Thursday, 30 October 2014
Tuesday, 28 October 2014
Remembering the great Jimmy Edwards . Watch the VÍDEO bellow /Whacko! [1960]/ Hold on! It takes some seconds to start ...
Jimmy Edwards, DFC (23 March 1920 – 7 July
1988) was an English comedic script writer and comedy actor on both radio and
television, best known as Pa Glum in Take It From Here and as the headmaster
"Professor" James Edwards in Whack-O!
Edwards was born James Keith O'Neill
Edwards in Barnes, London ,
the son of a professor of mathematics. He was educated at St
Paul 's Cathedral School , at King's College
School in Wimbledon, London ,
and later at St John's College , Cambridge .
He served in the Royal Air Force during
World War II, earning the Distinguished Flying Cross. His Dakota was shot down
at Arnhem in
1944, resulting in his sustaining facial injuries requiring plastic surgery—he
disguised the traces with the huge handlebar moustache that later became his
trademark. He was a member of the Guinea Pig Club.
Edwards was a feature of London
theatre in the immediate post-war years, debuting at London 's Windmill Theatre in 1946 and on BBC
radio the same year. He later did a season with Tony Hancock, having previously
performed in the Cambridge Footlights review. He gained wider exposure as a
radio performer in Take It From Here, co-starring Dick Bentley, which first
paired his writer Frank Muir with Bentley's personal script writer Denis
Norden. Also on radio he appeared in Jim The Great and My Wildest Dream.
Graduating to television, he appeared in
Whack-O, also written by Muir and Norden, and the radio panel game Does the
Team Think?, a series which Edwards also created. In 1960 a film version of
Whack-O called Bottoms Up was made, written by Muir and Norden. On TV he also
appeared in The Seven Faces of Jim, Six More Faces of Jim, and More Faces of
Jim, in guest slots in Make Room for Daddy and Sykes, in Bold As Brass, I
Object, John Jorrocks Esq, The Auction Game, Jokers Wild, Sir Yellow, Doctor in
the House, Charley's Aunt and Oh! Sir James! (which he also wrote).
He was the subject of This Is Your Life in
1958 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the BBC's Piccadilly 1 Studio.
Edwards also starred in The Fossett Saga in
1969 as James Fossett, an ambitious Victorian writer of penny dreadfuls, with
Sam Kydd playing Herbert Quince, his unpaid manservant, and June Whitfield
playing music-hall singer Millie Goswick. This was shown on Fridays at 8:30 pm
on LWT; David Freeman was the creator.
In December 1958, Jimmy Edwards played the
King in Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella at the London Coliseum with
Kenneth Williams, Tommy Steele, Yana and Betty
Marsden. In April 1966, Edwards performed at the last night of Melbourne 's Tivoli Theatre. His final words
closed a long tradition of Australian music hall. "I don't relish the
distinction of being the man who closed the Tiv. Music hall's dead in Britain . Now
this one's dead, there's nowhere to go. I'll either become a character comedian
or a pauper."
Edwards frequently worked with fellow
comedian Eric Sykes, acting in the short films written by Sykes: The Plank (1967),
which also starred Tommy Cooper; alongside Arthur Lowe and Ronnie Barker in the
remake of The Plank during 1979; and in Rhubarb (1969), which again featured
Sykes. The films were unusual in that although they were not silent, there was
no dialogue other than various grunts and sound effects.
Edwards and Sykes also toured UK theatres
with their theatrical farce Big Bad Mouse which, while keeping more or less to
a script, gave them rein to ad lib, involve the audience, and generally break
the "fourth wall". Sykes was replaced by Roy Castle in later runs of
the show both in its three-year residency at the Shaftesbury Theatre in London 's West End and also extensive tours of the Middle
East and Australia .
Edwards also starred in the stage revival of Maid of the Mountains.
Jimmy Edwards published his autobiography,
Six of the Best, in 1984, as a follow-up to Take it From Me. Among his
interests were brass bands, being a vice-president of the City of Oxford Silver Band , and
was an accomplished player of both the tuba and euphonium. Edwards was one of
the principal founders, and a lifelong member, of the Handlebar Club, in which
all the members had such moustaches. He was also a keen amateur polo player and
played at Ham Polo Club.
Edwards was a lifelong Conservative and in
the 1964 general election stood as a candidate in Paddington North, without
success. He was a devotee of fox hunting at Ringmer, near Lewes. He also served
as Rector of Aberdeen University for three years during the 1950s, a university
that has a history of appointing celebrities and actors as their honorary
rector.
He was married to Valerie Seymour for
eleven years. During the 1970s, however, he was publicly outed as a lifelong
homosexual, much to his annoyance. After the ending of his marriage, there were
press reports of his engagement to Joan Turner, the actress, singer and
comedienne, but these came to nothing and were suspected to be a publicity
stunt by both of them. His home was in Fletching, East Sussex, and he died in
London in 1988 at the age of 68 from pneumonia.
Sunday, 26 October 2014
The urgent need of slowing down in the way we experience and approach art in a Museum.
The Art of Slowing Down in a
Museum
OCTOBER 9, 2014 / New York Times / http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/10/12/travel/the-art-of-slowing-down-in-a-museum.html?referrer=&_r=0
Stephanie Rosenbloom
Ah, the Louvre. It’s sublime, it’s
historic, it’s … overwhelming.
