Brady Street Cemetery

I thought I had found a short cut back from Breid, the local bakery where I go to buy their delicious cakes, but I found myself instead in a total cul-de-sac, blocked by the high wall of the Brady Street Cemetery. It was a strange moment – a moment of total silence, more silent than ever normally experienced in a city, but for the rooks raucous overhead:-

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What to Read in 2021 (2)

For those who were unable to open the link to the article in the FT which I posted yesterday on reading matter for the next phase of COVID, I am now posting the paragraph which most caught my eye which reappears in today’s Life & Arts.

I’d love to think the book was about the future of museums, but it’s about their history in the post-war period, as based on 42 new or reconstructed museums from the Museum of Modern Art onwards, with a few reflections in the Conclusion about the problems they face post-COVID. Not that they don’t have a future, but it’s not clear yet exactly what that future will be:-

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Vivaldi and Fascism

I’m very grateful to a comment on my blog, pointing out, which I did not know, how recent the interest and enthusiasm for Vivaldi is and that its origins lie in concerts promoted by Ezra Pound in Rapallo, together with his lover, Olga Rudge, an American violinist. I presume this fact is well known to musicologists, but, after many years as a Vivaldi enthusiast, I did not know that it was only in the 1920s that his manuscript library was acquired in two chunks by the National Library in Turin and only in the 1930s that it began to be performed as part of an Italian cultural revival, closely associated to fascism. I don’t know if this should affect my enjoyment of the Nisi Dominus. I hope not.

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What to read in 2021 (1)

I have only just been tipped off that my museums book appeared in the FT’s description of which books to read in 2021. This has, of course, cheered me up no end, particularly when I see what company I am keeping: Peter Ricketts on the world of diplomacy; Linda Colley’s The Gun, The Ship and the Pen; Lucasta Miller on Keats. The book I’m particularly looking forward to is Rosemary Hill’s The Time’s Witness: History in the Age of Romanticism, published by Allen Lane in 2021. Much to look forward to !

https://www.ft.com/content/95f7419a-e449-43df-bfae-257b39190b20?accessToken=zwAAAXa-lW7okdOV90Ga5ElD39O_riV7ORkLIA.MEUCIB8-hBmKPPkPW38-0kQHqlbkMBISNmcDkIGZNlV8VKhuAiEA0H0EItvsnRHArOYOAGKuTHrIlMclmvqDUTXHuLaDD9Y&sharetype=gift?token=d7d0fda9-64b3-4edf-8dff-4b434d187fa4

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Tower Bridge

I am posting a picture of the view bicycling through Tower Bridge this morning, mainly because, although it might not be evident, it’s quite a hard view to take, because it’s normally blocked by buses and lorries and one anyway runs the risk of being run over in taking it. It shows how fine the architectural composition and detailing is:-

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The Year in Retrospect

Because my computer was down when I woke up, needing to be upgraded which took a surprisingly long time, I started idly browsing the statistics on my blog as the year comes to an end. I have always assumed that the numbers reading my blog would diminish, as, like most people during the last year, I have lead a life of exemplary uninterest, not exactly twiddling my thumbs, but where a trip to the local branch of Sainsbury’s is by far the most exciting part of my day. But I was surprised and pleased to spot that I have had almost exactly the same number of readers, somewhere just north of 200,000 so-called views per annum (being slightly competitive, I only need 601 views today to equal last year’s total of 206,937). But I also, couldn’t help but notice which posts attracted the most interest: the National Trust by far – well, they’ve got over 5 million members; Dominic Cummings a close second; two obituaries, Fiona MacCarthy and John Dancy came third. Most of it is very predictable, a record of the changes of mood and feelings over the course of the last, very complex and long year. I found two things of particular interest. The first was that my first post on Coronavirus was on March 7 (https://charlessaumarezsmith.com/2020/03/07/coronavirus/), so relatively early, when we were all just beginning to learn about the effects of the disease which has ruled our lives. The second was that the actions of Dominic Cummings were a turning point at the time, and have remained so for many people, not just because of what he did, but because of what the Prime Minister didn’t do, which has dogged not just him but all of us ever since (https://charlessaumarezsmith.com/2020/05/25/dominic-cummings-2/).

