Wednesday, 12 October 2011

Assignment One completed/marked/returned....

So how are things going on my course?  Well, I finally completed my first assignment and plucked up the courage to send it off for critique.  So it arrived on the doormat this morning and I was pleasantly surprised, my tutor said it was readable and clear, I guess thats a good enough start for me.  So  - punctuation corrected - here it is, be kind.....
The Sistine Chapel

How does one begin to attempt to describe the indescribable? An impossible task. Instead, what follows is simply an account of what was meant to be a purely cultural experience but what tuned out to be so much more.

Italy, Vatican City, the Vatican museum. It’s a typical spring morning in the city and the temperature is rocketing skywards. My ticket bought and the already rapidly forming queues negotiated, I am funnelled along endless corridors, past statues and galleries, which should be worthy of my attention but which are ignored as everyone including myself head towards one ultimate destination; the Sistine chapel. Eventually I reach the destination, my anticipation is great.  I enter the vast space through a tiny door in the far side of the chapel.

As I emerge into the vast space what appears to me attacks my senses on so many levels.  What strikes me first are the colours, vivid yet dusky cornflower blues and shiny golds.  Secondly, I was expecting to be awestruck by the ceiling but what is just as impressive is that every surface, including the walls, are painted.  Giant velvet curtains drape either side of the entrance, lush dark maroon in colour; on closer inspection, these are actually painted.  So lifelike I want to reach out and stroke them to check.

I had been warned that the chapel would be horribly busy and noisy.  It is, but that doesn’t distract me from the totally awesome sight I am witnessing. The amount of people simply adds to the magic, as - although I am surrounded by hundreds of other heads all tilted skywards – it’s as if I am there alone.  I am totally overwhelmed. 

The sound in the chapel is also unique.  The signs all around request a respectful silence, but how can the visitor not be expected to share their thoughts and feelings with others when presented with such a magnificent sight?  So the result is thousands of whispers, which create quite a sound.  The noise gradually gets louder, rising a few decibels more until a guard shouts “silenzio” and the voices instantly drop to quiet murmurs again only to slowly ebb upwards and the whole process starts again.

I have lost the rest of my party and find myself in the middle of the chapel alone.  I find my way through the crowds, unable to peel my gaze from the ceiling.  I find my way to the far wall where a bench runs around the perimeter of the chapel. I sit down.  I needed to absorb every inch.  I study each and every one of the frescoes and link them to the correct Bible story.  A tear begins to roll down my cheek.

On the far alter wall is Da Vinci’s crowning glory, The Last Judgement, in the centre is Christ surrounded by mankind, it seems kind of fitting that everyday, people come to observe this spectacle and he is indeed surrounded by mankind. 

My trip to the Sistine Chapel had such a powerful impact on me, in many ways.  People often talk of mans achievements when they put their mind to it.  I think it simply reaffirmed to me that there is something so much greater than myself

When I got outside and managed to find my fellow day-trippers, my husband asked me “So what did you think?”

Hmmmm, Where to start?