Upon entering any vast art museum — the
Hermitage, the British Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art — the typical
traveler grabs a map and spends the next two hours darting from one masterpiece
to the next, battling crowds, exhaustion and hunger (yet never failing to take
selfies with boldface names like Mona Lisa).
What if we slowed down? What if we spent
time with the painting that draws us in instead of the painting we think we’re
supposed to see?
Most people want to enjoy a museum, not
conquer it. Yet the average visitor spends 15 to 30 seconds in front of a work
of art, according to museum researchers. And the breathless pace of life in our
Instagram age conspires to make that feel normal. But what’s a traveler with a
long bucket list to do? Blow off the Venus de Milo to linger over a less
popular lady like Diana of Versailles?
“When you go to the library,” said
James O.
Pawelski, the director of education for the Positive Psychology Center at the
University of Pennsylvania, “you don’t walk along the shelves looking at the
spines of the books and on your way out tweet to your friends, ‘I read 100
books today!'” Yet that’s essentially how many people experience a museum.
“They see as much of art as you see spines on books,” said Professor Pawelski,
who studies connections between positive psychology and the humanities. “You
can’t really see a painting as you’re walking by it.”
There is no right way to experience a
museum, of course. Some travelers enjoy touring at a clip or snapping photos of
timeless masterpieces. But psychologists and philosophers such as Professor
Pawelski say that if you do choose to slow down — to find a piece of art that
speaks to you and observe it for minutes rather than seconds — you are more
likely to connect with the art, the person with whom you’re touring the
galleries, maybe even yourself, he said. Why, you just might emerge feeling
refreshed and inspired rather than depleted.
To demonstrate this, Professor Pawelski
takes his students to the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia , home to some of the most
important Post Impressionist and early modern paintings, and asks them to spend
at least 20 minutes in front of a single painting that speaks to them in some
way. Twenty minutes these days is what three hours used to be, he noted. “But
what happens, of course, is you actually begin to be able to see what you’re
looking at,” he said.
Julie Haizlip wasn’t so sure. A scientist
and self-described left-brain thinker, Dr. Haizlip is a clinical professor at
the School of Nursing
and the Division of Pediatric Critical Care at the University of Virginia .
While studying at Penn she was among the students Professor Pawelski took to
the Barnes one afternoon in March
“I have to admit I was a bit skeptical,”
said Dr. Haizlip, who had never spent 20 minutes looking at a work of art and
prefers Keith Haring, Andy Warhol and Jackson Pollock to Matisse, Rousseau and
Picasso, whose works adorn the Barnes.
Any museumgoer can do what Professor
Pawelski asks students such as Dr. Haizlip to do: Pick a wing and begin by
wandering for a while, mentally noting which works are appealing or stand out.
Then return to one that beckons. For instance, if you have an hour he suggests
wandering for 30 minutes, and then spending the next half-hour with a single
compelling painting. Choose what resonates with you, not what’s most famous
(unless the latter strikes a chord).
Indeed, a number of museums now offer “slow
art” tours or days that encourage visitors to take their time. Rather than
check master works off a list as if on a scavenger hunt, Sandra Jackson-Dumont,
who oversees the education programs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York , said you can
make a sprawling museum digestible and personal by seeking out only those works
that dovetail with your interests, be it a love of music or horses. To find
relevant works or galleries, research the museum’s collection online in advance
of your visit. Or stop by the information desk when you arrive, tell a staff
member about your fascination with, say, music, and ask for suggestions. If the
person doesn’t know or says, “we don’t have that,” ask if there’s someone else
you can talk to, advised Ms. Jackson-Dumont, because major museums are rife
with specialists. Might you miss some other works by narrowing your focus?
Perhaps. But as Professor Pawelski put it, sometimes you get more for the price
of admission by opting to see less.
Initially, nothing in the Barnes grabbed
Dr. Haizlip. Then she spotted a beautiful, melancholy woman with red hair like
her own. It was Toulouse-Lautrec’s painting of a prostitute, “AMontrouge” —
Rosa La Rouge.
“I was trying to figure out why she had
such a severe look on her face,” said Dr. Haizlip. As the minutes passed, Dr.
Haizlip found herself mentally writing the woman’s story, imagining that she
felt trapped and unhappy — yet determined. Over her shoulder, Toulouse-Lautrec
had painted a window. “There’s an escape,” Dr. Haizlip thought. “You just have
to turn around and see it.”
“I was actually projecting a lot of me and
what was going on in my life at that moment into that painting,” she continued.
“It ended up being a moment of self-discovery.” Trained as a pediatric
intensive-care specialist, Dr. Haizlip was looking for some kind of change but
wasn’t sure what. Three months after her encounter with the painting, she
changed her practice, accepting a teaching position at the University of Virginia ’s
School of Nursing , where she is now using positive
psychology in health care teams. “There really was a window behind me that I
don’t know I would have seen,” she said, “had I not started looking at things
differently.”
Professor Pawelski said it’s still a
mystery why viewing art in this deliberately contemplative manner can increase
well-being or what he calls flourishing. That’s what his research is trying to
uncover. He theorized, however, that there is a connection to research on
meditation and its beneficial biological effects. In a museum, though, you’re not
just focusing on your breath, he said. “You’re focusing on the work of art.”
