One Hundred Days of Ionarts
You read that correctly: today is the 100th day of this blog, which seems like as good an occasion as any to take a look back at some of the topics that have appeared here. It's remarkable in the world of blogging how things end up working out as they do, in the freeform way that is the hallmark of this new medium. (If you can't stand this sort of retrospective because it's repetitive, just hang in there for another day, because more posts are on the way. Maybe something about the theme of eyes in art, like the Eye of the Sun, shown at right, a rock formation in Monument Valley in southern Utah.) As I see it, here is an assortment of some of the big posts and ideas that have been worked out here:
July 24, Marsden Hartley at the Phillips Collection and Gertrude Stein (as an art collector)
July 26, Latest Reading, was the first appearance of the Paris Reading List, which has evolved into a separate part of this site
July 28, A Whole New Perspective on Realism, about a controversial painting by Gustave Courbet
August 1, Field Trip!, about the church of Notre-Dame-de-Toute-Grâce
August 3, Glaring at Cardinal Law, one of several posts about seeing Cardinal Law, former archbishop of Boston, at Mass at the National Shrine
August 4, We've Been Googled, first discovered that you could find Ionarts with a Google search
August 5, Das Ring at Bayreuth Festival, first post about Wagner
August 6, The Idea of a National Patrimony, about Prosper Mérimée
August 7, Mel Gibson, about seeing Mel Gibson introduce a viewing of clips from his controversial movie The Passion
August 8, More Renoirs Than You Can Shake a Stick At, about a visit to the Barnes Collection
August 11, Changes Planned for the Château de Chambord?, about the plans for the future of that castle
August 13, More Artistic Strikes Planned in France, about the summer strikes by the intermittents du spectacle
August 14, What Would Mozart Think?, about a controversial sculpture in Salzburg
August 18, The Popularity of Impressionism, about an exhibit in Auvers-sur-Oise
August 19, Wagner Festival in Washington?, first notice of an article in Die Welt on the Millennium Wagner Opera Company
August 21, Eugène Atget Photographs for Sale, about the sale from the collection of the Modern Museum of Art
August 23, One Month of Ionarts, about the recovery of lost 18th-century marble reliefs by the Louvre
August 25, Albéniz the Opera Composer
August 27, Centenary of the Prix Goncourt, about the anniversary of the prestigious literary award
September 10, REVIEW: The Rivals at the Shakespeare Theatre
September 11, Now How Much Would You Pay?, about determining the authenticity and value of a recently stolen Leonardo painting
September 12, American Cultural Imperialism, about the battle over American interests in the new Jeunet film
September 14, Translation of Interview with Don DeLillo, which provoked some strong reactions both positive and negative
September 19, European Patrimony Days, about an annual event in France
September 20, INTERVIEW: Wagner in Washington, first installment of six-part interview with Carol Berger, founder of Millennium Wagner Project
September 24, The Marquesas, about Paul Gauguin and Jacques Brel and their time there
October 1, Botticelli at the Palais du Luxembourg, about the Botticelli exhibit and the concept of the profile portrait
October 2, Tomb of St. Peter on the Vatican Hill, about the excavations under St. Peter's
October 3, András Schiff on the Goldberg Variations
October 7, Your Weekly Proust, about Botticelli and the character of Swann in Proust
October 8, Botticelli Exhibit, Ionarts in Paris begins
October 10, Conference on the Air de Cour in Versailles, Ionarts in Versailles on early Baroque music
October 14, Concerts at Versailles, Ionarts in Versailles continues
October 16, Photographs at the Musée d'Orsay, Ionarts in Paris continues
October 17, Gauguin—Tahiti at the Grand Palais (in four parts), end of Ionarts in Paris
October 20, Verdi Requiem at the Kennedy Center, Ionarts back in Washington
October 22, Juilliard Quartet at the Library of Congress (and October 24)
October 26, "The Texas Chainsaw" Massacred, guest blogger Todd Babcock weighs in with his first posting on cinema
October 27, Picasso at the National Gallery, Picasso and Fernande Olivier
October 28, Chilingirian Quartet at the Library of Congress


Ionarts is proud to host the cinematic musings of a friend in Hollywood: beginning today, guest blogger Todd Babcock will be contributing movie reviews and other posts related to the world of cinema, that quintessential American art form.
To try to encapsulate my various reactions to the show, I go back to what Gauguin wrote to the government minister (quoted in
The program began with an absolutely stellar performance of
What most people probably came to hear was the concert's second half, Ludwig van Beethoven's String Quartet in B-flat, op. 130. The Juilliard Quartet performed this piece with, as its final movement, the
Giuseppe Verdi's Requiem Mass is a favorite piece of mine, and I leapt at the chance to hear it performed yesterday at the
The remaining rooms of the exhibit are on the lower floor of the Grand Palais, reached by a spiral staircase. These rooms contain artwork made during Gauguin's return to France in 1893 to 1895, as well as in the final rooms his second stay back in Tahiti from 1895 to 1901 and the final years in Atuona, one of the Marquesas, from 1901 to his death in 1903. (See my comments on his years in the Marquesas in a post on September 24,
There is also a set of photographs that Gauguin may have used as models for his paintings, with comparison to reproductions of the works. Another photograph of the reliefs from the Buddhist temple of Borobodur, which inspired the composition of Ia Orana Maria (see above), hangs next to that painting. Gauguin's Fan with Motifs of Ta matete (from a private collection, 1892) shows the use of the Egyptian mixed profile in his treatment of Tahitian figures, and it hangs next to a reproduction of a piece of Egyptian relief that may have inspired Gauguin. The
In the exhibit's first small room, there is only one painting, the
The second concert of the evening was given under the title of La Chambre du Roy [The King's Bedroom]. The 

























































