Wolfson Prize for History

I went to the prizegiving for the Wolfson Prize for History tonight, which I have been going to nearly every year for the last twenty.   I like to go in order to find out what historians have been writing, at least the good ones;  and as a mark of respect to Leonard Wolfson, who was an extraordinarily knowledgeable and enthusiastic reader of twentieth-century history.   I once walked him round the twentieth-century gallery of the National Portrait Gallery.   He knew gigantically much more about every single sitter, particularly the politicians and generals, than I did.  I enjoy the dryness of the occasion, the presumption that no-one in London ever bothers to read a book.   This year the prize went to two books, The Red Fortress by Catherine Merridale, about the Kremlin, and a book about the archaeology of the Mediterranean, The Making of the Mediterranean Sea by Cyprian Broodbank.

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Barjac

In the early afternoon, we drove from Avignon up into the rough hills to Barjac, where Anselm Kiefer bought an old silk mill in the early 1990s.   We started in the undercroft of a large shed, feeling our way through the back passages:

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Le Train Bleu

I found myself breakfasting yesterday morning in Le Train Bleu en route to Barjac in the south of France to visit Anselm Kiefer, whose exhibition opens at the RA in September.  In the morning, I walked the neighbourhood:

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I unexpectedly came across a fire:

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