Previous research, including a study led by
Stephen Kaplan at the University
of Michigan , has already
suggested that museums can serve as restorative environments. And Daniel Fujiwara
at the London School of Economics and Political Science has found that visiting
museums can have a positive impact on happiness and self-reported health.
Ms. Jackson-Dumont, who has also worked at
the Seattle Art Museum, the Studio Museum in Harlem and the Whitney Museum of
American Art, said travelers should feel empowered to “curate” their own
experience. Say, for example, you do not like hearing chatter when you look at
art. Ms. Jackson-Dumont suggests making your own soundtrack at home and taking
headphones to the museum so that you can stroll the galleries accompanied by
music. “I think people feel they have to behave a certain way in a museum,” she
said. “You can actually be you.”
To that end, many museums are encouraging
visitors to take selfies with the art and post them on social media. (In case
you missed it, Jan. 22 was worldwide "MuseumSelfie" day with visitors
sharing their best work on Twitter using an eponymous hashtag.) Selfie-takers
often pose like the subject of the painting or sculpture behind them. To some
visitors that seems crass, distracting or antithetical to contemplation. But
surprisingly, Ms. Jackson-Dumont has observed that when museumgoers strike an
art-inspired pose, it not only creates camaraderie among onlookers but it gives
the selfie-takers a new appreciation for the art. In fact, taking on the pose
of a sculpture, for example, is something the Met does with visitors who are blind
or partially sighted because “feeling the pose” can allow them to better
understand the work.
There will always be certain paintings or
monuments that travelers feel they must see, regardless of crowds or lack of
time. To winnow the list, Ms. Jackson-Dumont suggests asking yourself: What are
the things that, if I do not see them, will leave me feeling as if I didn’t
have a New York
(or any other city) experience? (Museum tours may also help you be efficient.)
The next time you step into a vast treasure
trove of art and history, allow yourself to be carried away by your interests
and instincts. You never know where they might lead you. Before leaving the
Barnes on that March afternoon, Dr. Haizlip had another unexpected moment: She
bought a print of the haunting Toulouse-Lautrec woman.
“I felt like she had more to tell me,” she
said.
PARIS — Spending an idle morning watching people look at art is hardly a
scientific experiment, but it rekindles a perennial question: What exactly are
we looking for when we roam as tourists around museums? As with so many things
right in front of us, the answer may be no less useful for being familiar.
Stephanie Rosenbloom is The Getaway
columnist for the Travel section. Previously, she was a New York Times staff
reporter for Style where she wrote about American social trends including
fashion, technology and love in a digital age. Prior to that she was the
retailing reporter for Business Day, where she wrote about money and happiness
and covered companies like Walmart, Saks and Macy’s during the financial crisis
of 2008.
She appears regularly in New York Times
videos and is a featured writer in “The New York Times, 36 Hours: 150 Weekends
in the USA & Canada ” (Taschen, 2011) and “The New York Times
Practical Guide to Practically Everything” (St. Martin ’s
Press, 2006)
At Louvre, Many
Stop to Snap but Few Stay to Focus
By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN
Published: August 2, 2009 / http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/03/arts/design/03abroad.html
At the Louvre the other day, in the
Pavillon des Sessions, two young women in flowered dresses meandered through
the gallery. They paused and circled around a few sculptures. They took their
time. They looked slowly.
The pavilion puts some 100 immaculate
objects from outside Europe on permanent view
in a ground floor suite of cool, silent galleries at one end of the museum.
Feathered masks from Alaska , ancient bowls
from the Philippines ,
Mayan stone portraits and the most amazing Zulu spoon carved from wood in the
abstracted S-shape of a slender young woman take no back seat, aesthetically
speaking, to the great Titians and Chardins upstairs.
The young women were unusual for stopping.
Most of the museum’s visitors passed through the gallery oblivious.
A few game tourists glanced vainly in
guidebooks or hopefully at wall labels, as if learning that one or another of
these sculptures came from Papua New Guinea or Hawaii or the Archipelago of
Santa Cruz, or that a work was three centuries old or maybe four might help
them see what was, plain as day, just before them.
Almost nobody, over the course of that hour
or two, paused before any object for as long as a full minute. Only a
17th-century wood sculpture of a copulating couple, from San Cristobal in the
Solomon Islands, placed near an exit, caused several tourists to point, smile
and snap a photo, but without really breaking stride.
Visiting museums has always been about
self-improvement. Partly we seem to go to them to find something we already
recognize, something that gives us our bearings: think of the scrum of tourists
invariably gathered around the Mona Lisa. At one time a highly educated
Westerner read perhaps 100 books, all of them closely. Today we read hundreds
of books, or maybe none, but rarely any with the same intensity. Travelers who
took the Grand Tour across Europe during the 18th century spent months and
years learning languages, meeting politicians, philosophers and artists and
bore sketchbooks in which to draw and paint — to record their memories and help
them see better.
Cameras replaced sketching by the last
century; convenience trumped engagement, the viewfinder afforded emotional
distance and many people no longer felt the same urgency to look. It became
possible to imagine that because a reproduction of an image was safely
squirreled away in a camera or cell phone, or because it was eternally
available on the Web, dawdling before an original was a waste of time,
especially with so much ground to cover.
