Hermits in Chinese Art: art exhibition

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is presenting a year-long exhibition entitled “Companions in Solitude: Reclusion and Communion in Chinese Art.” The exhibition centers on Chinese paintings featuring hermits and hermits in natural settings.

From the Metropolitan website:

“This exhibition will explore the twin themes of solitude and togetherness in Chinese art. For more than two thousand years, reclusion—removing oneself from society—has been presented as the ideal condition for mental cultivation and transcending worldly troubles. At the same time, communion with like-minded people has been celebrated as essential to the human experience. This choice, to be alone or to be together, has been central to the lives of thinkers and artists, and Chinese art abounds with images of figures who pursued both paths—as well as those who wove them together in complex and surprising ways. Companions in Solitude, presented in two rotations, will bring together more than 120 works of painting, calligraphy, and decorative arts that illuminate this choice—depictions of why and how people have sought space from the world or attempted to bridge the divide between themselves and others. In the wake of 2020, a year that has isolated us physically but connected us virtually in unprecedented ways, this exploration of premodern Chinese reclusion and communion will invite meditation on the fracture and facture of human connection in our own time.

Rotation one: July 31, 2021–January 9, 2022
Rotation two: January 31, 2022–August 14, 2022″

URL: https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2021/companions-in-solitude

Legendary French hermit-martyr

Le Petit Bleu d’Agen reports on a series of lectures and tours of the archaeology of the ancient church remanants associated with the legendary saints, martyrs, and hermits St. Caprasius and the female St. Faith, associated with Agens, a town in France. Nowadays a lycée de l’Ermitage offers tours and lectures.

URL: https://www.petitbleu.fr/2021/07/22/vivre-en-ermite-une-experience-inedite-proposee-par-destination-agen-samedi-9687367.php

Hermit feature film: “Pig”

An oddly-themed feature film about a hermit (Nicholas Cage), once a chef, who has abandoned the city and lives alone in the wilderness, foraging for truffles with a companionable pig. The hermit sells the mushrooms to a swank restauranteur. The restauranteur abducts the pig, leading to the plot of the film, the unraveling of the drama of the search, with elements of crime and conflict. However, a lot of inside jokes and shots of luxury plates suggest irony if not satire, which requires viewing for evaluation. Trailer: https://youtu.be/-4nRpdONaAA

Anglo-Saxon king-hermit’s cave

Archaelogists have identified a cave church in Derbyshire, England, with the ninth-century Anglo-Saxon king Eardwulf of Northumbria. Eardwulf was dethroned and exiled, and lived the rest of his life reclusively, known as the hermit (or anchorite) Hardulph, who was to be canonized as a saint. For a time the cave was the presumed dwelling of an ornamental hermit on the expansive grounds of a wealthy eighteenth-century estate owner. Hardulph is thought to have attracted disciples by his eremitic example.

URL: https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/anglo-saxon-cave-house-scli-intl-gbr/index.html?ofs=fbia

Tove Jansson’s island

An article in The New European titled “The island life of Tove Jansson,” describes the post-Moomins life of Tove Jansson, creator of the popular children’s book series featuring the Moomins. She avidly pursued solitude on an island off the coast of FInland, living there intermitently the rest of her life. A Jansson quote: “If I could wish something good for someone, I would wish for them an island with no address.”

URL: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/brexit-news/the-island-life-of-tove-jansson-8066592