Sunday, 15 July 2012
Paintings
Just a quick post in partial explanation of why I'm hardly posting at the moment. I've been grappling with this painting for ages and have decided to stop. It's not a great photo of it and you can see the doormat, but at least that gives a slight idea of the scale. It's 50cm x 40cm, in acrylics, and shows Dannii Minogue in the back of a car with two friends/minions.
Sunday, 8 July 2012
A weekend in Hastings
Hastings bus shelter |
They're fisherman's shacks for drying their nets.
I'm afraid my photos weren't actually very good, so I've gone a bit overboard with the Photoshop.
The towers lend themselves very readily to Gothic fantasies.
But there was SO much more to see in Hastings. It was a fantastic town, full of interest and charm. It may have been a bit down on its uppers a few years ago but it has come right back up and seemed very alluring.
Is is obviously a place that originated as a fishing town
Nothing I like better than a rotting hulk |
Then we discovered that Hastings Old Town contains a labyrinth of junkshops, with some of the yards full of stalls and insane junk stretching back behind the shop fronts into large plots behind. Some of it verged on the post-apocalyptic, it being hard to imagine anyone wanting to buy what appeared to be the detritus of a lost civilisation. But it was very enjoyable trawling through it all. I managed to keep my hands in my pockets for most of the time, and just bought an old game:
Make your own landscape with the magnetic picture elements |
The office department in Hendy's |
We had dinner at St Clements in St Leonards, just along from Hastings, and I can really recommend it -- lovely food and very nice atmosphere. Then we stayed the night in a nice, old-fashioned little hotel in Sedlescombe, which looked like a beautiful, chocolate-box village.
Derek Jarman's house at Dungeness |
When we had been thoroughly scoured by the wind and been restored by a cup of tea at the miniature railway station, where they were having a special Thomas the Tank Engine Day, much to the excitement of a great many small children, we went on to Bexhill where we had lunch at the fabulous De La Warr Pavilion.
It must have been just before they put the 'Italian Job' style coach on top:
Richard Wilson's new installation on the Pavilion roof |
It was a lovely weekend. I could spend weeks down on the South coast, exploring. I could imagine myself moving their to live out my old age. Already I'm planning another trip -- there's Rye, Pallant House in Chichester, the Weald and Downland Museum, Down House (Darwin's House) -- so much still to see...
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