We could dream about covering lots of
ground thanks to expanding collections and faster means of transportation. At
the same time, the canon of art that provided guideposts to tell people where
to go and what to look at was gradually dismantled. A core of shared values
yielded to an equality among visual materials. This was good and necessary, up
to a point. Millions of images came to compete for our attention. Liberated by
a proliferation, Western culture was also set adrift in an ocean of passing
stimulation, with no anchors to secure it.
So tourists now wander through museums,
seeking to fulfill their lifetime’s art history requirement in a day, wondering
whether it may now be the quantity of material they pass by rather than the
quality of concentration they bring to what few things they choose to focus
upon that determines whether they have “done” the Louvre. It’s self-improvement
on the fly.
The art historian T. J. Clark, who during
the 1970s and ’80s pioneered a kind of analysis that rejected old-school
connoisseurship in favor of art in the context of social and political affairs,
has lately written a book about devoting several months of his time to looking
intently at two paintings by Poussin. Slow looking, like slow cooking, may yet
become the new radical chic.
Until then we grapple with our impatience
and cultural cornucopia. Recently, I bought a couple of sketchbooks to draw
with my 10-year-old in St. Peter’s and elsewhere around Rome, just for the fun
of it, not because we’re any good, but to help us look more slowly and
carefully at what we found. Crowds occasionally gathered around us as if we
were doing something totally strange and novel, as opposed to something normal,
which sketching used to be. I almost hesitate to mention our sketching. It
seems pretentious and old-fogeyish in a cultural moment when we can too easily
feel uncomfortable and almost ashamed just to look hard.
Artists fortunately remind us that there’s
in fact no single, correct way to look at any work of art, save for with an
open mind and patience. If you have ever gone to a museum with a good artist
you probably discovered that they don’t worry so much about what art history
books or wall labels tell them is right or wrong, because they’re selfish
consumers, freed to look by their own interests.
Back to those two young women at the
Louvre: aspiring artists or merely curious, they didn’t plant themselves
forever in front of the sculptures but they stopped just long enough to laugh
and cluck and stare, and they skipped the wall labels until afterward.
They looked, in other words. And they
seemed to have a very good time.
Leaving, they caught sight of a sculptured
effigy from Papua New Guinea
with a feathered nose, which appeared, by virtue of its wide eyes and open
hands positioned on either side of its head, as if it were taunting them.
They thought for a moment. “Nyah-nyah,”
they said in unison. Then blew him a raspberry.
Wednesday, 22 October 2014
Tuesday, 21 October 2014
"HUSKY"
Husky was founded in 1965 by retired American airman Steve Gulyas and his
wife Edna/ - Husky Ltd in Tostock,
Husky was sold in 90’s to
Described in http://shoptrotter.com/brands/husky-1965/
:
“Husky is an Italian clothing brand,
founded in 1965, which gained instant popularity with its Husky jacket,
designer by a retired American airman Steve Gulyas and his wife Edna.
Comfortable and weather-proof Husky jacket soon became a favourite hunting
outfit for Queen Elizabeth and other members of the english Royal Family.
Nowadays Husky offers much wider choice of comfy and weather-proof clothing,
perfect for a hunting or a fishing trip.”
|
Monday, 20 October 2014
Coming Soon : Chris Steele-Perkins’ book "A Place In The Country".
Holkham Hall: a modern-day Downton
There’s a butler, a gamekeeper, a cook – and everyone swears it’s
nothing like Downton Abbey. But what keeps a country estate alive in 2014?
Magnum photographer Chris Steele-Perkins spends a year at Holkham Hall in Norfolk
Words:
Photographs:
The
Guardian, Friday 17 October 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/oct/17/holkham-hall-norfolk-a-modern-day-downton-abbey?CMP=fb_gu
Pass
between the gatehouses, down the sweeping drive towards Holkham Hall, and you
enter a time warp. Fallow deer cluster scenically under broad oaks, geese honk
as they rise from the silver lake. It could almost be 1764, the year the grand
house was completed, shortly after the death of Thomas Coke, the first Earl of
Leicester.
The estate
is now run by Viscount Thomas Coke, the son of the seventh Earl of Leicester.
Photographs by Chris Steele-Perkins, who documented the 25,000-acre estate in Norfolk over the course
of a year, appear to portray a deferential Downton Abbey-style existence, even
today. But Steele-Perkins also discovered a world permeated by contemporary
corporate values and defined by its visitors – a country home that, as he puts
it, has been “reinvented in this new manner which is very consumable for the
outside world”.
Holkham has
diversified into 48 different businesses serving both aristocratic and popular
tastes, from a boutique hotel to a caravan park and 300 houses, mostly let to
local people. There are 200 full-time and 150 seasonal staff – including six
gamekeepers and a butler, but also a conservation manager and education
officer, too. Holkham’s walled estate is open to the public, hosting concerts
and festivals. Each year, more than half a million people visit Holkham’s
beach, which is a national nature reserve and, unusually, is entrusted to the
privately owned estate rather than the government’s wildlife body Natural
England.
The Cokes (pronounced “Cook”) are more
generous over public access than most great estates, but they are wary of the
media. David Horton-Fawkes, estates director, admits they were nervous about
giving access to Steele-Perkins, a member of the Magnum collective who has
documented poverty around Britain .
