jack: (Default)
Amphitheatre

Logically, I knew London was a major Roman settlement, and hence presumably had an amphitheatre, but I didn't stop to ask, is it still there? Do we know where it was?

So I was surprised when I stopped at the Guildhall's Art Gallery, and they advertised having it in their basement, even if I shouldn't have been.

There's not that much there, the remnants of stone entrance way, and part of the arc. Most of the area would be outside the building. But they did a nice job illustrating it. Metal lines on the floor showed where relevant walls would have been, and wooden tiered seating. And a wooden (rectangular) drain with silt trap is visible under the floor, covered with glass.

And there's several athletic figures picked out in a glowing network of lines, like some 3d cyberpunk thing, showing that people would have been doing stuff there, not admiring the architecture.

V&A

And we went to the V&A. The Frida Kahlo exhibition was sold out for the day, and we didn't quite make it to the future exhibition, but we ended up seeing a lot of the permanent collection.

It's a glorious riot of stuff collected loosely by theme. We walked through the Rodin gallery entering and leaving. I only actually know vaguely of Rodin, but it was really impressive: sculpture which is both very realistic, and very dramatic, often oversized, often influenced by classic statuary, e.g. in missing heads, and sometimes by, apparently, wanting to portray many naked bodies writhing together.

We went on a quest for the contemporary glass exhibit, hoping to see more of Chihuly's amazing tentacly sculptures (spoiler: we did), but we ended up getting confused by the different staircases, and by the absence of a middle in the second main floor (and all of the mezzinine floors), and ended up crisscrossing through almost everywhere on our way.

We saw more sculpture, Japanese, Chinese, Buddhist, Middle Eastern, etc galleries, all a mix of notable things and beautiful things. The second main floor was more mixed, with collections of manufactured stuff, and library of art books, and stained glass and ecclesiastical gold, and we were flagging by then, so we made a last push to the glass, which was indeed very interesting.

And we had pea and lime cake which was surprisingly palatable.

And felt like we'd made good use of a random day off work with no major goals.

London

Oct. 4th, 2012 12:43 pm
jack: (Default)
The Shard

Regardless of whether it's a good idea, it's really pretty.

London Eye

I always thought this was a bit silly, but it's actually quite impressive to be up in it.

Public Transport

Despite problems it's amazing to be somewhere where you can actually look up a sensible way from A to B and have some confidence that it will work, and know that most transport routes really will have another come along in 10 minutes, rather than running an ok service between 10am and 4PM, and then shutting down for rush-hour, evenings and weekends.

Serpentine Gallery

It is really cute, it feels like a proper posh art gallery (old buildings, white rooms, professional staff standing around discreetly in corners, uncluttered) but completely free just sitting in the middle of Hyde Park.

The exhibition was Thomas Schutte, who I'm embarrassed to say I knew literally nothing about, but it's very nice to take half an hour to just go and see something you wouldn't otherwise have seen.

The most impressive piece was this towering statue (more scary in person): http://www.serpentinegallery.org/IMG_5324-700.jpg I won't try to analyse it.

Natural History Museum

Ostriches are really big! As are emperor penguins, which I think were more bigger than I imagined than ostriches, whilst obviously not being as absolutely big.

And I bought the cutest stuffed toy ever (http://www.nhmshop.co.uk/dino-soft-toys/t-rex-soft-toy/product.html). I am indisputably over 3 years old :) The picture doesn't do it justice: it's really cuddly, but really fierce! It has a bendy plastic skeleton inside, so you can pose it with a lot of freedom and it will stand up in the pose.

Londres

Oct. 11th, 2005 12:29 pm
jack: (Default)
I might be in london again this weekend. Does anyone want to book some time for lunch?