I went to see my solicitor early this morning but not before I went to the beach at Manorbier and spent a perfect hour messing about in rock pools and enjoying this wonderful warm weather the UK is having this week. Isn't it glorious? My solicitor is a gentleman and refrained from comment as I left a trail of sand all through his office as it dried on my shoes.... His receptionist says he is very fond of me so he is obviously kind enough to overlook the mess I made... wonder if he'll add the clean up costs on to my bill? I hope some of you are also experiencing this wonderful 'indian summer' week we're having. How about getting out and about and finding a beach to enjoy it on too? Halcyon days!Wednesday, 28 September 2011
Perfect Day
I went to see my solicitor early this morning but not before I went to the beach at Manorbier and spent a perfect hour messing about in rock pools and enjoying this wonderful warm weather the UK is having this week. Isn't it glorious? My solicitor is a gentleman and refrained from comment as I left a trail of sand all through his office as it dried on my shoes.... His receptionist says he is very fond of me so he is obviously kind enough to overlook the mess I made... wonder if he'll add the clean up costs on to my bill? I hope some of you are also experiencing this wonderful 'indian summer' week we're having. How about getting out and about and finding a beach to enjoy it on too? Halcyon days!Monday, 26 September 2011
Sunday, 25 September 2011
The Haven
Well, I made the decision on Monday morning that I was not going to do the full time Foundation course. The college have been great and made various other alternative suggestions for me but I realised at the eleventh hour that it was not the right direction for me. I am returning to complete the same thing but the slower way, via the modules I've already started at Aberystwyth Uni. I met my tutor there this week and despite the fact that she was the one who suggested I do full time art college she understood why I had made the decision I had. It will take twice as long and it still means I need to constructively use my time better but I am happy and relieved to have gone this way. So, feeling rather silly for starting something I did not finish I needed to re-group and do something I feel positive about. Hence, an early morning trip to the docks at Milford Haven to start taking images for my digital photography portfolio assessment. My theme is going to be 'boats and ropes'. Here are a few that I've selected as a starting point. I only have to have 10 images but of course, like all people let loose with a camera, I have loads. Time to refine and re-inforce the basic rules in my head and then improve.Tuesday, 20 September 2011
Sunday, 18 September 2011
Sunny Devon
I also found a couple of printmakers and managed to catch the opening preview of a new calligraphy exhibition at the Devon Guild of Craftsmen in Bovey Tracey. On our way home I also visited the studios of Clare Schmidt Norris and Rachel and Mary Sumner. All were inspirational in their own way and well worth a look through their portfolios.The downside of course is that all good things come to an end. We've had a fantastic two weeks holiday but my young man has to return to the grindstone tomorrow and I am meant to be joining my foundation course. As it has already been going for two weeks I am starting late because of my holiday. All of a sudden I don't want to do it and I'm trying to remember all the reasons why I thought it was a good idea! Oh crikey, what to do?
Monday, 12 September 2011
Snap Happy
Thursday, 8 September 2011
Whistle stop trip
It's been a hectic few days away. I think I must be about two inches shorter as I have walked myself into the ground around parts of Shropshire and parted with my savings in a few too many galleries and bookshops than is healthy for a girl. I have also eaten too many cakes in stops along the way. If you read my musings on any sort of regular basis then you will know that I have been fascinated by the work of textile artist Mandy Pattullo this year and the story of maidens garlands - funerary tributes to virginal spinsters who died in the same parish they were born and brought up in. I remembered that one of the churches where these are hung is in a village called Minsterley so we headed there for a look. I was more taken with the skull and crossbones imagery above the doorway and the usual poignant pull of the headstones. One of the saddest marked the grave of a young 21 year old soldier who was gassed in action at Ypres and died of his injuries in January 1919.At least he is acknowledged. I could not find the names of the girls to whom the garlands were dedicated. They hang very high in the roof of the church interior and it is hard to see them so one has been brought down and encased in perspex for closer inspection.
I got my shopping fix in Much Wenlock on Monday and Bishops Castle on Tuesday, both great little towns with unusual galleries and shops.... and tea rooms. I did not want to 'do' Ludlow shopping as well so we waited until Tuesday evening and then went into town when hardly anyone was around and the tempting shops were closed! I have been before and it is an architectural highlight if you love half timbered building and carvings on the fascias of them. This is the Feathers Hotel, adorned with carvings of strange characters. Ludlow is full of places like this and it is having it's annual food festival this weekend. This has become a major national event for foodies so the place will be heaving. I hope a good time will be had by all.
So, Wednesday was the day we planned to come home via a circuitous route which took in that visit to Compton Verney. In contrast to everywhere else we'd been this week, this was packed with visitors. We were jostling for space with coach parties. At one point someone told me to 'keep up' and then realised I wasn't in their party! They apologised and I laughed about it.... and then realised they were touring with a group of septagenarians...
What I had really come to see were the folk art galleries and the Enid Marx/Margaret Lambert collections. These did not disappoint. I could have taken so many things home with me if I had been allowed to do so. There were wonderful wooden models and signs, little dioramas and naive paintings. The best treat of all was the sight of seeing an Alfred Wallis original, painted on an old tin tray. Naive yes, but masterful at the same time.To accompany the folk art display this year Compton Verney put out a request to the public to send in items that they considered to be contemporary folk art. There are some quirky and adorable submissions like the amateur, yet completely recognisable, painting of Bob Dylan picked up in a car boot sale and a storm at sea depicted in a matchbox. Best thing for me was a display in the small cafe. Running the length of the perimeter at eye level are framed drawings made by factory worker Albert Barnett in the 1970's. He drew every single day on the back of envelopes, on order pads, on receipts etc. He drew in ballpoint and the subjects were whatever he saw around him or intrigued him from the daily paper like the obituaries. Once completed, at the end of the working day he gave them to a fellow worker to take home for his wife. Some of them are clearly addressed to her. There must have been about 70 of them on display and this request has brought them to light from the family he gave them to. Some of them show his grasp of the written language was not perfect but that just makes them all the more special.Besides, his grasp of the visual language was spot on. It was worth the entrance fee for these alone.
We're heading off again next week to Devon for a few days but I foolishly booked a weekend workshop which starts tomorrow so we've had to break our holiday up into two parts. The workshop is organised by Abersytwyth University and it is learning how to take outdoor pictures with a digital camera. I have never fully understood what all the buttons are for on a camera so I am hoping for great things.... but with my grasp of technology I won't be holding my breath!
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