Amsterdam has about a million museums. Tulip museum. Purse
museum. Cheese. Pancake. Rembrandt.
Alas, we don’t have time or money to see them all, but the two that made
our must-see-whilst-in-Amsterdam cut were 1) Van Gogh and 2) Anne Frank.
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| Drinking coffee and watching the weird Amsterdam weather (sleet to rain to sunshine all in about 2 minutes) |
I’ve always loved Van Gogh. As a human being—fascinating. As
an artist—brilliant, but in a very human way, if that makes sense. And as a
lover of sunflowers, I’m predisposed to adore. One of the coolest things about
the museum exhibit we saw (Van Gogh at Work) is that it follows his career from
its earliest stages. You get to watch his technique evolve, see him figure out
perspective and color combinations as he studies under and admires the work of
others. If you looked at his landscapes closely, you could see grains of sand,
sometimes a bit of grass, stuck in the thick dabs of paint. I love that he
immersed himself so much in the world he painted that it literally became part
of the piece. I think the most powerful writing is done in much the same way.
When we first entered the museum, I told Andrew, “If we get
separated, meet me at the sunflowers,” which was quite poetic if I do say so
myself, but also unnecessary (thank goodness) because we both completely missed
the sunflower wing on our first go-round. After a brief moment of panic in which
I considered the fact that the sunflowers might be *gasp* ON LOAN, I gathered
myself and approached the
information desk, where a skinny Dutchman assured me I was just an idiot, and
they were on the first floor.
The Anne Frank Museum we visited after a delicious Indian
meal on the Prinsengracht
canal. I’ve always felt a kinship to Anne, as silly as that may be to say. I
remember reading her diary as a young girl myself, getting caught up in her
precocious accounts, being touched by her audacity and hope, and then
experiencing the shocking revelation that had I been alive in 1942, this story
could have been mine. Like me, Anne wanted to be a writer, longed to pen
stories that people actually read and admired. But unlike me, Anne was
confident it would happen for her. And in a strange and poignant way, it did.
I also
played Anne in my school’s 6th grade production of the Anne Frank
play. Mostly when I think about that performance, I think about the fact that I
had to do an “on-stage kiss,” aka a boy put his hand on my face and then kissed
his own hand as quickly as possible. At twelve-years-old, this was about as
sweat-inducing as anything we could imagine. The halls were atwitter with the
scandal of it for weeks.
Many of my
lines in the play, which I tried so hard to understand and do justice to at the
time, took on new life when I reread them on the walls of the house where she
hid. The slow and winding walk through the house, past the original secret
bookcase and up steep staircases, gave you just enough time to digest the
tidbits you saw. A single quote. A smiling childhood portrait. The red and pink
checkered diary itself, open on a pillow. The windows are covered, as they had
to be when the Franks lived there, so they wouldn’t be detected, and the effect
is subtle, but smothering. Two years in this place? A teenager? The reality of
the situation I had read about as a kid started settling in.
The museum
ends on a tear-jerking, but hopeful note, which I like to think Anne would
approve of. Otto, her father and only surviving member of the Amsterdam
hideaway house, speaks on a short video clip. It’s impossible to imagine the
extent of his sadness, but rather than succumb to it, he spent the rest of his
life advocating against discrimination and injustice like that suffered by so
many in WWII.
Today is out last day in Amsterdam! After Andrew finishes
doing laundry at this little roadside Laundromat, we’re going to see where the
day takes us and then hop on a night train to Munich, where (summon all positive
vibes) my suitcase will finally reach me.
Good thing I look so good in this black and white sweater because I’ve
had to wear it four days in a row now.


Loved reading every word of this.....EXCEPT the suitcase part!
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