Deb (Readerbuzz) Nance's Reviews > All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me
All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me
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Deb (Readerbuzz) Nance's review
bookshelves: art, death, healing, inspiration, memoir, nonfiction
Jan 01, 2024
bookshelves: art, death, healing, inspiration, memoir, nonfiction
Patrick Bringley leaves a cush job at The New Yorker after the death of his beloved older brother and he becomes a guard at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The work offers time for reflection and over the course of five or so years, Bringley heals. He and his wife have two children, and he continues to work at the Met for five more years. Bringley develops close friendships there and thinks about art and life and death and meaning.
A lovely, thoughtful book. I enjoyed Bringley's reflections on life as well as the anecdotes he shares.
My favorite part was the last day he spent at the Met.
He decides his favorite piece of art is a Crucifixion by Fra Angelico. "My fondness for it owes something to my biases...I like old Christian art and its luminous sadness. I like that the picture makes me think of Tom, however painful that may be. Christ's body looks like it's been nailed to the mast of some storm-tossed ship. It's the center around which the rest of the world seems to rock and wheel. A graceful, broken body, it reminds us again of the obvious: that we're mortal, that we suffer, that bravery in suffering is beautiful, that loss inspires love and lamentation."
He takes away much from his experiences in the museum. "Artists create records of transitory moments, appearing to stop their clocks. They help us believe that some things aren't transitory at all but rather remain beautiful, true, majestic, sad, or joyful over many lifetimes---and here is the proof, painted in oils, carved in marble, stitched into quilts."
And more: "But when I took up my post ten years ago there were things I didn't understand. Sometimes, life can be about simplicity and stillness, in the vein of a watchful guard amid shimmering works of art. But it is also about the head-down work of living and struggling and growing and creating."
A lovely, thoughtful book. I enjoyed Bringley's reflections on life as well as the anecdotes he shares.
My favorite part was the last day he spent at the Met.
He decides his favorite piece of art is a Crucifixion by Fra Angelico. "My fondness for it owes something to my biases...I like old Christian art and its luminous sadness. I like that the picture makes me think of Tom, however painful that may be. Christ's body looks like it's been nailed to the mast of some storm-tossed ship. It's the center around which the rest of the world seems to rock and wheel. A graceful, broken body, it reminds us again of the obvious: that we're mortal, that we suffer, that bravery in suffering is beautiful, that loss inspires love and lamentation."
He takes away much from his experiences in the museum. "Artists create records of transitory moments, appearing to stop their clocks. They help us believe that some things aren't transitory at all but rather remain beautiful, true, majestic, sad, or joyful over many lifetimes---and here is the proof, painted in oils, carved in marble, stitched into quilts."
And more: "But when I took up my post ten years ago there were things I didn't understand. Sometimes, life can be about simplicity and stillness, in the vein of a watchful guard amid shimmering works of art. But it is also about the head-down work of living and struggling and growing and creating."
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All the Beauty in the World.
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Reading Progress
December 29, 2023
–
Started Reading
December 31, 2023
– Shelved
January 1, 2024
– Shelved as:
art
January 1, 2024
– Shelved as:
death
January 1, 2024
– Shelved as:
healing
January 1, 2024
– Shelved as:
inspiration
January 1, 2024
– Shelved as:
memoir
January 1, 2024
– Shelved as:
nonfiction
January 1, 2024
–
Finished Reading
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Louise (A Strong Belief in Wicker)
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Jan 03, 2024 07:19AM
That sounds rather fascinating. I'll watch out for it.
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