Showing posts with label madingley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label madingley. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 August 2013

Where to take family visitors: A Cambridge itinerary


meet the fockers


My parents are visiting next week.  They've been to Cambridge many times before so I'm not going to take them to King's College and other familiar sights.  Nor are we going to do a lot of walking as they are getting just a little elderly.


Here's a possible itinerary for when parents visit:




Day 1
Jesus College, sculpture exhibition.

Barry Flanagan, Bronze Horse, Jesus College

If people have enough energy:  pop in to All Saints' Church on the way out and look at the Pre-Raphaelite decorations and stained glass by Edward Burne-Jones, William Morris and Ford Madox Brown.

Possible coffee stop at Clown's on King Street.


Day 2
Drive out to Madingley Garden.
My mother loves gardens and this recent discovery of mine is top of my list for places to visit.

048 mad facade shoes
Madingley Garden

If we have enough stamina, we could stop by the American War Cemetery on the way back.

But we will probably head for coffee instead --  possibly at the West Café  in the Hauser Forum on the new West Site of Cambridge University.  I discovered the West Café last month and had a lovely lunch on the outside terrace, overlooking the fields.  Added bonus:  sciencey types with ipads at all the other tables.

25 DSCF8701
West Café, Hauser Forum

27 DSCF8687
The Barton bike path going past the Hauser Forum

Plus, if you're on a bike:  it's a lovely bike ride to get there via the West Cambridge bike path.




Day 3
Botanic Garden.
Did I mention that my mother loves gardens?  The Botanic Garden is one of her favourites, plus we now have the fantastic new Garden Café there.  Both my mother and father love modern architecture so the award-winning Sainsbury Lab is an added draw.

DSCF7736
Garden Café, Botanic Garden

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Garden Café umbrellas and bits of the Sainsbury Lab




Day 4
If people are up for it, we may take a drive down to near Stansted and go to the Henry Moore Sculpture Park in Perry Green.  I've not been there but it looks like a nice, doable outing from Cambridge.  Nature plus art:  a good combination.


Catalogue of the Henry Moore collection at Perry Green

Local alternative (in case people don't feel like travel):

Lynn Strover Art Gallery in Fen Ditton.  This has a Bank Holiday exhibition called The Little Picure Show from  Sat-Mon, 24-26 Aug 2013.

Source:  © Lynn Strover.






Day 5
I have to pick up another family member from Luton Airport in the morning so that will eat half the day.  Perhaps we will relax afterwards and have Cream Tea at the Orchard Tea Garden in Grantchester.

Gateway Gallery, Luton Airport

Orchard
Orchard Tea Garden in winter

Possible supper at Bill's on Green Street.





Day 6
A day to go punting.  Or just veg out.  Possibly finish with drinks on the roof terrace of the Varsity Hotel.

Although, if you want great views for free, just take the lift up to the top floor of the Park Street car park.  ;-p

Mural at the Newmarket Street roundabout




More ideas for a Cambridge itinerary are here at my pinterest site:  Visitors' itinerary.

Where do you take visitors?



Related blog posts:
Murals in a tunnel under a roundabout
Werewolf art at Luton Airport
Madingley series


Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2013/08/where-to-take-family-visitors-cambridge.html

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Madingley Hall 3: The Turret

001 mad ball east facade 1543-7 Tudor

Remember my visit to Madingley Hall?  And my subsequent wanderings about the Gardens?  This is the third and final part of my mini-series on Madingley Hall, and it's about:

The Hunting Murals in the Turret

Above, you see the east façade of Madingley Hall.  See the turret in the left corner?  That's where the murals are, right at the top, up an old winding staircase.

027 mad bear baiting murals rm in turret late 16thc early 17th local artist prob hunt

The murals were painted in the late 16th / early 17th century, by a local Cambridge artist.  This one shows a Bear Baiting.

Yes, there were bears.  In Cambridge.

The owners of Madingley Hall kept bears in their grounds for sport.

