Executive Times

 

 

 

 

 

2005 Book Reviews

 

The City of Falling Angels by John Berendt

 

Rating: (Recommended)

 

 

 

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Personality

 

John Berendt’s new book about Venice, The City of Falling Angels, captures setting and personalities with precision. As a journalist, Berendt knows how to ask good questions, and contact those people who are likely to be good sources. His love for the city of Venice and his presentation of some of the people who live there, makes The City of Falling Angels absorbing for readers.

 

Here’s an excerpt, from the end of Chapter 2, pp. 40-47:

 

The meeting was opened by the general manager of the Fenice, Gianfranco Pontel, who wept and swore he would not sleep soundly again until the Fenice was rebuilt and back in operation. Pontel, a political appointee with no musical background, said he saw no reason to resign, as several people had publicly demanded he do.

Following Pontel, one official after another came forward to be­wail the fate of the Fenice, pray for its resurrection, and absolve himself of any blame. As they spoke, high above them on the cof­fered ceiling, legions of tormented souls languished in Palma Gio­vane’s Cycles of Purgatory, in silent mockery of their every word.

Mayor Cacciari, his black hair tousled, came to the microphone. The day after the fire, he had announced that the city would rebuild the Fenice within two years and that it would be rebuilt just as it was before, rather than as a modern theater. He revived the old slogan Corn ‘era, dov’era (As it was, where it was), first invoked in the cam­paign to build an exact replica of the Bell Tower in St. Mark’s Square, the Campanile, after it collapsed in 1902. The city council quickly ratified Cacciari’s decision.

Today the mayor repeated his promise. He was forthright about the rationalizations that kept running through his mind. “Afterward you invent ten thousand excuses,” he said. “You tell yourself, ‘You can’t simultaneously be the custodian of the Fenice, the police, the public utilities, the fire department. You cannot be expected to keep watch over the city house by house, church by church, museum by museum.’ You can say all these things to yourself, but you keep thinking, ‘No, it’s not possible, this cannot happen. No, it didn’t hap­pen. The Fenice cannot burn   

Though the audience was clearly unhappy, the august setting of the Ateneo Veneto served to enforce a measure of civility, if not quite the usual pin-drop silence. The assemblage gave voice to its general disgruntlement by maintaining a constant murmur that rose and fell in response to the remarks of the speaker. There came a point, however, when actual words leaped out of the undertone, dis­tinctly audible words, angry words, sharply spoken and coming from among the standees on the left side of the hall.

“When we elected you,” the voice called out to Cacciari, “we gave you the most beautiful theater in the world, intact! And you have given it back to us in ashes!” The voice belonged to the painter Ludovico De Luigi, freshly returned from New York, where his spontaneous painting of the Fenice on fire had been auctioned off by Save Venice to benefit the Fenice. De Luigi, his face flushed, his white hair flowing, pointed an accusing finger at the mayor. “It’s a disgrace!” he shouted. “Somebody has to take responsibility! If not you, then who?” The murmuring swelled to a buzz, and the buzz was punctuated by the syllables of De Luigi’s name: “Ludovico, -vico, -vico, -vico.”

Members of the audience craned their necks in half-embarrassed expectation. Would this outburst turn into one of Ludovico’s hap­penings? Were his nude models waiting in the wings? Would he haul Out another version of his bronze viola sculpture, the one with a large phallus protruding from it? Would he let rats out of a cage as he had once done in St. Mark’s Square? Apparently not. De Luigi had not had time to bring anything to this meeting but himself.

Mayor Cacciari looked wearily at him. “Venice is unique,” he said. “It’s like no other place on earth. One cannot expect me or any other elected official to assume responsibilities beyond what’s rea­sonable and normal.”

“But that’s why we elected you,” said De Luigi. “We put you in charge, whether you accept that or not! And you!” he bellowed, now pointing his finger at the startled general manager, Pontel. “For God’s sake, stop that sniveling! You’re like a baby whose toys have been taken away. Do the honorable thing. Resign!”

