Thunderclap: A Memoir of Art and Life & Sudden Death

by Laura Cumming

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"New York Times bestselling author and art critic Laura Cumming reveals the fascinating, little-known story of the Thunderclap--the massive explosion at a gunpowder store in Holland that killed Carel Fabritius, renowned painter of The Goldfinch, and nearly killed Johannes Vermeer, painter of Girl with a Pearl Earring--two of the greatest artists of the 17th century"--

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MM_Jones Parallel explorations, one nonfiction, on the Delft Thunderclap and the artist Carel Fabritius

Member Reviews

9 reviews
I read this as I enjoy books about art and I enjoyed the author’s previous book, On Chapel Sands.
I found this book interesting, but not really engaging, as it is too digressive and meandering, not that I don’t like the asides and commentary, but they loosen the structure of this book too much for me.
The book interpolates:
• Detailed descriptions of paintings from the Dutch “Golden Age”, concentrating on the works of Carel Fabritius, of whose paintings I was only aware of The Goldfinch before reading this book.
• Descriptions of Cumming’s father, James Cumming, his life and paintings.
• General observations and ruminations on life, and art, and mortality.
Sometimes the author makes links between these mini-essays, but show more sometimes not, although throughout she returns to descriptions of Fabritius’ paintings, from the opening discussion of A View of Delft in the National Gallery, London (which I can’t remember noticing), to her final comments upon The Goldfinch in the Mauritshuis, The Hague.

The book is well written, informative and interesting, but I missed something. Perhaps I feel that the book is an act of catharsis for the author, rather than of discovery for the reader.

I read the Kindle edition of this book, which has the advantage over the hardback edition of being able to zoom in to the detail of the illustrated paintings, which appear rather small in the undersized hardback (21cm x 15cm, with a lot of white space around the illustrations).
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½
A memoir of art and life and sudden death

This is quite a difficult book to classify and I suppose it is a memoir but not as they are conventionally conceived. For me this was a study of Dutch paintings of the 1600s with offshoots into the life of Cumming and her painter father James Cumming and the impact he had on the way she 'sees' paintings.

The first thunderclap in the book is the explosion of gunpowder stored in a cellar next door to where the artist Carel Fabritius, who along with everyone else in the building, died. It isn't clear how the explosion was started - a spark from a lamp or a metal key turning in the keyhole - but the whumph was so loud it was heard 70 miles away. Fabritius was 32 years old. Sudden death. What then show more follows is a journey through Dutch paintings and how they have featured in Cumming's life: a painting she visited time and time again when living in London, paintings she saw on their only family visit abroad to Amsterdam and Delft, iconic paintings but all linking back to Carel Fabritius.

What I particularly loved about this book was Cumming's writing. She writes about paintings creating images with words and shows us that we can all look at and describe what we are seeing. For instance, she writes about Adriaen Coorte's Still Life with Shells

For me the most startling mobilisation involves a group of shells arranged along the ledge like a corps de ballet in the footlights. They are all on tenterhooks. A long spiny shell poised on tiptoe stretches an arm out towards a dainty little red one, as if longing to touch her, or to invite a pas de deux. It's spines tick-tack along the stone, like Prufrock's claws at the bottom of the sea. A pearly conch sounds out its rising music. The eye sees, and it hears.
p144

Of course her artist father was instrumental in how Cumming saw things - as probably was her artist mother. At school she was taught that the Golden Age Dutch paintings were all about things; things that were revered and therefore needed to be recorded for posterity - look at my wealth. Her father laughed at this,

Paintings are not substitutes, he said, they are something else altogether. A likeness is never the only reason an artist paints a picture.
p10

I was much less convinced by other aspects of the book. Yes there are sudden deaths and it is about aspects of life but they weigh lightly in the book and feel like add-ons. But the writing about art. It is sublime.
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½
This is another book I selected from the long list for the inaugural Women’s Prize for Nonfiction. I thought from the description it would focus on the 1654 explosion when a large store of gunpowder destroyed half the city of Delft – much like what happened in Beirut in 2020. Instead it was much deeper and richer than I expected.

The book itself is nominally about Dutch painter Carel Fabritius, who was killed in the Thunderclap of 1654 and left behind only a few paintings. Fabritius was a student of Rembrandt and a possible stepping stone to Vermeer. The few paintings he left behind, including The Goldfinch are masterful. In the last few pages of the book, we are let into a secret from microanalysis of The Goldfinch.

