Regent’s Park (2)

Before going round Regent’s Park, I was shown a very beautiful, fold-out panoramic view of it, produced by Richard Morris, the Secretary of the Medico-Botanical Society of London, and published by Rudolph Ackermann in 1831, price £1 10s., described on its title page as a Panoramic View Round Regent’s Park.   From drawings taken on the spot by Rich. morris, Author of Essays on Landscape Gardening and recently republished by the London Topographical Society.   These give much more of a sense of how it was originally intended to be:  more theatrical, less private, much less planting and a place of public parade.

This is Hanover Terrace to the west, completed in 1822:-

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Clarence Terrace:-

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Serpentine Pavilion

I didn’t necessarily expect to like the latest Serpentine Pavilion by Bjarke Ingels, but I did:  a piece of pure geometry, simultaneously simple and complex in a way that is visually both adventurous and satisfying:-

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Henry Cole Wing

One of the few benefits of a morning which was so cold and wet is that, when the air cleared, it had a crystal clarity.   So, I was not the only person who was impressed by the Henry Cole Wing, designed by Henry Scott as a School of Naval Architects, gleaming in the early evening sun, with its abundance of terracotta ornament, the loggia at the top which allowed the students access to fresh air, and its restrained Victorian pomp:-

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Ditchling Museum

En route to Sussex, we stopped off at the Ditchling Museum, which we have shamefully never been to in spite of the fact that it has recently been very beautifully renovated by Adam Richards architects, skilfully maintaining its small-scale and vernacular character.   We would have liked twice the time to enjoy the collection, including a small exhibition of Edward Johnston’s typography.

The Museum:-

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Olivier Bell

We went today to the 100th. birthday party of Olivier Bell, one of the last survivors of the second generation of the Bloomsbury Group, daughter of A.E. Popham, Keeper of Prints and Drawings at the British Museum, and widow of Quentin Bell, the younger son of Clive and Vanessa Bell.   She is still pretty stalwart:  a survivor of the pre-war Courtauld Institute, the last of the so-called Monuments Men who helped to restore works of art to their original owners after the second world war, and a veteran of the post-war Arts Council, organising small exhibitions and European loans.   She edited Virginia Woolf’s diaries meticulously and helped to establish the Charleston Trust, of which she was until recently an active trustee:-

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Found

We went yesterday afternoon to the exhibition Found which has been put together by Cornelia Parker at the Foundling Hospital, based on the idea that the original Foundling Hospital was supported by a group of artists in the 1740s who chose to offer ‘Performances in their different professions, for Ornamenting this Hospital’.   It’s a wonderfully eclectic group of works, mostly interspersed throughout the Museum, although with a more conventional semi-exhibition in the basement.   We liked the eroded helmet shown by Ackroyd and Harvey;  the screenprint by Patrick Caulfield, which prefigures the work of Michael Craig-Martin;  Michael Craig-Martin’s own FILM, which he made when he was a student at Yale;  Richard Deacon’s self-curated shelf which doesn’t appear in the catalogue;  Edmund de Waal’s group of works based on found objects in Orkney;  Antony Gormley’s cast of Paloma which echoed the bronze light fittings (was this deliberate ?);  Mona Hatoum’s wire drawings;  and Alison Wilding’s frog.   Many of the artists are RAs in the same way that the original artists who supported the Foundling Hospital became the group who established the RA, united by kindred interests.

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Regent’s Park (1)

I spent yesterday morning learning about the mysteries of Regent’s Park.   Of course, one is aware of it as a Londoner, laid out north of the rest of the city in open farmland as a grandiose gesture of urban town planning to rival Paris towards the end of the Napoleonic Wars.   But I had not realised the extent to which each of the Terraces is set back from the road and the vegetation has grown up in such a way that the epic scale of the stucco palaces and the way they are supposed to relate to one another is not really evident unless one pokes about behind the scenes.

I started at the back of York Terrace:-

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In the distance was the corner pavilion of Cornwall Terrace:-

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Alison Wilding RA

We went to see the work which Alison Wilding is showing in her old studio space next door to the Regent’s canal.   It was commissioned by Simmons and Simmons, the city law firm, for their new headquarters in Canary Wharf, which was to have been designed by Santiago Calatrava.   But they fell out with him. Alison’s work was used as a hat stand and then put into storage.   It looks good, evanescent in the space:-

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Green Truffle

As gentrification creeps up the Roman Road, we’ve got a brand new Italian delicatessen at no. 21, opened last Wednesday, which stocks the finest fresh pasta and olive oil straight from Italy.   After years of having nothing but chicken shops locally, it’s a pleasure to be able to stock up on different varieties of spaghetti:-

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14-16 Cockspur Street

Yesterday, I was walking down Cockspur Street and noticed the astonishingly elaborate metalwork decoration above one of the doors of the Brazilian Embassy.   It was done by Ernest Gillick, an ARA who did much 1920’s commemorative sculpture, including a medal for the Royal Academy Schools.   The building, designed by Arthur Bolton in 1906, had been taken over by P&O from the Hamburg America Line in 1918 as reparation for the first world war.   P&O then commissioned Gillick to do grand statues of Britain and the Orient – Britain as a Roman centurion with a putto holding a trident on the right, the Orient as a Nubian slave – and the company motto QUIS SEPARABIT in between:-

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