by Wassily Kandinsky (1923, watercolor and ink on paper, 35.5 x 25.2 cm, Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid)
Archive for the Art Category
Delicate Tension – Wassily Kandinsky
Posted in Art with tags Delicate Tension No. 85, Wassily Kandinsky, Zarte Spannung on December 26, 2023 by telescoperThe Return of Halley’s Comet…
Posted in Art, Literature, The Universe and Stuff with tags Aphelion, Halley's Comet, Horace, Quintus Horatius Flaccus on December 11, 2023 by telescoperI was reminded at the weekend that Halley’s Comet has just passed its aphelion (furthest distance from the Sun) and is now falling back into the Solar System towards its next perihelion (closest distance to the Sun) in 2061, by which time I will almost certainly be retired.
Halley’s Comet last visited us in 1986 when I was 23 and living in Brighton. It will next appear in 2061, when I shall be 98 and lucky to be living at all.
This reminded me of a rather poignant cartoon I found a while ago on Facebook. I don’t know the name of the artist. If anyone does please let me know.

The comet’s orbital period of 75 years or so is brief by astronomical standards, as is the duration of a human life. As Quintus Horatius Flaccus (Horace to you and me) put it in one of his Odes (Book I, Ode 4, line 15):
Vitae summa brevis spem nos vetat incohare longam
Art at the Musée Fabre
Posted in Art, History with tags François-Xavier Fabre, Montpellier, Musee Fabre, Neoclassicism on November 26, 2023 by telescoperI spent several hours today wandering around the excellent Musée Fabre; for a little flavour of the place, see the little video I took in one of the rooms here. The largest part of the collection is French art, particularly from the 16th to 19th century, although there are also quite a few rooms dedicated to “northern” paintings, principally of Flemish origin. The gallery was founded by François-Xavier Fabre (1766-1837) who was born and died in Montpellier but spent most of his productive life as an artist in Italy (especially Florence). Fabre gave most of his own paintings to start the gallery, and there are many of examples of his work here, but many of his contemporaries are represented too, as well as earlier French artists such as Nicolas Poussin, and later ones such as Henri Matisse. Among the non-French artists are Peter-Paul Rubens, Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Wright of Derby, to name but a few.
The permanent collection is accompanied by an exhibition of modern art by Pierre Soulages, who passed away last year, and who specialized in sombre abstracts which make quite a contrast with the permanent collection.
Anyway, here is a gallery of random pictures I took. If you click on the image it will tell you who the artist was: the one by Soulages is obvious; the very fine bronze sculpture is Le Coureur (1955) by Germaine Richier, an retrospective of her work finished earlier this month (as you can see from the banner in the first picture). Check out the little boy in the very sepulchral scene depicting a vigil for the dead, who is looking at the viewer as if to say “What are you doing here?”











Musée Fabre, Montpellier
Posted in Art with tags Montpellier, Musee Fabre on November 26, 2023 by telescoperThe Metamorphosis of Narcissism
Posted in Art, Education, Maynooth with tags Strategic Plan on October 24, 2023 by telescoperMy attention was drawn today to a paper in the journal Research Policy. It’s an Elsevier journal so the article is behind a paywall, and the methodology looks very dodgy, but the abstract is worth reading for amusement value (the emphasis is mine):
Universities hold a prominent role in knowledge creation through research and education. In this study, we examine the effects of VC narcissism on university performance. We measure VC narcissism based on the size of the signature, in line with a methodological approach which has been widely used in the recent literature and repeatedly validated in laboratory experiments. We exploit a quasi-natural experiment of VC changes and employ a Difference-in-Difference research design, which alleviates concerns related to endogeneity and identification bias. We show that the appointment of a highly narcissistic VC leads to an overall deterioration in research and teaching performance and concomitantly league table performance. We further identify excessive financial risk taking and empire-building as possible mechanisms explaining the main results and provide evidence on the moderating role of university governance. Our findings are consistent with the view that narcissism is one of the most prominent traits of destructive leadership; they also have practical implications for leadership recruitment and the monitoring of leadership practices in the higher education sector. The results of this study extend prior research in several ways. Extant literature on executive leadership and narcissism yields inconclusive findings; this literature has mainly focused on for-profit organisations and has not considered universities. In addition, prior research in higher education on the determinants of university performance has not yet examined the role of leadership personality traits.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2023.104901
I chose the title of this post – an allusion to a famous painting by Salvador Dalí that plays with the themes of hallucination and delusion – reading a sentence in the introduction to the paper:
Over the past few years the complexity and challenges of running a higher education institution have changed beyond recognition.
In other news, I am dismayed that, because of my absence from campus on sabbatical, I am unable to attend today’s long-awaited launch event for the brand new Maynooth University Strategic Plan (which will be accompanied by a protest by postgraduate students at Maynooth about low stipends and poor working conditions). The latter seems to me to be of far greater importance to the future of the University than the former.



















