Showing posts with label London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label London. Show all posts

Sunday, June 19, 2022

SuperBloom At The Tower!

That was the plan. Fill the moats with wildflowers for the Jubilee. Sell tickets. People will buy them and come to see the color and wonder. We did. The spring drought pretty much rained on this parade, so to speak, and the Tower authorities even refunded all the tickets sold before June 15th. Which we gratefully accepted. But we went to see the SuperBloom anyway, partly for laughs, and partly because it was not that far out of the way.

Theory

Moat, walls, and towers

Imposing place; we've visited enough times before
Sadly, not much in the way of a superbloom; even the grass looks
a bit pekid

An industrious 10 year old could probably pick them all in one day

We figure the guy who thought up the Marble Arch Mound 
subsequently got a job with the Tower and had this great idea...

Just about the time we were leaving, a cannon
began firing, repeatedly...

We surmised, correctly, the this had something to do
with the Horse Guard Parade and the Jubilee; I lost
count but I expect the cannon(s?) fired 75 times

We made our way back past this imposing monument,
which I've yet to identify, to the Tower Hill station and
then points west
Stopping at the Inns of Court to see if we could peek in at The
Temple (closed: holiday; duh...)

Past the Royal Courts, also closed
To the Strand, where thousands of Britons were returning
from the Horse Guards thing; and to Somerset House and the
Courtauld Gallery, both of which were, thankfully, open, or I
(cruise director for the day) would have been in really big trouble

National Gallery and Covent Garden

We walked through a bit more of Fitzrovia en route to the National Gallery, a favorite we visited six or more times last summer. I had resolved to just enjoy it this time and not worry about documenting everything as I normally do. Surprisingly, I was able to adhere to my resolution. Fun to look at the all the Turners, et al., without worrying about composition, distortion, light, glare.... After the National Gallery, we ambled over to Covent Garden before returning back home.



At a nearby art gallery




Really? Together? That must have been fun!
Passing by Chinatown


Seriously, the only picture I took at the National Gallery; we just
wandered to see our many favorites; I know this museum pretty
well, by the way, and found it impossible to follow any of their
"art routes"; it's a maze within a labyrinth within a web; IMHO


Trafalgar


All decked out for the Jubilee, just a day or two away

Still processing this one...a false but interesting
dilemma?

We kept running into this guy and his lady friend;
famous? an actor?

Always a fun place


Saturday, June 18, 2022

Liberty Of London

We had big plans for the next day, May 31st, a walk to Oxford Street and beyond to the Liberty department store, and then maybe Covent Garden. But the London forecast failed us: when we emerged from Liberty there were a series of deluges that followed us all the way back to the apartment. FWIW, later in the day I walked over to Marylebone to visit the Cadenhead store there, hoping to find some of the same goodies I have enjoyed in Edinburgh. (We're talking scotch here, single malt, Islays preferably, bottled from the cask in the store, no diluting, no color added, etc.). Another disappointment: Scottish laws forbid bottling the stuff anywhere but in Scotland, as I might have expected. The Cadenhead's in London sells a very limited selection of Cadenhead labels, shipped from Edinburgh or Campbelltown, and all the other single malts you'd find anywhere else. Bummer. But hey, it's London!

It's a fair question why a couple that lives in a camper sometimes, and out of backpacks and carry-ons other times, would be visiting a high-end clothing and homewares store. In the case of Liberty, it's partly the history, the founder's association with Arts and Crafts and Art Nouveau artists and designers, notably Morris and Rosetti. In some places, British Art Nouveau is called "Liberty." Another reason is that the merchandise is often innovative or interesting or at least beautiful. Another reason is the store's age and architecture, sort of a Tudor revival built in part out of a couple of old Royal Navy sailing ships. The architecture is often shamed, and certainly doesn't fit the merchandise. According to me. But hey, it's London!





Matching glasses for those who don't want an exact match

Got buttons?


















Not all that pricy really

Sure you can serve anything you like in this plate
One of several mug trees



Beautiful carving all over, too


Return To The British Museum, 2022

Our brush with Egyptian Revival Art Deco whetted our appetite for another visit to the British Museum. (Egyptian stuff). However, we'd vowed to look at just those things we missed last summer, namely the classical Greek stuff, ceramics and buildings and sculpture and such. As with our 2021 Bloomsbury apartment, the BM was just a ten minute walk away.

The Nereid Monument, from Xanthos, now Turkey; we were 
there in 2010, and immediately noticed a curiously vacant area in
the agora; aha, we thought, the British Museum has been here

Ultima Cena

Madonna e Bambino; wait, no...

My all-time favorite Greek wine cooler; do not try this at home,
kids; love the commentary below


Another favorite: Hercules and Apollo fighting
over the Delphic Oracle's tripod chair

Floorplan of the British Museum; or possibly
the palace of Minos

I love the very old Cycladic figurines

Alas!

Now we are upstairs examining the friezes from the Temple of
Apollo near Bassei, Greece, late 5th century BCE

Pretty much about the fight between the Lapiths
and the Centaurs (long story, basically a cautionary
tale about not abusing the hospitality shown you);
also fighting between the Greeks and Amazon 
delivery drivers 
Now we are at the center ring, the Elgin Marbles
from the Parthenon, in Athens; I'll spare you all
the literature the BM has promulgated about its
rightful ownership, etc., etc.; the current story is
that the BM is the world's proper custodian of such
treasures, at least the ones it has already in its
possession; it's complicated, sort of, but would be
nice if they'd give just a few back to Greece, maybe
on a trial basis...

Helpful model of the Parthenon before the Turks used it for artillery
practice

One whole wall; mostly a ceremonial procession

More Lapiths and Centaurs

On the pediment, goddesses

Other long wall

My two favorite male gods, Mercury (travel) and Dionysus (wine)

Still more, but enough is enough