Showing posts with label Chambéry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chambéry. Show all posts

Friday, 15 June 2007

Chambéry, natural high, smoke and mirrors?



The Road to Rousseau

"Chambéry had been blandly pleasant – the first graffiti less town I’d visited, sharp air, even a bit of history in Coryate’s revelation that it was once home to the Turin shroud.”


Continental Drifter, Tim Moore.

Chambéry is French, but could at a squint be Italian. It houses a palace to the Dukes of Savoy, the original Dukes of Hazard, so often was this region sacked. Bandits ruled the mountain passes that took Lyon silks to Italy, where the ancestors of Georgio Armani got cracking. Lyon was Dufy’s home for a long while; the artist working on textiles. There is much, in a different life, to write about the trade links between France and Italy – and the Alps played a central part.

So Savoy is, perhaps, an archetype of “betwixtness”. Nowadays Chambéry is a busy university town, with a business park full of start-ups working in the environmental/ecological fields. And this betwixtness is manifest in the contrasts, and little smokes and mirrors, around.

The Cathedral where I first met “Davide”, the spiritual troubadour, is one such example: Patrick has recommended I visit because of its tricks. For almost the entire internal experience is based on trompe l’oueil, painted columns, buttresses, adornments. The effect is spiritual – and with a hint of mischief. In praying here the mis-en-scène is about being fooled. Amiens cathedral this is not.




But it is a half an hour walk from the centre that this betwixt quality reveals itself most fully. For here the philosopher of nature; the original “romantic”, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, came in exile from Geneva. He lived in Les Charmettes with one of his many patrons, a woman this time, and he walked. He walked and he thought.




“In 1749, as Rousseau walked to Vincennes to visit Diderot in prison, he read in the Mercure de France of an essay competition sponsored by the Académie de Dijon, asking whether the development of the arts and sciences had been morally beneficial. Rousseau claimed that this question caused him to have a moment of sudden inspiration by the roadside, during which he perceived the principle of the natural goodness of humanity on which all his later philosophical works were based.”

From Wikipedia

He walked and he thought and he wrote. And what he wrote changed the way we see things. The mountains had long been thought of as pagan hubs of evil, an Axis of Ices, as it were. It is Rousseau, rather than the much later Wordsworth or Caspar Friedrich David, who finds contentment and deep spirituality in walking these paths high into the mountains. The view from his garden is enough to encourage a landscape painter to emigrate here. And yet, for all the beauty, there is always a bust trade-route town half an hour down the hill. A balance, smaller and more perfect, less Rabelesian, than Lyon, but a fine betwixtness all the same. Rousseau – in the why we travel stakes – is important not just in terms of political development, human psychology, and aesthetic sense, but also in shifting the “vision” of the world. As did Favre, whose face appears on one of those “Lyon” style trompe l’oueil building paintings. Favre was a grammarian, got the French language into shape, before Voltaire buffed it further. It is one of those ironies of being “betwixt” that Chambéry has within its haunting a man who opened up the GPS of aesthetics to us, and another who closed down the vagaries of the French Language.




“Rousseau saw a fundamental divide between society and human nature. Rousseau contended that man was good by nature, when in the state of nature (the state of all other animals, and the condition humankind was in before the creation of civilization and society), but is corrupted by society.” For a primer on his life, of which this part is a small affair, there is always the “wiki”.Or here.

In beginning the process of shift towards nature as expression of God, as pantheistic principle in which man can find himself, Rousseau created a kind of tourism. These days the summer sees hundreds of thousands of people coming to walk these same walks. Perhaps, as with the Englishmen I met in Lansleburg, they come armed with GPS; mountain rescue men are laden with portable defibrillators, hooked up by cell-phone to the hospitals of the region, but they come and they experience nature – without the aid of skis or boards. They are the heirs of Rousseau, even if they don’t think about quite so much.

Catherine has been walking these hills since she was a little girl, it is part of her ritual now. She’s 31, and says she’ll keep exploring, “til she drops.”

In Turin now, debating whether to see the Cathedral “with” the Turin shroud – which was for a time housed in Chambéry, for Turin was the court of the Dukes of Savoy – I realize I’m very betwixt today. I’m missing the calm of the mountains, and the peace of the painterly landscapes. Turin is a Fiat-football city, striving for “tourist” status, but with quite a long way to go. Considerations of the Rouseau-ian kind are light years away here. Instead: a museum: “Ferrari and the Cinema”, that’s the sort of thing Cities should do, not confuse us about textiles (probably from Lyon).



Film with Betty Blue Girl and the Theatre Dullin reflected. Sunday Morning

The one thing Chambéry isn’t is “bland”. It is one of those liminal, “nodal” points, that pushes us onwards up the mountains and towards new ways of seeing. And these days that means seeing that the Environment around these parts, is in serious trouble. Petrol guzzling Rolls Royces don’t help, of course.