“We can easily be depicted as an anachronistic relic of the 19th century, but
we’re not that,” Horton-Fawkes insists. “We don’t want to be seen as
forelock-tugging servants living in the 19th century. It’s disrespectful to the
people who work here.”
In fact, Steele-Perkins found a bustling,
busy estate which he likens to “a well-run ship”. “I started to think of the
estate in nautical terms,” he notes in an introduction to his book of these
photographs. “A long time ago I had spent a week on the aircraft carrier HMS
Invincible where the crew was organised into myriad teams, but worked together
as an organic whole when needed. Holkham is similar: building maintenance,
farming, forestry, gamekeeping, with their officers and their petty officers
and their ratings, in effect.”
For much of the 20th century, country piles
such as Holkham were an endangered species. Prohibitive death duties between
the wars caused the break-up of many great estates, which were sold for
development, handed over to the National Trust or, incredibly, demolished.
Holkham held 42,000
acres in the late 1940s when the fourth earl, another
Thomas Coke, tried to pass it to the National Trust. That deal never happened
and the Cokes were down to their last 25,000 acres in 1973
when Edward, father of the current incumbent, began running the estate. “When
he took over in 1973, every facet was losing money,” says Viscount Coke, 49,
who lives in part of the hall with his wife Polly and their four children.
When Coke returned to his family seat aged
28, after Eton , university and the army, he
remembers his father looking at him and saying, “What are you doing here?” The
seventh earl (who is still alive) managed a mix of farming, forestry and
shooting, with a few tourists visiting the house, and he didn’t need any help.
So the young heir began by looking after a large caravan park – “We’d prefer to
say holiday park,” Coke says, “we’ve invested a lot on landscaping and making
it nice” – which had returned to the estate after the local council’s lease
ended.
Twenty years ago, 75% of Holkham’s turnover
came from the land. Now, tourism and leisure make up 55% of turnover; farming
and property rentals are only 40%. Coke was given full control of the estate
seven years ago and appointed Horton-Fawkes two years ago. “For a landowner,
I’m not bad at this customer service sort of thing, but David introduced me to
a whole new level,” Coke says. “I don’t think I’ve uttered the word ‘punter’
for the last few years – I have to say things like ‘guest’.” Such openness has
been rewarded: Coke is surprised that his walled garden is now tended by 23
volunteers. “I always thought people would happily volunteer for the National
Trust, but to volunteer for Little Lord Fauntleroy living in a big house – it’s
amazing we’ve got to that position.”
In many ways, the estate resembles any
other modern corporation. Coke has introduced board meetings and non-executive
directors, “people with experience from outside”. Senior staff recently visited
Volvo’s HQ in Gothenburg to see how they did business, and they already have
some unusual incentives in place: if an employee doesn’t perform a task on
time, they must bake a cake. Coke is not exempt although, he admits, when
called upon he “made two loaves of bread in the breadmaker”.
Coke and his wife have a private staff of
three, compared with 50 in
the Downton era, though this does include a butler. When Coke took over the
estate, he says, “I thought, ‘Dad had a butler, I’m not going to have one’ –
but it’s such a big house.” The butler, Steele-Perkins notes, is “quite young
and nothing like the butler of fiction”. He wears full butler attire only for
formal occasions, and Steele-Perkins spent time with the staff while they
prepared for one such event: a black-tie dinner for 24 people. “Laying the
table, lining up the glasses, took hours.”
Steele-Perkins was surprised to find that
even among themselves, staff refer to their bosses as “Lord” and “Lady”.
Horton-Fawkes says that Tom and Polly “lost a lot of sleep” over this. “They
are very approachable, and didn’t want that deferential relationship,” he says.
Nevertheless, they decided to retain a traditional formality to “reinforce the
boundary between work and home”.
As for the staff, it seems that old habits
die hard. “I quite like saying ‘Lord Coke’, that formality seems right for the
estate,” says Sarah Henderson, Holkham’s conservation manager. Kevan McCaig,
the head gamekeeper, who was previously employed by the royal family at Sandringham , says he is “more comfortable” calling his
boss Lord Coke. “In different places I’ve worked I’ve never called anybody by
their first name,” he says.
McCaig lives in a cottage in the grounds.
Only one member of staff lives in the hall itself: the head of security. But
while he was working there, Steele-Perkins was able to stay in the house. “It
could be quite spooky,” he says, “coming back there at night, torch in hand,
after dining at one of the pubs that Holkham owns, footsteps echoing down stone
paved corridors above the haunted cellars, a whisper of wind around the
windows…” Over the course of the year, as the family got to know him better, he
graduated from the butler’s quarters to the guest bedrooms. He remembers one
night staying in a bedroom with Italian Renaissance paintings on the wall - a
room which, he recalls, “had a footprint bigger than that of my whole house in London ”
• Chris Steele-Perkins’ book A Place In The
Country, from which these photographs are taken, is published by Dewi Lewis
next month, priced £25.
Steele-Perkins was born in Rangoon, Burma in
1947 to a British father and a Burmese mother; but his father left his mother
and took the boy to England at the age of two. He went to Christ's Hospital and
for one year studied chemistry at the University of York before leaving for a
stay in Canada. Returning to Britain, he joined the University of Newcastle
upon Tyne, where he served as photographer and picture editor for a student
magazine. After graduating in psychology in 1970 he started to work as a
freelance photographer, specializing in the theatre, while he also lectured in
psychology.
