up on eighty now and like everyone his age, he loves to talk about the past. I asked if he remembered a second cousin from his father’s side whom I had met 50 years ago when I had first moved into the Château. “Oh, she died a long time ago”, he told me quickly. I figured this because it was indeed a very long time ago, even the both of us. Already, by then, she must have been a woman in her 70’s by then. I asked if he remembered when she had last come to see the Château on a spring afternoon. I had been sitting with a friend Alan, in my kitchen when Poussy K was leading a trio of elderly people around the courtyard in which the famous bust of Cezanne that his grandmother had cast in bronze was mounted upon a stone plinth. As they walked around my place, one of them poked their head into the kitchen where we were sitting, and Poussey K introduced us to his aunt. They apparently lived in the North of France. I invited them all in for tea. His aunt was wide-eyed and very curious about seeing everything on her visit. She was a very handsome woman of a certain age and one could see she would have certainly been a great beauty in her day. I made them tea and she began regaling us with stories. I slowly understood that she wanted to visit the Château for perhaps the last time in her life. She remembered my kitchen that had once been a set of rooms where Cezanne left his materials between painting excursions around the property. Poussey K’s grandmother who was a very skilled sculptor, was one of the very few people around Aix who actually believed in Cezanne and saw his greatness. She befriended him, and he apparently had free rein of the place to come and go as he pleased. He certainly made good use of it by painting everywhere on the property, even up to Bibemus quarry where he made a monumental series of pictures at the end of his life. There also are numerous pictures of the Château from several vantages points in the forest. All these pictures are now spread around the globe in museums and private collections.
This aunt told us that she had often come to visit the property as a child and recounted to us that on one afternoon when she was maybe six years old, Poussey’s grandmother took her by the hand and told her, “Today, I’m going to introduce you to a very great and famous artist”, whereby they set off on one of the paths leading into the forest. Just a short way in, they came across an opening where an old balding man sat on a stone bench looking at a few canvases that were propped up on some bushes surrounding him. In her telling, “he scared me, and he looked like a wild bird of prey.” she exclaimed. Both Alan and me were on the edge of our seats by this point. But, as she continued, her fear quickly subsided when they were introduced and he put her on his lap so that she too could also look at the pictures surrounding him. Then she told us the most astonishing thing of all. She said that the paintings she was looking at resembled a spinach omelette (“une omelette aux épinards). I was dumbfounded by this extraordinary memory that seemed to fly off a page of John Rewald’s book on Post-Impressionism that I was reading at the time. Afterwards the trio departed and Poussy accompanied them back to their car.
This memory would stay with me forever, and to this day whenever I see any of Cezanne’s pictures from Bibémus Quarry, I think of this lovely woman who filled my imagination with history that eventful day. I knew it was true because who else, but an imaginative child could come up with such a fitting visual association with those paintings?
So, here on the Pacific Ocean and so far from my youth in France, comes not only this wonderful memory but also this painting from the other evening that displays the colours of Bibémus Quarry.
We've had some really splendid blooms lately, skies that have knocked me over with the weight of their ferocity. But this evening bloom from the other night was gentle and friendly-looking.
Because of certain skies, people hall look alike. I take in stride because I know them all
like an extended family so I see them differently despite their strong resemblances to each other. I understand all their quirks that exist underneath their colour harmonies and drawing structure. Although I'm the author, I'm also the kindly grandfather who loves them all in spite of their character flaws and unlikely rapports. .
And like they say about snowflakes, that seeing a sky full of them, they'll appear all the same but actually, no two snowflakes are ever the same according to God (and the scientists).
Observing the sky on most days, I marvel at its behaviour as it takes me into dusk. When it's tactile enough to allow me in to find a solution for a picture I'm always grateful.