Thursday, 14 June 2007

Race



“…I never saw so many roguish Egyptians together in one place in all my life as in Nevers, where there was a multitude of men, women and children of them, that disguise their faces, a our counterfet western Egyptians in England. For both their haire and their faces looked so black, as if they were raked out of hel, and sent into the world by great Beelzebub, to terrifie and astonish mortall men: their men are very Ruffians & Swashbucklers, having exceeding long black haire curled, and swords or other weapons by their sides. Their women also suffer their haire to hang loosely about their shoulders, whereof some I saw dancing in the streets, and singing lascivious vaine songs; whereby they draw many flocks of foolish citizens about them.



In Nevers, and elsewhere, Tom commits the sin we’d now call racism; it is more accurate, I suspect, given where he eventually travelled, to call this the fear of the “other”. In Lyon over dinner “Elvis”, one of those traveling wheeler-dealer whatever you want, businessmen talked a little about the troubles in St. Dennis, the northern suburb of Paris where I stayed, and where Turkish, African, Tunisian and Moroccan “banlieu” youth has rioted, over the years. “Those places, there’s a lot of trouble there, people are lazy,” he says. I liked my time there: it was a healthy antidote to the judgments of Paris. Elvis hadn’t been there for a while, he’d been in Indonesia, India, Thailand…but it was bad there.

There are so many assumptions we make about race; the elections here brought in a President whose position is – or has been – hard-line about immigration. In Lyon I watch a policeman (with a van of policemen parked outside) ask for papers before buying his kebab. “Sarkozy has a quota system. Numbers. People are going to suffer more now,” John says. At Lyon station I watch two young Tunisians try and buy a ticket without their passports, in the 30 minutes I queued they made little progress, and met several officials.

Somewhere out there is a heavily-trafficked website called “FuckFrance”. It’s American, I think. Political in its way; but not the way we like it: thoughtful, nuanced, balanced. It represents “freedom of speech”; there are plenty of counter-balances, of course, but because views, about race, politics or national identity, are genuinely under threat from the good side of globalization, the economic and social nomadism of so many people, as well as the bad side (the racism, the targeting of specific groups, the fear of “terror”) then perhaps the “centre” breaks. And with this breakage, the balancing toleration that should be a by-product of the digital modern. It hasn’t shaped that way yet: just read the news blogs.

Watching the Champions’ League Final in Abbeville it is obvious that the men at the bar were firstly Pro-Anything-Not-English (that’s to say, Liverpool). Secondly that each time an African (or home-grown player that wasn’t clearly white) touched the ball they shouted: “The Black, The Black.”

A few days ago the Lithuanian Football Association was fined thirty thousand Euros because it its match against France the home crowd waved a flag of Africa painted in the French colours, because to the great black players who have graced the blue shirt over the past 30 years.

Behind my attempt to understand Tom Coryat, and his journey, is a desire to “see” as he did; not what he saw, but “how” he saw. For, in Abbeville, whilst kids are SMS-ing whoever, wherever; whilst in Amiens boys are battling in online worlds with players from Iceland, Nigeria and Peru; whilst Zinedine Zidane, despite the “head-butt” is close to God here in France, it’s still an unsettling sight to see how little we’ve moved towards being “betwixt” when it comes to race.

In La Chambre, high in the Alps, I sit down to lunch. A local with a medicine-ball head, and an “Ethnique: Francaise" logo, says to his wife: “Thank goodness the tourist is white. And this one is all white.”

And there I was thinking I had a healthy tan.

Chambéry couples now internet is back











Wednesday, 13 June 2007

Sun: simple









All above in La Tour du Pin, staging post for Chambéry, and a gentle introduction, for a while, to the sun.

It is as simple as the sun coming out in a town that is big enough, but not too big: charm comes rushing down from the, very new, mountains and streams all around. Even the tallest chateau of the Dukes of Savoy, or most hi-tech Mediatéque Rousseau, is not quite tall enough to hide the fact this is alpine territory. Chambéry: home of Rousseau and Favre.

There really are blue distant hills, and heat.

Patrick retires next January, after living here in Chambéry for the past 17 years. He is a financial consultant, not yet fully understanding what retirement will mean. He and his wife are moving south next year, to the place they’ve had near Cassis for a dozen years. The children are gone, one is in Geneva, the other Canada, so why not?

During the last months here Patrick is filming the city, his memory on digi-cam: we meet close to the Duke’s palace. Built in the time when Savoy was as promiscuous, or as bad at defending itself, as a Venetian courtesan. “The old town, they’ve done marvellous things in restoration, particularly as this whole area is built on rivers,” he says. “They built on wooden poles, drilled deep, and now…it’s fantastic. A lovely city. And the style, very special, Savoyard, like Italy. Like Piedmont. All around the city you find courtyards and squares hidden away, it’s not like most of France. For a time the Turin Shroud was here, did you know?”