By 1971, Steele-Perkins had moved to London
and become a full-time photographer, with particular interest in urban issues,
including poverty. He went to Bangladesh in 1973 to take photographs for relief
organizations; some of this work was exhibited in 1974 at the Camerawork
Gallery (London). In 1973–74 he taught photography at the Stanhope Institute
and the North East London Polytechnic.
In 1975, Steele-Perkins joined the Exit
Photography Group with the photographers Nicholas Battye and Paul Trevor, and
there continued his examination of urban problems: Exit's earlier booklet Down
Wapping had led to a commission by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation to
increase the scale of their work, and in six years they produced 30,000
photographs as well as many hours of taped interviews. This led to the 1982
book Survival Programmes. Steele-Perkins' work included depiction from 1975 to
1977 of street festivals, and prints from London Street Festivals were bought
by the British Council and exhibited with Homer Sykes' Once a Year and Patrick
Ward's Wish You Were Here; Steele-Perkins' depiction of Notting Hill has been
described as being in the vein of Tony Ray-Jones.
Steele-Perkins became an associate of the
French agency Viva in 1976, and three years after this, he published his first
book, The Teds, an examination of teddy boys that is now considered a classic
of documentary and even fashion photography. He curated photographs for the
Arts Council collection, and co-edited a collection of these, About 70
Photographs.
In 1977 Steele-Perkins had made a short detour
into "conceptual" photography, working with the photographer Mark
Edwards to collect images from the ends of rolls of films taken by others,
exposures taken in a rush merely in order to finish the roll. Forty were
exhibited in "Film Ends".
Work documenting poverty in Britain took
Steele-Perkins to Belfast, which he found to be poorer than Glasgow, London,
Middlesbrough, or Newcastle, as well as experiencing "a low-intensity
war".
He stayed in the Catholic Lower Falls area, first squatting and then staying in the flat of a man he met in Belfast. His photographs of Northern Ireland appeared in a 1981 book written by Wieland Giebel. Thirty years later, he would return to the area to find that its residents had new problems and fears; the later photographs appear within Magnum Ireland.
He stayed in the Catholic Lower Falls area, first squatting and then staying in the flat of a man he met in Belfast. His photographs of Northern Ireland appeared in a 1981 book written by Wieland Giebel. Thirty years later, he would return to the area to find that its residents had new problems and fears; the later photographs appear within Magnum Ireland.
Steele-Perkins photographed wars and disasters
in the third world, leaving Viva in 1979 to join Magnum Photos as a nominee (on
encouragement by Josef Koudelka), and becoming an associate member in 1981 and
a full member in 1983. He continued to work in Britain, taking photographs
published as The Pleasure Principle, an examination (in colour) of life in
Britain but also a reflection of himself. With Philip Marlow, he successfully
pushed for the opening of a London office for Magnum; the proposal was approved
in 1986.
Steele-Perkins made four trips to Afghanistan
in the 1990s, sometimes staying with the Taliban, the majority of whom
"were just ordinary guys" who treated him courteously. Together with
James Nachtwey and others, he was also fired on, prompting him to reconsider
his priorities: in addition to the danger of the front line:
. .
. you never get good pictures out of it. I've yet to see a decent front-line
war picture. All the strong stuff is a bit further back, where the emotions
are.
A book of his black and white images,
Afghanistan, was published first in French, and later in English and in
Japanese. The review in the Spectator read in part:
These astonishingly beautiful photographs are more moving than can be
described; they hardly ever dwell on physical brutalities, but on the bleak
rubble and desert of the country, punctuated by inexplicable moments of formal
beauty, even pastoral bliss . . . the grandeur of the images comes from
Steele-Perkins never neglecting the human, the individual face in the great crowd
of history.
—Philip Hensher
The book and the travelling exhibition of
photographs were also reviewed favorably in the Guardian, Observer, Library
Journal, and London Evening Standard.
Steele-Perkins served as the President of
Magnum from 1995 to 1998. One of the annual meetings over which he presided was
that of 1996, to which Russell Miller was given unprecedented access as an
outsider and which Miller has described in some detail.
With his second wife the presenter and writer
Miyako Yamada (山田美也子), whom he married
in 1999, Steele-Perkins has spent much time in Japan, publishing two books of
photographs: Fuji, a collection of views and glimpses of the mountain inspired
by Hokusai's Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji; and Tokyo Love Hello, scenes of
life in the city. Between these two books he also published a personal visual
diary of the year 2001, Echoes.
Work in South Korea included a contribution to
a Hayward Gallery touring exhibition of photographs of contemporary slavery,
"Documenting Disposable People", in which Steele-Perkins interviewed
and made black-and-white photographs of Korean "comfort women".
"Their eyes were really important to me: I wanted them to look at you, and
for you to look at them", he wrote. "They're not going to be around
that much longer, and it was important to give this show a history." The
photographs were published within Documenting Disposable People: Contemporary
Global Slavery.
Steele-Perkins returned to England for a
project by the Side Gallery on Durham's closed coalfields (exhibited within
"Coalfield Stories"); after this work ended, he stayed on to work on
a depiction (in black and white) of life in the north-east of England, published
as Northern Exposures.
