Our Theme - June/July 2022
Ebony and Ivory - forever linked in contrast and balance
Ebony and Ivory - forever linked in contrast and balance
HF #208 | Christine Stoman
Musing on our theme, Ebony and Ivory, I see my hesitant young fingers on the piano, idly wondering who decided to position the blacks and the whites just so and what would happen if I could scramble the keys around. Today I’m wise enough to know that, had I mixed them up in childish mischief, I would have destroyed the delicate balance that is piano music.
It is the question of balance that keeps me musing. Our theme denotes contrast, balance and nature. Black and white. Dark and light. Wood and bone. Talking interior design, it could translate to starkness and softness. In the spiritual realm, to sin and purity. Opposites they are and seemingly in balance like the seesaws of childhood.
In art there is the famous Italian word chiaroscuro, meaning ‘light-dark’, where contrasting light and shade are used to dramatic effect, balancing natural light and dark surfaces. Think Vermeer (The Milkmaid) and Leonardo da Vinci’s anatomy sketches.
Meanwhile, a road trip through the desert to the coast revealed a signboard pointing into an Adolph Jentsch landscape: EBONY. A railway siding, not visible to the passing eyes, where in 1915 at the start of World War I the South African troops won victory over the governing Germans. The latter had built makeshift stone ramparts overlooking the Khan Valley, later photographed by historian Klaus Dierks. At least they could watch the play of light and shade while awaiting the invaders.
Best of all in this desert landscape, in this wonderful year of rain, was the yellow grass waving at passers-by. A perfect picture of Ebony and Ivory.
Christine Stoman