Satisfied that he had made his point, De Luigi subsided, and a su­perintendent stepped forward to say that the task of rebuilding the Fenice would help revive old crafts that no longer existed in Venice. There would be a need for artisans who could reproduce, by hand, the wood and stone carvings, the sculpted stucco and papier-mâché, the parquet floors, the paintings, the frescoes, the gilding, and the richly intricate fabrics for curtains, tapestries, and upholstery. The loss of the Fenice was a tragedy, he said, but the rebuilding of it would create a renaissance of all the old crafts. The cost of the re­construction would be upwards of $6o million, but money would not be a problem, because Rome recognized the value of the Fenice as a national treasure. The money would come.

The woman by the door nudged her friend. “What did I tell you? There are no accidents.”

The last to speak was a vice mayor. “Venice is a city of wood and velvet,” he said. “The damage could have been much worse. . . .”

The audience filed back out into the sunlight of Campo San Fantin, where the two cigarette-smoking policemen were now en­gaged in banter with a trio of pretty young girls. They were ex­plaining that they would love to take the girls into the theater for a peek at the wreckage, but it had been sealed by the police, and no­body could go in. Ludovico De Luigi’s voice rang out as he headed away in the company of friends. “I rneant to insult them! Let them be angry.” He gestured at the Fenice as he passed it. “Venice once had twelve opera houses. Now we have none. One more nail in the cof­fin. Look at it! An empty shell. Just like Venice.”

 

The death of Venice had been predicted, pronounced, and lamented for two hundred years, ever since 1797, when Napoleon brought the once-mighty Venetian Republic to its knees. At the height of its glory, Venice had been the world’s supreme maritime power. Its reach had extended from the Alps to Constantinople, and its wealth had been unequaled. The architectural variety of her palaces—Byzantine, Gothic, Renaissance, baroque, neoclassical— chronicled an evolving aesthetic shaped by a millennium of con­quests and their accumulated spoils.

But by the eighteenth century, Venice had given itself over to hedonism and dissipation—masked balls, gaming tables, prostitu­tion, and corruption. The ruling class abandoned its responsibilities, and the state became enfeebled, powerless to resist Napoleon’s ap­proaching army. The Great Council of the Venetian Republic voted itself out of existence on May 12, 1797, and the last in the line of 120 doges resigned. From that day forward, there had been no doges in the Doge’s Palace, no Council of Ten in the Great Council Chamber, no shipbuilders turning out warships in the Arsenal, no prisoners shuffling across the Bridge of Sighs on the way to the dungeons.

“I will be an Attila for the Venetian state!” Napoleon had thunderedin Italian so as not to be misunderstood. He proved good to his word. His men looted the Venetian treasury, demolished scores of buildings, pulled precious stones from their settings, melted down objects of gold and silver, and carted off major paintings for installation in the Louvre and the Brera Museum in Milan.

Venice emerged from its defeat an impoverished provincial vil­lage, unable to do much more than settle into a languid and pictur­esque decline. It is this Venice that we have come to know—not the triumphant and arrogant conqueror but the humbled and crum­bling ruin.

The fallen Venice became a symbol of faded grandeur, a place of melancholy, nostalgia, romance, mystery, and beauty. As such, it was irresistible to painters and writers. Lord Byron, who lived in a palace on the Grand Canal for two years, seemed almost to prefer the decaying Venice—”Perchance even dearer in her day of woe, / Than when she was a boast, a marvel, and a show.” Henry James saw Venice as a much-used tourist attraction, “a battered peep-show and bazaar.” John Ruskin, focusing on the city’s architectural riches, hailed Venice as “the paradise of cities.” To Charles Dickens, Venice was a “ghostly city,” and for Thomas Mann it was a darkly seduc­tive curiosity— “half fairy tale, half snare.”

I understood why so many stories set in Venice were mysteries. Sinister moods could be easily conjured by shadowy back canals and labyrinthine passageways, where even the initiated sometimes lost their way. Reflections, mirrors, and masks suggested that things were not what they seemed. Hidden gardens, shuttered windows, and un­seen voices spoke of secrets and possibly the occult. Moorish-style arches were reminders that, after all, the unfathomable mind of the East had had a hand in all this.