In 2008 Steele-Perkins won an Arts Council
England grant for "Carers: The Hidden Face of Britain", a project to
interview those caring for their relatives at home, and to photograph the
relationships. Some of this work has appeared in The Guardian, and also in his
book England, My England, a compilation of four decades of his photography that
combines photographs taken for publication with much more personal work: he
does not see himself as having a separate personality when at home. "By
turns gritty and evocative," wrote a reviewer in The Guardian, "it is
a book one imagines that Orwell would have liked very much."
Steele-Perkins has two sons, Cedric, born 16
November 1990, and Cameron, born 18 June 1992. With his marriage to Miyako Yamada he has a stepson, Daisuke and a
granddaughter, Momoe.
Holkham Hall is an 18th-century country house
located adjacent to the village of Holkham, Norfolk, England. The house was
constructed in the Palladian style for Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester
(fifth creation) by the architect William Kent, aided by the architect and
aristocrat Lord Burlington.
Holkham Hall is one of England's finest
examples of the Palladian revival style of architecture, and severity of its
design is closer to Palladio's ideals than many of the other numerous Palladian
style houses of the period. The Holkham estate, formerly known as Neals, had
been purchased in 1609 by Sir Edward Coke, the founder of his family fortune.
It is the ancestral home of the Coke family, the Earls of Leicester of Holkham.
The interior of the hall is opulently but, by
the standards of the day, simply decorated and furnished. Ornament is used with
such restraint that it was possible to decorate both private and state rooms in
the same style, without oppressing the former. The principal entrance is
through the "Marble" Hall, which leads to the piano nobile, or the
first floor, and state rooms. The most impressive of these rooms is the saloon,
which has walls lined with red velvet. Each of the major state rooms is symmetrical
in its layout and design; in some rooms, false doors are necessary to fully
achieve this balanced effect.
Holkham was built by first Earl of Leicester,
Thomas Coke, who was born in 1697. A cultivated and wealthy man, Coke made the
Grand Tour in his youth and was away from England for six years between 1712
and 1718. It is likely he met both Burlington—the aristocratic architect at the
forefront of the Palladian revival movement in England—and William Kent in
Italy in 1715, and that in the home of Palladianism the idea of the mansion at
Holkham was conceived. Coke returned to England, not only with a newly acquired
library, but also an art and sculpture collection with which to furnish his
planned new mansion. However, after his return, he lived a feckless life,
preoccupying himself with drinking, gambling and hunting, and being a leading
supporter of cockfighting. He made a disastrous investment in the South Sea
Company and when the South Sea Bubble burst in 1720, the resultant losses
delayed the building of Coke's planned new country estate for over ten years. Coke,
who had been made Earl of Leicester in 1744, died in 1759—five years before the
completion of Holkham—having never fully recovered his financial losses.
Thomas's wife, Lady Margaret Tufton, Countess of Leicester (1700–1775), would
oversee the finishing and furnishing of the House.
Although Colen Campbell was employed by Thomas
Coke in the early 1720s, the oldest existing working and construction plans for
Holkham were drawn by Matthew Brettingham, under the supervision of Thomas
Coke, in 1726. These followed the guidelines and ideals for the house as
defined by Kent and Burlington. The Palladian revival style chosen was at this
time making its return in England. The style made a brief appearance in England
before the Civil War, when it was introduced by Inigo Jones. However, following the Restoration it was
replaced in popular favour by the Baroque style. The "Palladian revival",
popular in the 18th century, was loosely based on the appearance of the works
of the 16th-century Italian architect Andrea Palladio. However it did not,
adhere to Palladio's strict rules of proportion. The style eventually evolved
into what is generally referred to as Georgian, still popular in England
today. It was the chosen style for numerous houses in both town and country,
although Holkham is exceptional for both its severity of design and for being
closer than most in its adherence to Palladio's ideals.
Although Thomas Coke oversaw the project, he
delegated the on-site architectural duties to the local Norfolk architect
Matthew Brettingham, who was employed as the on-site clerk of works.
Brettingham was already the estate architect, and was in receipt of £50 a year
(about 7,000 pounds per year in 2014 terms in return for "taking care of his
Lordship's buildings". William Kent was mainly responsible for the
interiors of the Southwest pavilion, or family wing block, particularly the
Long Library. Kent produced a variety of alternative exteriors, suggesting a
far richer decoration than Coke wanted. Brettingham described the building of
Holkham as "the great work of [my life]", and when he published his
"The Plans and Elevations of the late Earl of Leicester's House at
Holkham", he immodestly described himself as sole architect, making no
mention of Kent's involvement. However, in a later edition of the book,
Brettingham's son admitted that "the general idea was first struck out by
the Earls of Leicester and Burlington, assisted by Mr. William Kent".
In 1734, the first foundations were laid;
however, building was to continue for thirty years, until the completion of the
great house in 1764.
The Palladian style was admired by Whigs such
as Thomas Coke, who sought to identify themselves with the Romans of antiquity.
Kent was responsible for the external appearance of Holkham; he based his
design on Palladio's unbuilt Villa Mocenigo,] as it appears in I Quattro Libri
dell'Architettura, but with modifications.
The plans for Holkham were of a large central
block of two floors only, containing on the piano nobile level a series of
symmetrically balanced state rooms situated around two courtyards. No hint of
these courtyards is given externally; they are intended for lighting rather
than recreation or architectural value. This great central block is flanked by
four smaller, rectangular blocks, or wings, and at each corners is linked
to the main house not by long colonnades—as would have been the norm in
Palladian architecture—but by short two-storey wings of only one bay.
