Then as soon as husband and son returned, we in turn escaped on a little tour of nice places plus an awful lot of shopping opportunities. Who knew there were SO MANY branches of Jack Wills?
First stop was Bicester Village, rather grim in the rain, but I discovered a shop that actually seemed different from all the rest and made me feel excited (especially if I could half my age and weight, but hey ho):
Now I've just found out that Desigual is the shop that celebrates new branches opening by giving free outfits to the first 100 people who turn up in their underwear. Sadly I don't think this could ever be an option for me.
Still, moving right along, it was Stratford-on-Avon next, taking in Anne Hathaway's cottage:
In the evening we went to see a performance of A Midsummer Night's Dream in the newly refurbished Swan Theatre.
Mark Wootton was brilliant as Bottom |
On, the next day, to Birmingham, where we went to the Ikon Gallery first, before the shopping temptations could overwhelm us. The new show at the gallery was by Atsuko Tanaka, a Japanese artist who died in 2005 and who was an important figure in Japanese avant-garde art (I hadn't heard of her before). I liked her big, colourful canvases of connected circles which made me think of telephone exchanges or the Bletchley Park Enigma machines.
There was also her dress of lights:
Here she is wearing it:
Shop, shop, shop, trying to resist going nuts. Selfridges was cool:
We liked the jelly-bean bull in Selfridges but noticed some naughty people had picked the beans off his bottom:
You could hardly tell that Birmingham city centre had been damaged by rioting so recently. It seemed like business as usual, which I guess is a good thing.
The next day we drove on to Great Malvern which I've always loved. I like a place with slopes. We discovered the smallest theatre in the world where performances are given on demand (no booking necessary).
The Theatre of Small Convenience is a converted Victorian gentleman's loo |
I love Hay, but I'm not too keen on the literary festival as I'm not a big fan of author events -- the book's the thing for me. I can't resist the endless piles of ripening books, and when I'm there my head tends to be permanently tipped to one side in spine-reading mode. We made a stop at the Children's Bookshop just outside Hay as well.
The Children's Bookshop on the Toll Road |
I was happy because I got some nice old books about Sweden.
The next day we took in Cheltenham (lovely, specially the Montpellier district), then motored on to Bath. Bath is just unbelievably gorgeous. You don't know where to look next. I wanted to show Dora everything and try to give her a sense of the period when it was at the height of its popularity. We had cakes in the Pump Room after we had been round the Roman Baths -- these were fantastic too with the new (to me) presentation with projected images of Romans going about their business.
I hadn't really understood previously how recently the baths were excavated and I saw the whole thing in a much more layered way this time. I hadn't even realised that the 'Roman' statues around the top of the baths are in fact late Victorian. I was very taken, also, with the 'letters' written to the Goddess of the source, Sulis Minerva. These were messages scratched onto thin sheets of lead, folded up, and thrown into the water. They were mostly, it seemed, from aggrieved citizens who had been the victims of theft, naming the suspects and begging the goddess to wreak punishment on them. It was beyond me how anyone had managed to read the messages.
While we were in Bath we went to see 'A Museum for Myself' by Peter Blake at the Holburne Museum.
Really recommend this (on till Sept 4th).
Nice notebooks that give a flavour of the exhibition |
All too soon, it was the M4 for us, complete with accident. But we had a brilliant time and quite took to the nomadic lifestyle.