Wiki did; I didn’t.

Tom had big adventures getting this far; without the pleasures of the tunnel, or the train, he was already climbing mountains. (and it is worth remembering that in this pre-Rousseau, and very pre-Romantic era, mountains were thought evil, pagan, places of evil spirits and thoroughly bad times).

“I went from Pont de Beauvoisin about halfe an houre after sixe of the clocke in the morning, the eight day of June being Wednesday, and came to the foote of the Mountaine Aiguebelette which is the first Alpe, about ten of the clocke in the morning. A little on this side of the mountaine there is a poore village called Aiguebelle where we stayed a little to refresh our selves before we ascended the Mountaine. I observed an exceeding great standing poole a little on this side the Mountaine on the left hand thereof.

The things that I observed betwixt Pont de Beauvoisin, and the foote of the Mountaine were these. I saw divers red snails of an extraordinary length and greatnesse, such as I never saw before. Barely almost ripe to be cut, whereas in England they seldome cut the rathest before the beginning of August, which is almost two moneths after. Likewise I saw such wonderful abundance of chestnutte trees, that I marvailed what they did with the fruit thereof: it was told me that they fedde their swine therewith.

I ascended the Mountaine Aiguebelette about ten of the clocke in the morning a foote, and came to the foote of the other side of it towards Chambéry, about one of the clocke. Betwixt which places I take it to be about some two miles, that is a mile and a halfe to the toppe of the Mountaine, and from the toppe to the foote of the descent half a mile. I went up a foote, and delivered my horse to another to ride for me, because I thought it was more dangerous to ride then to goe a foote, though indeede all my other companions did ride: but then this accident happened to me. Certaine poore fellows which get their living especially by carrying men in chairs from the toppe of the hill to te foot thereof towards Chambéry, made a bargaine with some of my company, to carry them down in chaires, when they came to the toppe of the Mountaine, so that I kept them company towards the toppe. But they being desirous to get some money of me, lead me such an extreme pace towards the toppe, that how much soever I laboured to keepe them company I could not possibly performe it: The reason why they led such a pace, was, because they hoped that I would give them some consideration to be carryed in a chaire to the toppe, rather than I would leese their company, and so consequently my way also, which is almost impossible for a stranger to find alone by himselfe, by reason of the innumerable turnings and windings thereof, being on every side beset with infinite abundance of trees. So that at last finding that faintnesse in my selfe that I was not able to follow any longer, thous I would even break my hart with striving, I compounded with them for a cardakew which is eighteen pence English, to be carryed to the toppe of the Mountaine, which was t the least half a mile from the place where I mounted the chaire. This was the manner of their carrying me: They did put two slender poles through certaine woodden rings, which were at the foure corners of the chaire, and so carried me on their shoulders sitting in the chaire, one before, another behinde: but such was the miserable paines that the poore slaves willingly undetooke: for the gain of that cardakew, that I would not have done the like for five hundred. The wayes were exceeding difficult in regard of the steepnesse and hardnesse thereof, for they were al rocky, petricosae & salebrosae, and so uneven that a man could hardly find any sure footing on them…

…Then might I justly and truly say, that which I could never before, that I was above some of the clouds. For though that mountain be not by the sixth part so high as some others of them: yet certainly it was a great way above some of the clowdes. For I saw many of them very plainly on the sides of the Mountaine beneath me.

I mounted my horse againe about one of the clock at the foote of the mountaine, on the other side towards Chambéry, so that I was about three houres going betwixt the two feete on both sides, being but two miles distant. From the place where I mounted my horse I had two miles to Chambéry, and came thither about two of the clocke in the afternoone…


“It is a shame the Duke’s Palace is closed today; next week there are great shows here,” Patrick says. “If you can get up into the bell tower, it is marvellous. And the cathedral, in the centre, look up…you will see something special.”

I tell Patrick about Tom. “That is great, that is travel. And he came here: think of that. It is easier than thinking about my retirement.” He laughs, films a little more in the bright-white sun, and returns to his wife, waiting patiently.

With sun comes the realization I’m au Sud, in a way: life is – like more northern Lyon – lively and outdoor here, even when the inevitable 4pm thunderstorm kicks in as it has done every day for three weeks. Jean Jacques Rousseau came here from Geneva, I’ll write when I’ve seen his house, but it is no surprise that he formed his ideas here: nature is very present. Town and country feel very close – in harmony even.

Solar power plays a big role in Chambéry and the hinterlands; environmental concerns are plain. And Patrick is correct, Italy’s shadow is here to be felt in the architecture.

Or perhaps it is just the sun, a little solar power on white arms that have been shackled in rain-resistant leather for too long.