St Anne’s Limehouse (9)

I haven’t previously listened to any of the recent Open City podcasts on single buildings, but not surprisingly was very pleased and interested to listen to such a serious and systematic analysis of the architecture of St. Anne’s Limehouse by George Saumarez Smith and Matthew Lloyd Roberts (listen below). 

It’s rare to hear such close and thoughtful criticism of single buildings – cultural, historical, contextual and, more unusually, stylistic, based on George’s deep knowledge of classicism.

https://shows.acast.com/opencity/episodes/deconstructed-st-annes-limehouse-east-end-baroque

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John Vanbrugh: The Drama of Architecture (1)

The book on Vanbrugh that I have been working on – I started writing seriously over Christmas 2021 – seems suddenly a touch more real now that you can pre-order it on Amazon.  It’s being copy edited at the moment.  75,000 words.  It comes out in November just in time for Christmas, an exhibition at the Soane Museum in February a year from now, and Vanbrugh’s tercentenary on 26 March 2026.  A Vanbrugh-fest, I hope.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/John-Vanbrugh-Charles-Saumarez-Smith/dp/1848227310/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?crid=19GWQMCM0ZJV4&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.CEXyaQkZPTe9WHwCbSJKZD6GIcx9ooSSKN2jdKnCJnC1BMKkrsy2834OXpdSg-A3M65eYY7kOLBf6mpvhiZZd1pBbkxbLmO9bQuSdSrbasAP6XVhVQqyQKF8DVAhDL3psTVd6c-bnoZf9WWvsTJyOXgaQB5hMFm59oFun3VIEEob5xceGWihBWLFNjxBJvsnaMK187trSjEjgEd2J299Nw.jyqVXzXD_fPHtCbJISNW2l4OHdR0fcfahkjJnUPBDOg&dib_tag=se&keywords=charles+saumarez+smith&qid=1739474558&sprefix=charles+saumarez+smith%2Caps%2C517&sr=8-3

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Festen

The Royal Opera House was selling tickets cheap for Festen, but possibly not any more after its first night last night: so horrifyingly and briefly intense.  I didn’t know at all what to expect, but thought it pretty powerful stuff.

https://theartsdesk.com/opera/festen-royal-opera-review-firing-every-front

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Joe Saumarez Smith (1)

We are mourning the death of my nephew Joe who has died aged only 53, the chairman of the British Horseracing Authority.  As the Sun says, he took to racing young, not a family characteristic, and was brilliant at all aspects of betting.  It was a great benefit to me when I went to the National Portrait Gallery that my trustees knew him as the racing correspondent of the Daily Telegraph.  ‘Kind, thoughtful, funny intelligent’.  A good description.  A terrible loss.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/sport/33321846/racing-boss-dead-aged-53/

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Louis Pohl Koseda

If you are in central London this week, I recommend a visit to the exhibition by Louis Pohl Koseda in Christie’s exhibition galleries to the left of the entrance on King Street.

Louis was a student at the Royal Drawing School, graduating in 2023, when he won the Christie’s Award which gave him a year in which to pursue his work.  He has been astonishingly prolific, drawing scenes from his imagination, but also located in the city.  The work is amazing.

https://www.royaldrawingschool.org/lectures-events/louis-pohl-koseda-christies-award-2025-exhibition/

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Sir John Soane (2)

I find the Soane Museum endlessly fascinating, always different every time I go. I have discovered I have a surprising number of pictures of its interiors taken over the last couple of years.

First, Soane himself by Francis Chantrey:-

And the surrounding mis-en-scène:-

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Sir John Soane (1)

If you missed this morning’s edition of In Our Time, I strongly recommend listening to the three different, but compatible accounts of his career from Gillian Darley, who wrote his biography, Frank Salmon who teaches architectural history, and Frances Sands who looks after his drawings at the Soane Museum, interviewed by Melvyn Bragg:-

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0027jwv?partner=uk.co.bbc&origin=share-mobile

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Hayward Gallery

I see that the Twentieth-Century Society is calling, once again, for the Southbank Centre to be listed – quite rightly (https://c20society.org.uk/news/if-not-now-when-c20-renews-34-year-long-call-for-southbank-centre-listing).

But I notice they concentrate only on the exterior whereas what I am always impressed by is the strength and muscularity of the interior spaces and how well they serve as major exhibition galleries.

It’s a period piece and surely deserves listing now long overdue:-

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O’Donnell + Tuomey

It’s normally much later in the month that my articles in The Critic appear online, but here are my reflections on a recent excursion to County Cork (the second half appears next month).

O’Donnell + Tuomey have also done the new Sadler’s Wells East in Olympic Park and the Saw Swee Hock building for LSE.

https://thecritic.co.uk/when-architects-meet-their-makers/

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William Butterfield

I have only just been alerted to the fact that my long-ish review of Nicholas Olsberg’s excellent and beautifully produced book about William Butterfield in the February issue of The Critic has already appeared online:-

https://thecritic.co.uk/prickly-architect-of-gothic-marvels/

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