Hello, my last blog was one of the least read blogs I’ve ever written with 49 views. No one cares that I went on holiday, and fair enough. I remember having to watch videos my granny made on her camrecorder and copied them onto VHS of her cruises round the world and they were dull, I get it. Mainly we did just have a nice time which is boring. Compare that to a blog I wrote this time last year called “double bad news” that had 374 views.
374 minus 49 = 325 people that are only interested in bad things happening to me. If you’re one of them sorry but you will be disappointed by this blog. Other than getting told off by a librarian and getting a massive bruise mainly everything was fine. So quit now if you like.
But for the nice people still reading I’ll tell you the story of my first solo exhibition. We got back from holiday on a Tuesday afternoon and we had a ton of things to do. The next day I was putting up my exhibition, but because it’s a Wednesday (so no school in France) I teach a little group of kids English in my house. We are currently making a video of the story of Goldilocks and the 3 bears.
After my English teaching I rushed off to the gallery and got there just before they closed for a 2 hour lunch. The French love their long lunches, but it’s super annoying when you can’t even use your long lunch break to get some useful shopping done because loads of shops close for lunch. Once when I had French lessons the person in charge apologised that we only had a “very short lunch” of one hour. Anyway I got to the library 5 minutes before lunch which meant I could stay locked in working on the exhibition over lunch time. The paintings all clipped onto invisible strings, so the small ones were fairly easy to sort. I needed help doing the massive one. It’s really hard to put up a painting together when there’s a language barrier. When I got home I asked Dan what the French word for diagonal was. He told me it was “diagonale” and I was fuming. As well as the big paintings I had these little A4 lino prints and gelli prints. And then I had some of my print making things to display to show the process.
The private view (which I think is badly named because it means the opening night that anyone can normally come to) was on the Friday. The library lady told me on the Wednesday that she had all the food, and drink for it. Which was kind of annoying because a few weeks earlier Dan had gone to Spain to get a load of cheap wine and snacks for it, and paper plates and everything. I just assumed I had to provide that, and it was lovely that I didn’t have to, but it would have been better if we hadn’t made a whole trip to another country to stock up. We served all their much nicer wine so I still have a lot of cheap wine to drink. I also made a lemon cake and cookies because the French don’t really think of that kind of thing, they just had a lot of charcuterie stuff.
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Gelli prints |
People started arriving half an hour before opening, just random local old people who must come every time for the food. It was weird seeing them looking at my art and taking photos, someone was even writing notes. Some of my friends started arriving after a while and I went to poor one of them a drink and got told off by the librarian! Apparently the bar is not open until I have made a speech in front of the mayor. I had to sneak my friend a water because she was so thirsty! It’s not the first time I’ve been told off by a librarian of course. Librarians are kind of the opposite of dyslexic art students and if you are going to give dyslexic art students a photo copy budget of 100 quid then you should expect to find them sprinkling glitter and bits of string into the photo copier. We’re certainly not going to waste that budget photocopying books, because we all hate reading.
Anyway I made a little speech about my work which Dan translated into French and then we could finally drink something. Quite a few people wanted to talk to me, which resulted in me getting none of my own cake and cookies that I’d spent the whole day making. But other than that it was a lovely night. I sold one of the mountain canvases and my painting on 3 stones, to a woman who’s kid once painted a stone that she loved but then it went missing. Something like that, but she was very emotionally attached to this stone paintings. I felt like a fraud selling the stones, I don’t even really own them, I stole them from a beach and then painted them. I also sold 3 lino prints.
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Painting the rocks |
The next day we went to the water park. Since coming back from Corsica Eric has been desperate to swim because he missed out on the holiday, so we went on the opening day of Frenzy water park. It was warm, like 25 degrees, but a bit grey which meant there were only 20-30 people there for the first couple of hours. Last summer we went to a different water park where you had to queue up to an hour for each of the big slides, here the most we waited for one slide was 5 minutes. They had loads of big slides but unfortunately the boys were too small for many of them. They could go on the inflatable obstacle course, the body board slide where you go on your front and when you hit the water you skim it for ages, the slide that throws you up in the air and 3 of the water chutes.
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My favourite slide |
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The bruise maker |
I went on one slide with Dan where it’s a normal water chute at first you, do a bit of a spiral in a tunnel and then you go very fast nearly vertically into a big half pipe. I’ve never seen someone so scared yet so repressed as Dan, he said “crikey” a lot. We also both had a go on the one that throws you into the air, there were different levels between 1 and 8, I found I had no control of what happened or how I would land so one time smashed the water so hard I got a big bruise on my leg.
But all in all it was fun, the boys actually just loved watching people do the big throw you in the air slides. I wish you could join a water park like people join gyms and just go on your lunch break or whatever. Talking weird lunch breaks, even the water park closed for lunch! Not all of it, but all the big slides were closed for an hour for Lunch. That’s weird right?
Recently I’ve been trying to make a bit more effort with French. I’ve signed up to some new online classes and I’m trying to do more jobs that previously I would have let Dan do, because he’s better at French. Partly because I have to because he’s out at work all day now and partly because it will help with French. My Spanish friend (who speaks to me in French) challenged me on this recently. She came round for lunch and it was the first time she’d come without translator Dan being there. She speaks very good French enough to have a French job in a clothes shop, and she just learned by talking. She said when she moved here she had to do all the admin and go to all the meetings you have to go to when you’re trying to find a job and a house and a school for your kids. She was saying how I should have been the one to go to the hospital with Eric when he needed stitches. But it always seems like it makes more sense for Dan to go if possible.
This week I’ve done a lot though. At the exhibition I spoke to a lot of people in French then I went out roller skating at the beach and then for a meal with my roller skate club, where I’m the only English person. I have previously avoided socials because I just think they’ll be awkward. I then went to an estate agents to ask about houses to rent, and I was really proud of myself that I had a good conversation with that guy. I also took the boys to get a hair cut, that was fairly awkward, because I tried to subtley say to the hair dresser that she knows how to cut hair better than an 8 year old so please don’t listen too much to his instructions, but I couldn’t quite say that well and would you believe my 8 year old would not translate that sentence for me.
And then this is less fun but I had to go to the dentist for a filling. I don’t enjoy the combination of doing something horrible and adding in my embarrassing French, I don’t know dentist specific words like “filling” either. She spoke to me a bit in bad English she said she would put me to sleep and I was pretty surprised and then she said “not you, I will put your teeth to sleep” which is a cuter way of saying I’ll numb the area. Then she got really confused between the words tooth and teeth and I explained it for her. Anyway my teeth had a nice sleep and woke up all better.
Next week I’ll have more chance to practise French at a meeting at Percy’s new secondary school, but I’ll write more about the whole weird French school system and how we dropped the ball on school admin, resulting in a parent knocking on our door next time.