The author show more illuminates the Golden Age of Dutch Painting for us, letting us see the day to day lives and environs of many painters, most living in Delft.

Cumming was much influenced by her father, Scottish painter James Cumming and his love for art which he richly embedded in his daughter. And so this book is also partly memoir as she recounts her father and her cherished experiences as she saw what living ones art entails.

This book is highly readable – and for me, not knowing much of Dutch art, it was absolutely fascinating. The reproductions scattered through the book are lovely. I read a hardcopy edition of the book, published in the US by Scribner and I must say the paper is beautiful quality: heavy and slick. It feels so nice to the touch and is perfect for the fifty or so illustrations. A near perfect smallish book.
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½
Focusing on Dutch artist C. Fabritius and his painting A View of Delft with a Musical Instrument Seller’s Stall, painted in 1652, the author tells Fabritius’s story, her own, her father’s, Delftt, and other Dutch artists. In other words, it is an all-encompassing book about Dutch art history but always comes back to Fabritius. He was killed as a result of a “thunderclap” of an explosion of stored gunpowder near his house, but that killed many more. Fabritius’s life was cut very short and the author wonders what more he could have created. There’s an excellent examination of one of his most famous works, The Goldfinch. I really liked the audiobook—the author has a beautiful and calming voice—but you must have the ebook show more or real book so you can look at the artwork while listening to her. show less
Laura Cumming is an art historian and she tries to solve the mysteries surrounding the life of Dutch painter Carol Fabritius. Fabritius died tragically in 1654 in Delft when a store house of gunpowder exploded and destroyed about half of the small city. He was a student of Rembrandt but developed his own unique style although Cumming points out that very few of his paintings have survived. As well as describing the work of Fabritius, Cumming tells the reader about the art of her own father and the works and styles of many Dutch artists. The descriptions are wonderful and give the reader a sense of the life and preoccupations of Dutch society during the 1600's. Cumming pays tribute to her father with her writing on his life . I really show more enjoyed reading this book. There are a number of reproductions of the art that Cumming describes show less
I very nearly bought this book, having greatly enjoyed The Vanishing Velasquez. Thankfully I did not waste my money! Sure, Carel Fabritius did a couple of interesting paintings and his demise in the massive gunpowder explosion in Delft adds to his mystique. But good grief, this book stretches out its limited material with pseudo-intellectual prattle about life and fate. Maybe I don't appreciate enough about Dutch Golden Age painting but this is boring stuff.
Interesting story and well written - a bit too wordy.

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Author Information

Picture of author.
5 Works 1,131 Members
Laura Cumming has been the art critic of the Observer since 1999. She has contributed to the London Evening Standard, the Guardian, and Vogue. Her book The Vanishing Velquez was longlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize and was a New York Times bestseller. She lives in London.

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Thunderclap: A Memoir of Art and Life & Sudden Death
Original publication date
2023-07-23
Important places
Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands; Delft, South Holland, Netherlands
Important events
Gunpowder explosion 12th October 1654
Epigraph
Come back! Even as a shadow, even as a dream . . .
EURIPEDES
Dedication
For James Cumming
Ever Loved
First words
I love a painting that hangs in the National Gallery in London.
Quotations
Seeing is everything. Looking is everything. It was for him, it is for me. If I had no more speech, hearing or movement, I would still have the active life of looking; and the luxury of its replay in my dreams at night. The i... (show all)nsatiable longing is constantly and miraculously fulfilled; pure joy, total gratitude. And art increases this looking, gives you other eyes to see with, other ways of seeing, other visions of existence. Art and artists enlarge our world.
p108
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The painting lives. The creator survives.
Blurbers
Hoare, Philip; Carew, Kegie; McWilliam, Candia

Classifications

Genres
Art & Design, Biography & Memoir, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, History
DDC/MDS
759.9492Arts & recreationPaintingHistory, geographic treatment, biographyOther geographic areasEuropeOther partsNetherlands
LCC
ND653 .F3 .C86Fine ArtsPaintingPaintingHistory
BISAC

Statistics

Members
258
Popularity
125,692
Reviews
8
Rating
(4.18)
Languages
Dutch, English, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
14
ASINs
3