Roman Road

Although I know our end of the Roman Road very well, I very seldom go down the part beyond Mile End Park. Today, I walked to the park which was looking autumnal:-

Then I discovered that the Roman Road, to my amazement, now has a pop-up patisserie, called Alibi Pantry, which has the most delicious takeaway cakes, and an Italian deli, called Symposium which sells East London beer, new to me, as well as a gigantic range of Italian wine: gentrification no doubt, but I am not complaining:-

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What is an Art Museum ?

I have been asked about the difference between a museum and an art gallery, based on the possibility that museums have traditionally been accessible and democratic, modelled on the beliefs of Henry Cole and Prince Albert, whereas art galleries were more for the cognoscenti. As it happens, it was the first question I was asked at my first interview at the NPG. I can’t remember what I answered then, but would say now that museums belong to a nineteenth-century encyclopedic tradition of public instruction, based on a systematic layout, whereas galleries are for art, where there is much less emphasis on labelling, more on looking. Art museum is, I think, American usage and at the V&A I was discouraged from using the term, but this hasn’t stopped me from using it in the title of my book.

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The Art Museum in Modern Times (1)

Ever since the beginning of lockdown, or at least since March 31st. when the final text was due, I have been preoccupied by completing my book about art museums, a good preoccupation since it involved detailed picture research, which is now so easy thanks to Google Images, and also liaison with Harry Pearce at Pentagram, which was a pleasure seeing the initial layouts, the design being gradually being tightened, the choice of typeface (it’s Futura) and the amount of care and thought which went into the cover. Now, I have just seen the page of Thames & Hudson’s Spring catalogue and the whole process feels real again. It shows the cover – Frank Lloyd Wright with the model of the Guggenheim and James Turrell in the 21st Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa – and the layout of the pages devoted to MONA in Hobart, the West Bund Museum in Shanghai and the Louvre Abu Dhabi: enough to whet the appetite, I hope.

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Tony Armstrong-Jones

Today’s post in Spitalfields Life of photographs of East London by Tony Armstrong-Jones suggest that he was a ‘jobbing’ photographer before he met Princess Margaret. On the contrary, I think they show what an interesting and creative photographer he was when he was living in Rotherhithe and riding on his motorbike round East London, exploring aspects of society which were not at all routine for someone making his living as a society photographer.

https://spitalfieldslife.com/2020/11/10/tony-armstrong-jones-east-end/

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Hazel Press

We have just taken delivery of the first four volumes of writing and poetry, published by a new small press based in the depths of rural Cambridgeshire or, as the colophon suggests, Bedfordshire, a product of lockdown, designed by Dale Tomlinson and printed in Beccles – a very nice piece of small press design and book production.

https://hazelpress.co.uk/#:~:text=Hazel%20Press%20is%20an%20independent,change%2C%20feminism%20and%20the%20arts.

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Newlands House

Newlands House, a gallery in Petworth, is doing a programme of high-profile exhibitions, including one at the moment on Ron Arad. I am doing a talk with Ron and Antony Gormley on Wednesday 18th. November:-

https://newlandshouse.gallery/events/webinar-ron-arad-in-conversation-with-sir-antony-gormley-and-sir-charles-saumarez-smith/

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US Election (2)

I find it fascinating how quickly the mood of the world order can change. A week ago we were still necessarily in thrall to an elderly, lying, dishonest, golfing President, worried by the possibility that he might be re-elected. How instantaneously his allies in the press and the world have deserted him, leaving him to give an unattended speech in the car park of a suburban garden centre, while suddenly there is a sense of hope and possibility in the world. It’s legitimate to talk about the perils of climate change, about the benefits of international collaboration, the problems ahead in Ireland if we pursue a hard Brexit, the need to work together. I am enjoying watching Johnson re-invent himself as an internationalist instead of a Trump worshipper.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/nov/08/joe-biden-us-world-stage-britain-brexit-coronavirus-climate?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other

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US Election (1)

What a relief ! Some have said that Biden didn’t fight a very powerful campaign, but it shows that someone honorable, decent and extremely experienced can defeat a noisy, arrogant, inflammatory, duplicitous, opinionated bigot, a good lesson for us all.

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The Great Swim

While we have all been glued to the news reports of the American election, Christopher Woodward, the director of the Garden Museum, has been swimming in the cold Atlantic from Newlyn to the Scilly Isles to raise money for the Garden Museum. He has just sent a clip of what it’s like out in the Atlantic:-

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Clouds

In a short intermission from never-ending Zoom meetings, I walked out into the back yard and witnessed this unusual and beautiful cloud formation, which seemed suitably expressive of the uncertainty of the world:-

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