In the soul-searching aftermath of the Fenice fire, VenetianS seemed to be asking themselves the very questions that I, too, had been wondering about—namely, what it meant to live in so rarefied and unnatural a setting. Was there anything left of the Venice that Virginia Woolf described as “the playground of all that was gay, mysterious and irresponsible”?

This much I knew: The population of Venice had been declin­ing steadily for the past forty-five years—from 174,000 in 1951 to 70,000 at the time of the Fenice fire. The rising cost of living and the scarcity of jobs had caused a migration to the mainland. Venice was no longer impoverished, however. On the contrary, northern Italy now had one of the highest per capita incomes in Europe.

Because of its two centuries of poverty, the city’s architectural heritage was still remarkably free of modern intrusions. The nine­teenth and twentieth centuries had left barely any mark on it at all. Walking through Venice now, one still encountered a succession of vistas that looked much as they had when Canaletto painted them in the eighteenth century.

 

Within days of my arrival, I began to consider the idea of extending my stay and living in Venice for a while. I had learned basic Italian grammar at the age of sixteen, when I spent the summer in Torino as an exchange student living with an Italian family, and it had stayed with me. I could read the newspaper with ease, understand the spoken word passably, and speak well enough to make myself understood.

I decided I would live in an apartment, not a hotel. I would walk around the city with a notebook and, on occasion, a small tape recorder. I would have no fixed agenda, but I would look more at the people who lived in Venice than at the eleven million tourists who filed through it every year.

In preparation for this undertaking, I reread the classic texts.

They were not at all encouraging. Mary McCarthy put it bluntly in I’7enice Observed: “Nothing can be said [about Venice] (including this statement) that has not been said before.” McCarthy’s parenthetical comment, “including this statement,” was an allusion to Henry James, who had written in “Venice,” an 1882 essay, “There is notoriously nothing more to be said on the subject.. . . It would be a sad day in­deed when there should be something new to say. . . . I am not sure there is not a certain impudence in pretending to add anything to it.”

These declarations were not as forbidding as they seemed. Mary McCarthy was referring mainly to clichéd observations about Venice that people mistakenly think they have originated—for example, that St. Mark’s Square is like an open-air drawing room, that Venice at night resembles a stage set, and that gondolas are all painted a fu­nereal black and look like hearses. Henry James was reacting to the overabundance of travelogues and personal reminiscences of Venice, which was an ultrafashionable travel destination in his day.

My interest, in any case, was not Venice per se but people who live in Venice, which is not the same thing. Nor, apparently, had it been a common approach in books about Venice. The best-known novels and movies set in Venice tended to be about people who were just passing through: Death in Venice, The Wings of the Dove, The Aspen Papers, Don’t Look Now, Summertime, Across the River and Into the Trees, The Comfort of Strangers. The main characters of all these stories, and many more besides, were neither Venetians nor resident expatriates. They were transients. My view of Venice would focus on people who, for the most part, lived there.

Why Venice?

Because, to my mind, Venice was uniquely beautiful, isolated, inward-looking, and a powerful stimulant to the senses, the intel­lect, and the imagination.

Because, despite its miles of tangled streets and canals, Venice was a lot smaller and more manageable than it seemed at first. At eighteen hundred acres, in fact, Venice was barely twice the size of Central Park. Because I had always found the sound of church bells pealing every fifteen minutes—close at hand and distant, solo and in concert, each with its own persona—a tonic to the ears and nerves.

Because I could not imagine a more enticing beat to assign my­self for an indefinite period of time.

And because, if the worst-case scenario for the rising sea level were to be believed, Venice might not be there very long.

 

For all the reasons Berendt had for writing this book, there are multiple more reasons why readers will enjoy The City of Falling Angels. The title is referred to on page 294: “After part of a marble angel fell from a parapet of the ornate but sadly dilapidated Santa Maria della Salute Church, Arrigo Cipriani, the owner of Harry’s Bar, pasted a sign outside the church warning, ‘Beware of Falling Angels.’” Readers need not beware of The City of Falling Angels. Be ready to book a flight after reading it.

 

Steve Hopkins, November 21, 2005

 

 

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The recommendation rating for this book appeared

 in the December 2005 issue of Executive Times

 

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