This Week In Art Restoration Mishaps, A Historic Clock Tower In Prague
"The 600-year-old Orloj, ... one of Prague's most famous landmarks, is at the centre of an embarrassing row amid claims that an artist endowed it with likenesses of his friends and acquaintances in an expensive restoration project, possibly as a joke." - The Guardian
In his 18-page complaint, Milan Patka argues that the artist hired to restore the work, Stanislav Jirčík, has diverged so far from the original as to replace some of faces with likenesses of his own friends, and in other cases changed the ages, genders, and clothing of the figures. In one case, a scene depicting a man with auburn hair in a green coat transformed into a man with jet black locks and a new bushy mustache; a dog in the scene that was once a black mutt, is now a brown-and-white shepherd.
I
She’s done the most difficult thing,
Lived a life of myth
Inside a life of flesh
Been a symbol to millions
While being a woman to herself
Shaped the contours of an age
While seeming small on the stage
Held the hand of a nation
While it went through ambiguous transitions
Been on the face of coins and notes
While dealing with a family flawed as all are
Been the fairytale figure in our children’s dreams While the nation was often ragged at its seams
It’s hard enough to manage
The balance of a life
And to be the stabiliser of millions
In times of glory and of strife
II
Sometimes I catch a glimpse
Of her at a window
Or holding that severe
And maternal expression
That often calms the nation
Or sometimes in a horse-drawn carriage
Trotting past on a commemorative day
I catch the wave of her hand
And wonder how she’s held It together all these years
Never showing doubt
Or faltering, or falling down
Beneath the despair of the times Or giving up, or not being able
To rise up to her duties
For some reason or other,
And I think that there’s Something greater than duty
That drives her
And holds her up,
In that slowly fading,
Always glimmering throne.
And it’s something to do
With power, and something
Also to do with the mysterious Destiny of a people
Who need the symbol of a crown
To grasp what they can be
And what they can do
On the dim roads of history
Where sometimes a symbol Helps a people rise
And stay risen
While all around
Darkness prowls
The boundaries of lands
That toil and yet do not thrive.
III
Once I sat down to lunch
With her and saw from close up
The mystery of that flesh Inside the fairytale.
Like all our wise mothers
She understands time,
Understands that things Are wrought day by day,
With steadiness,
With steeliness,
Wearing down rocks
With the patience
Of constant rain,
Keeping to a manageable vision,
Holding the emotions firm,
Rising each day to do the job
You’re called to, with calmness, And a quiet humour,
Seeing through the bluster
Of men who talk but do not last
And grasping that time
Is like one’s children
That one attends to
With care and love
And toughness.
It’s with such humility,
Such unseen fierceness
Of will that with
A barely perceptible smile
She has wielded
The sceptre of these isles
And been an unlikely pillar Among the leaders of the world For seventy eventful years.
Far more than being a queen
She’s done the most difficult thing,
Inside a life of flesh
Lived a life of myth.