028 mad bears were kept for sport

This black bear is being attacked by three dogs.  The huntsman to the left does not look too happy.  You've got to love his nifty hat.

029 mad bear cu

"Help!  Bear attack!"  (Not words you hear much these days in Cambridgeshire...)

030 mad boar

Another mural shows a wild boar.  It seems to be mauling some sort of creature (can you tell what that is?).  Just look at that fierce expression.

This is a great bit of art to look at with children!

031 mad hunt

A less violent scene:  huntsmen, horses, hounds -- and are those two birds falcons?

032 mad bird cu

This bird reminds me of the bird I saw inside the Hall, on the 17th-century tapestry.

020 mad tapestry boat


018 mad tapestry Saloon Brussels c1660 firm of de Vos

Good-bye, Madingley Hall and Gardens!  I'll be back again for sure!

041 mad grassy avenue lancelot 'capability' brown 1756

Have you been to Madingley?  What did you think?  Perhaps some of you have done courses for, with the University of Cambridge's Institute for Continuing Education?

Let me know in comments!

Part 1:  Madingley House (and its paintings)
Part 2:  Madingley Gardens (and its sculptures)



Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2013/07/madingley-hall-3-turret.html

Monday, 22 July 2013

Madingley Hall 2: The Gardens

024 mad window Saloon stone mullions stained glass roundels w arms of kings queens England end 19th C lsc Capability Brown mid 18thc

Remember when I visited Madingley Hall?  Through the windows of the Saloon, I glimpsed the Gardens, laid out by the famous garden designer Capability Brown in 1756.

I couldn't wait to get out of the hall and wander through those amazing grounds.


041 mad grassy avenue lancelot 'capability' brown 1756

It was a sultry summer's day.  I took off my shoes and walked barefoot on the perfectly-mown lawn.  There's nothing quite like springy soft turf under your soles.  Absolutely gorgeous!

042 mad shoes lawn

I don't know an awful lot about garden design but this combination of wild meadow and architectural formal bushes strikes me as peculiarly English.


043 mad meadow

Don't you just want to wander down this grassy path?  Like Little Red Riding Hood being tempted into the woods?

044 mad meadow path

And what do you find down in the woods?  Not a Big Bad Wolf but this lovely lichen-clad statue along the Lower East Walk.

045 mad statue lower east walk


046 mad statue cu

Yes, there's art in the Madingley Gardens, too.  Sculpture among nature:  is there anything more Romantic?

This bust of an ancient God stands at the end of the long formal grassy walk, the one with the clipped bushes on either side.

047 mad herm

Turn around, and you will see the north façade of the Hall.  It was built in the 1590s, and re-designed in 1909-10.


048 mad facade shoes

See the arched shapes at the bottom of the façade?  And above them, the light-coloured rectangles?  This heraldic bird of prey is one of them.  Don't you love its stern eyes and lolling tongue?

049 mad dragon

A bit further on in the wall, we find this gargoyle.

050 mad gargoyle

051 mad gargoyle on triangle

And under the terrace, the Buddha Pond.  Note also the fun beast's head.

052 mad buddha pond

I walked around to the south side of the building and found this Hazel Walk, planted in the first half of the 19th century.

053 mad hazel walk1st h 19th

Goldfish and lilies in a pond.

054 mad pond

The Sunken Garden, full of white flowers.

055 mad sunken garden

A sundial invites you to sit and dream.

056 mad sundial

Lichen, stone, spiky grass and fatty leaves:  all sorts of textures.

058 mad lichen

And a lush display of polygonatum or Solomon's Seal.

059 mad poly

Now why does the one in my garden not look like that??

060 mad poly zizou

Look out for my future blog post, the third and last in the series on Madingley Hall:  Murals of bears and wild boar in the turret.

Enjoy these hot summer days!


Permalink:  http://artincambridge.blogspot.com/2013/07/madingley-hall-2-gardens.html

Part 1:  Madingley House (and its paintings)
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