Great Yarmouth (1)

Once a year, I go on an excursion to an east coast resort: this year to Great Yarmouth, an unexpectedly interesting large and historic town, with a huge medieval parish church, the remains of its town walls, complete with surviving circular brick-and-flint towers, and the so-called Rows, little medieval alleyways which connected the three main streets until heavily bombed in the war. Much good eighteenth-century building, when the town was prosperous from the herring trade. And grand nineteenth-century pleasure palaces, including a hippodrome, dating from when the railway arrived and the day tripper.

We started at the Fishermen’s Hospital, almshouses provided by the Corporation for retired fishermen in 1702. Good plasterwork decoration and a statue of Charity in the middle:-

Pevsner is a bit sniffy about St. George, but it was designed by John Price, a London architect, and has a good English baroque quality, now turned appropriately into a theatre:-

Later, we poked our nose inside to see the lightly adapted interior, now well used:-

Opposite, on King Street, are the old Church Rooms, all brick and terracotta, now decayed:-

These are two shots of the Rows, each with their number prominently displayed:-

Then we came across the first of the surviving medieval towers, now inhabited:-

The last stop before lunch were the two Row Houses which were preserved by the Office of Works after the war, with their good surviving woodwork and plasterwork ceilings:-

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Malasaña (3)

I made the mistake of walking back to the hotel through the centre of Madrid, which was hot.Not least I was keen to see the Oratorio de Caballero de Garcia, also designed by Juan de Villanueva, but in a straight and not especially interesting neoclassical style. I only photographed the door locks :-

I passed the Iglesia de Las Calatravas, which is in restauro:-

The big and unexpected treat was wandering in to S. Antonio de los Portugueses – small and early seventeenth century in architectural form, with surprisingly elaborate later frescoes by Luca Giordano and a ceiling by Francisco Rizi and Juan Carreño, all very complete and well preserved, if restored:-

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Mat Collishaw

I was able to call in briefly at Mat Collishaw’s exhibition Dialogues, organised by the Fondació Sorigué in the Pavillón Villanueva. It shows his deep fascination with birds and animals in captivity and the organic life of plant forms – beautiful, prelapsarian, slightly dangerous, mobile:-

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Real Jardín Botánico

I left the conference in order to see Mat Collishaw’s exhibition in the Royal Botanical Garden, which I have never seen before: still a working botanical garden, well-kept, sandwiched between the Prado and Atocha Station, pretty much as originally laid out by Francesco Sabatini and Juan de Villanueva, on Linnaean principles, in 1781:-

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Malasaña (2)

The second part of my Malasaña tour is briefer, no more than a short walk to find something to eat at an hour that no Spaniard would dream of eating:-

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Malasaña (1)

After an afternoon attending the keynote speeches of a conference on The Museum for all, nearly all of it in Spanish, I took myself off to do the Spanish equivalent of the passeggiata in Malasaña, the district closest to my hotel and, according to my guide book (Michael Jacobs, Madrid Observed), an area which is happily down-at-heel, criss-crossed by long, still mostly cobbled streets.

I started at the Barracks of the Conde Duque, most of which is newly and blandly restored, but which retains its elaborate entrance gateway by Pedro de Ribera:-

Nearby is the Plaza de Las Comendadoras:-

Down the Calle de Quiñones, alongside the church of Las Comendadoras:-

To Santa Maria la Real de Montserrat:-

Nice tiling on the Laboratorio de Espacialidades Juanse, a disused pharmacy:-

Everywhere nice lettering:-

Back to the lovely Café Moderno:-

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