Cultural Critic and Essayist

Henrik Bering

29 articles 2004–2017

Henrik Bering is a journalist and cultural critic who contributed essays and book reviews to The Weekly Standard from 2004 to 2017. His writing for the magazine spanned a wide range of subjects including history, culture, the arts, and European affairs. Of Danish origin, he brings a transatlantic perspective to his commentary on politics and cultural trends.

Italian for Beginners

February 10, 2017 · Table of Contents, movies, Language

The first words I learned in Italian were gamba di legno, or wooden leg, for which Benito Mussolini and Walt Disney are to blame: After the war, my mother, who was fluent in Italian, had been involved with a charity that provided artificial limbs for Italian amputees. And for decades thereafter,…

A Survivor's Tale

December 9, 2016 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

An essential job requirement for a government minister in a totalitarian dictatorship is a willingness to suffer endless humiliation at the hands of the supreme leader. Deng Xiaoping (1904-97) delivers a master class in the art of self-abasement, when subjected to the sadistic whims of Chairman…

Picture Perfect

February 12, 2016 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

Paintings are delicate things that don’t much like fire, floods, wars, or general mayhem. Velázquez's masterpiece, Las Meninas, which shows the infanta of Spain with her entourage of ladies-in-waiting, her dwarves, and her calf-size mastiff, certainly has had its share of close calls. To save it…

Epistolary Art

October 5, 2015 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

That aesthetic discernment can exist entirely on its own, devoid of human warmth, is demonstrated by the lives of the art connoisseurs Bernard Berenson and Kenneth Clark. As leading arbiters of taste in their day, both enjoyed all the trappings of success. Berenson, the oracle on Italian…

Let George Do It

July 20, 2015 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

One of the benefits of living in a monarchy is that whenever an Englishman feels miserable he can always point to some hapless royal whose lot is worse. As the British aristocrat Richard Grenville-Temple noted back in the days of George III: 

Looking Backward

January 26, 2015 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

As Charles Dickens’s Child’s History of England makes plain, Charles II was not an upstanding individual: “Whenever you see his portrait, with his swarthy, ill-looking face and great nose, you may fancy him at his court in Whitehall surrounded by the worst vagabonds in the kingdom (though they were…

Lafayette Squared

October 27, 2014 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

Whenever a French president visits Washington and White House speechwriters need to come up with something nice to say about France, Lafayette is cited as the man who came to America’s aid in its war of independence. Whether this produces the intended emotional echo in the visitor’s mind is a…

Mirror, Mirror

June 30, 2014 · Books, book reviews, Magazine

In the history of art, self-portraiture constitutes a world of its own, presenting us with moods ranging from the lighthearted to the sordid. There is sheer delight in Rubens’s painting of himself and his first wife Isabella Brant in a bower of honeysuckle bliss; acute menace when Caravaggio decks…

Scratch an Actor

June 2, 2014 · book reviews, Magazine, Henrik Bering

In the annals of villainy, Laurence Olivier’s portrayal of Richard III holds a special place: In the 1955 film version of Shakespeare’s play, Olivier’s Richard brims with malevolent energy, all the more lethal for being witty. In On Acting, his tricks-of-the-trade book from 1986, Olivier describes…

Freudian Brush

December 9, 2013 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

Lucian Freud (1922-2011) did not tolerate lateness, as Mick Jagger’s onetime wife Jerry Hall found out the hard way back in 1997. For four months, she had been sitting for her portrait, in which she was breast-feeding her and Jagger’s son. But being punctual was not among Ms. Hall’s virtues, and…

How It All Began

November 18, 2013 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

While the Second World War is considered the necessary war against Nazi evil, World War I is widely seen as a pointless tragedy, an impression first shaped by the British trench poets Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon, then reinforced by Barbara Tuchman’s Guns of August (1962). That book, which…

Citizen Hirst

December 7, 2009 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

Damien Hirst

Is Ugly Beautiful?

November 24, 2008 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

The day jazz died can be pinpointed with great accuracy: It was the day Charlie Parker put his alto sax to his lips and started sounding like Woody Woodpecker on speed.

Brush with History

September 10, 2007 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

One million pounds for a landscape with some sheep, painted by an amateur artist, may strike some as rather on the high side; but that was the winning bid at a recent auction at Sotheby's in London.

Soldier of Iraq

October 2, 2006 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

Rules of Engagement

Varnishing Days

May 22, 2006 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

J.M.W. Turner

Ruling the Waves

February 7, 2005 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

The British Seaborne Empire

Falling to Pieces

June 21, 2004 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

The Smoking Diaries

A Fairy Tale

February 2, 2004 · Magazine, Henrik Bering, Books and Arts

The Stories of Hans Christian Andersen