But I'm glad I went, because it was screening in a cinema on East 68th Street, and that's just a few blocks from the Frick Collection, which I haven't
visited in years. (We had no classes today, because of the Jewish holiday.) Amazing collection, beautiful place! I was entranced again by Bellini's remarkable St Francis, by Holbein's Thomas More, by the Rembrandts and Constables, Veronese and Corot, and the Fragonard room... But what particularly moved me, with a quiet deep joy that could easily have expressed itself in tears, were three religious paintings: Duccio's Temptation of Christ on the Mountain (above; the angels at upper right were added later - the picture works better if you imagine them gone); a nearly
surreal Pièta attributed to the circle of the Swiss painter Konrad Witz (right; how the Virgin's robes flow off endlessly at bottom like the infinity of her sorrow, what mute sadness in the figure shrouded in red at right, remarkable landscape...); and Claude Lorrain's nearly Poussinian Sermon on the Mount, which I can only describe as depicting and conveying a sublime peace through the uncharacteristic dark knobby center with its vision of harmony in the circle of Jesus with the disciples, telling them the strange good news
that it is the poor who are blessed, those who mourn, the meek, and those who hunger and thirst for righteousness... (On the Frick website you can look closely at each of these: Duccio, Witz and Claude.)Ludicrous religion may often be, and a menace, too, especially in ignorant contemporary American forms. But that's not the whole story.