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MONA

First up in my Google newsfeed this morning is a long article about the revamp of MONA: how well Google knows my interests, because MONA plays a prominent part in the last section of my book. It’s such a determined and, I think, successful attempt to break out of the conventions of the traditional museum – underground, no labels, no easy route, so purely exploratory, information provided in different voices on handsets, art that is deliberately provocative, focussed on sex and death, all of it now a very important part of Tasmania’s tourist economy.

So what are his answers to COVID ? Go local, turn up the volume, make himself more the centrepiece, and serve cheaper burgers, all good lessons, I suspect, for other museums.

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2020/dec/30/tasmanias-mona-gets-a-major-revamp-but-will-it-lure-the-locals

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London Bookstores

To parallel the list of New York bookstores I discovered yesterday, I’ve been thinking about my top ten London ones which specialise in architectural books. It’s a vicarious substitute for being able to visit them, part of life which is now missing.

1. The AA Bookshop

The best by quite a long way is what I still think of as the Triangle Bookshop on the ground floor of the Architectural Association, named after a bookshop in the Triangle in Kennington, invariably well stocked, good on architectural theory, good on city guides, perfect for browsing, with very helpful staff. A great bookshop.

2. The RIBA Bookshop

I used to find the RIBA bookshop a bit too technical for my taste, a few too many engineering manuals, but it’s got much better with a good general stock, including, which I like, a whole section of architectural guides.

3. John Sandoe

I seldom make it to the King’s Road, but when I do am impressed by the way such a small shop manages to be so packed with books I want and it’s very knowledgeable and helpful staff. They were the only shop allowed to sell the special edition of my book on East London and will now take advance postal orders for my book on museums.

4. Daunt’s

I always use the branch at the top of Marylebone High Street, really a travel bookstore, but such a wonderful one, with its Edwardian glass-roofed area at the back, first opened in 1912, where the world is laid out systematically and topographically, so that one can explore the globe.

5. Heywood Hill

I have to include Heywood Hill for my older brother’s sake who gave me my book addiction and sold me the entire reading list for my Cambridge course in architectural history. I used to be an account customer which meant that one never knew how much a book cost until the hand-written bill arrived at a later date. It’s always been strong on architecture and probably still is.

6. Hatchard’s

I have never enjoyed Hatchard’s quite as much as when its art department up on its second floor was run, rather fiercely, by Maureen Boland and Baron Nicolas van den Branden de Reeth, but it still has a very good stock of current architectural books, erring towards the luxurious end of the market and away from the scholarly.

7. Foyle’s

Foyles has been expensively and successfully revamped with its architecture section near the entrance on the ground floor, good just because it is still on such a big scale, so able to stock in depth.

8. Artwords Bookstore

It’s always a pleasure to come across Artwords on Rivington Street in Shoreditch, good on art, but good on architecture too.

9. Broadway Books

I think of it as my local bookstore at the bottom end of Broadway Market, always well and thoughtfully stocked and good for Christmas shopping, but not this year.

10. Page’s of Hackney

Last, a plug for Page’s of Hackney because I admire the fact that there is a proper, well-stocked, local bookshop on the Lower Clapton Road.

I’m sure I’ve missed some, including Ian Shipley who closed some time ago. It makes me realise what an important part bookshops still play in my world beyond the parcel deliveries.

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New York Bookstores

I have had unexpected pleasure from finding the attached list of New York architectural bookstores. It gives an opportunity for vicarious browsing, as well as listing stores I don’t already know.

I thought I still had a bookmark from McNally Jackson, his favourite New York store as well as mine, but they only allow one bookmark per purchase which means they are always in short supply, as opposed to the bookmark of University Press Books in Berkeley, California, my second favourite, of which I still have a plentiful supply in spite of not having visited the store since 1991. Also, the Corner Bookstore on Madison at 93rd. which was a benefit of staying in the Hotel Wales.

https://archidose.blogspot.com/p/nyc-bookstores.html?m=1

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