Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Rococo My World At The Painswick Rococo Garden

Perhaps it was the novelty of the thing, or a desire to do something new...Rococo is not our thing, nor is its parent Baroque...or maybe it was just curiosity...and Chat-GPT said it was a great garden and worth the entrance fee*...but we elected to visit the Painswick Rococo Garden and to make a day of Painswick and the nearby Newark Park house and estate. Each warrants a brief post.

Rococo is Baroque on steroids, some say. Think ornate, over the top, rich people in fancy dress enjoying themselves in the paradisical gardens of their 18th century day; while the masses starve. Fragonard. Watteau. After us, the Deluge. How that translates into a garden is still unclear to me, but we saw one and perhaps you can figure it out from the pix below.**

Plan of the place; the great house is not part of the deal


The Red House, among the 3-4 follies




As it turns out, the garden is almost entirely fruits and veggies, very
little ornamental or decorative...





Apples and pears, espaliered

Peas



Ample interpretive information; there is a textbook definition of
rococo in the garden pamphlet, but little information on how this
get expressed on the ground


Lettuce, cabbage, broccoli being protected from insects


Did I mention it's mostly an edible garden?

Another folly

Cold plunge pool; seriously; spring-fed

Pond and boat

Arbor...nicer if flowering

Impressive stump sculpture

Vicki wants a memorial bench, only it has to be wrought iron and 
art nouveau

Hermitage...in Montana we might call this a war lodge

Rococo bees

Great house; not open to the public








Fragonard's The Swing, arguably the greatest of Rococo
paintings; I suggest Painswick install a swing somewhere on 
the premises and maybe add a dress-up room as well; charge 
extra, of course



































































































































































*Chat-GPT can make mistakes...
**If you do, please explain to me...

Monday, June 1, 2026

Glouceter Cathedral, 2026, Part The Second

Continuing our visit to Gloucester Cathedral...

Later in the visit, I took the elevated perambulatory...























Which is where they keep the dress-up stuff










His Holiness, Bishop Mark















And more of the interpretive stuff

Closer-up view of Pope Clement

Close quarters in the perambulatory

A Saxon sculpture of JC 

Pigeon-view of east window

More interpretive stuff, including the apparent "golfer"


Descent

Graffiti 

Now in the quire (choir), exquisitely carved, as usual...but, in this
extraordinary case, all 46 of the misericords were open and accessible...
not quite the lurid and lewd versions we prefer, but pretty good
nonetheless

Dragon back-biting?

Futbol?

Driving for a lay-up?

14th century English wood-carver's impression of what an elephant
must look like

Still processing

King perhaps not getting the best advice?

Among the more colorful chapels...great cathedral!


Gloucester Cathedral, 2026, Part The First

After an administrative day in Wells, we drove on to a motel at Michaelwood, from which we would visit Kilpeck, Gloucester, and other sites of interest in the area. First up, May 20th, was Gloucester and its great cathedral, which we'd visited twice before:

https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2013/07/gloucester.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2013/07/gloucester-cathedral-basics.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2013/07/gloucester-cathedral-extras.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2016/05/gloucester-cathedral-2016.html.

The 2013 posts are the most comprehensive and give a pretty good account of the old town and cathedral. The 2016 post is exclusively about the fan vaulting in the cloisters. Below we will offer the usual new items and angles. We wandered in the cathedral first, then took the tour, then wandered some more...hence the posts below will not seem very well organized....

Approaching from the north

A bit of the exterior sculptural program

The windows range from Medieval to Victorian to
contemporary; this one depicts the coronation of Henry III
at Gloucester

And this the burial of Edward II at Gloucester, then
an abbey; neither the royal events associated with 
Gloucester were happy ones...look them up!

Much internal buttressing here


The great east window, completed in 1350, largest in
the world at the time; much of the Medieval glass is intact,
including the topmost depiction of Pope Clement; it is
equally curious why Clement would be at the top and not 
the Sky Daddy and also why he apparently escaped the
notice of Protestant reformers and their sharpshooters

Refurbishing the great old organ

Altar

Tomb of Edward II

Handwashing station outside the abbey refectory

Now, some glimpses of the cloisters and the fan vaulting


The fans are hollow and merely decorative; during WWII
there was concern that a damaged roof might allow water into
the fans and thus destroy them...so each fan had a hole drilled 
into it to allow the water to drain...above center leftish

View of the central tower from the cloister

Many great pix of the fan vaulting in the 2016 post

My one decent shot of the nave, with its enormous Norman piers;
and Norman (Romanesque) arches

Screen

One of the contemporary windows, "Rhapsody in Blue"

Can you hear the clarinet "smear"?