The external appearance of Holkham can best be
described as a huge Roman palace. However, as with most architectural designs,
it is never quite that simple. Holkham is a Palladian house, and yet even by
Palladian standards the external appearance is austere and devoid of ornamentation.
This can almost certainly be traced to Coke himself. The on-site, supervising
architect, Matthew Brettingham, related that Coke required and demanded
"commodiousness", which can be interpreted as comfort. Hence rooms
that were adequately lit by one window, had only one, as a second might have
improved the external appearance but could have made a room cold or draughty.
As a result the few windows on the piano nobile, although symmetrically placed
and balanced, appear lost in a sea of brickwork; albeit these yellow bricks
were cast as exact replicas of ancient Roman bricks expressly for Holkham.
Above the windows of the piano nobile, where on a true Palladian structure the
windows of a mezzanine would be, there is nothing. The reason for this is the double
height of the state rooms on the piano nobile; however, not even a blind
window, such as those often seen in Palladio's own work, is permitted to
alleviate the severity of the facade. On the ground floor, the rusticated walls
are pierced by small windows more reminiscent of a prison than a grand house.
One architectural commentator, Nigel Nicolson, has described the house as
appearing as functional as a Prussian riding school.
The principal, or South facade, is 344 feet
(104.9 m) in length (from each of the flanking wings to the other), its
austerity relieved on the piano nobile level only by a great six-columned
portico. Each end of the central block is terminated by a slight projection,
containing a Venetian window surmounted by a single storey square tower and
capped roof, similar to those employed by Inigo Jones at Wilton House nearly a
century earlier. A near identical
portico was designed by Inigo Jones and Isaac de Caus for the Palladian front
at Wilton, but this was never executed.
The flanking wings contain service and
secondary rooms—the family wing to the south-west; the guest wing to the
north-west; the chapel wing to the south-east; and the kitchen wing to the
north-east. Each wing's external appearance is identical: three bays, each
separated from the other by a narrow recess in the elevation. Each bay is
surmounted by an unadorned pediment. The composition of stone, recesses,
varying pediments and chimneys of the four blocks is almost reminiscent of the
English Baroque style in favour ten years earlier, employed at Seaton Delaval
Hall by Sir John Vanbrugh. One of these wings, as at the later Kedleston Hall,
was a self-contained country house to accommodate the family when the state
rooms and central block were not in use.
The one storey porch at the main north
entrance was designed in the 1850s by Samuel Sanders Teulon, although
stylistically it is indistinguishable from the 18th century building.
Inside the house, the Palladian form reaches a
height and grandeur seldom seen in any other house in England. It has, in fact,
been described as "The finest Palladian interior in England."[20] The
grandeur of the interior is obtained with an absence of excessive ornament, and
reflects Kent's career-long taste for "the eloquence of a plain
surface". Work on the interiors ran from 1739 to 1773. The first habitable
rooms were in the family wing and were in use from 1740, the Long Library being
the first major interior completed in 1741. Among the last to be completed and
entirely under Lady Leicester's supervision is the Chapel with its alabaster
reredos. The house is entered through the "Marble" Hall (the chief
building fabric is in fact Derbyshire alabaster), modelled by Kent on a Roman
basilica. The room is over 50 feet (15 m) from floor to ceiling and is
dominated by the broad white marble flight of steps leading to the surrounding
gallery, or peristyle: here alabaster Ionic columns support the coffered,
gilded ceiling, copied from a design by Inigo Jones, inspired by the Pantheon
in Rome. The fluted columns are thought to be replicas of those in the Temple
of Fortuna Virilis, also in Rome. Around the hall are statues in niches; these
are predominantly plaster copies of classical deities.
The hall's flight of steps lead to the piano
nobile and state rooms. The grandest, the saloon, is situated immediately
behind the great portico, with its walls lined with patterned red Genoa velvet
and a coffered, gilded ceiling. In this room hangs Rubens's Return from Egypt.
On his Grand Tour, the Earl acquired a collection of Roman copies of Greek and
Roman sculpture which is contained in the massive "Statue Gallery",
which runs the full length of the house north to south. The North Dining Room,
a cube room of 27 feet (8.2 m) contains an Axminster carpet that perfectly
mirrors the pattern of the ceiling above. A bust of Aelius Verus, set in a
niche in the wall of this room, was found during the restoration at Nettuno. A classical apse gives the room an almost temple
air. The apse in fact, contains concealed access to the
labyrinth of corridors and narrow stairs that lead to the distant kitchens and
service areas of the house. Each corner of the east side of the principal block
contains a square salon lit by a huge Venetian window, one of them—the
Landscape Room—hung with paintings by Claude Lorrain and Gaspar Poussin. All of
the major state rooms have symmetrical walls, even where this involves matching
real with false doors. The major rooms also have elaborate white and
multi-coloured marble fireplaces, most with carvings and sculpture, mainly the
work of Thomas Carter, though Joseph Pickford carved the fireplace in the
Statue Gallery. Much of the furniture in the state rooms was also designed by
William Kent, in a stately classicising baroque manner.
So restrained is the interior decoration of
the state rooms, or in the words of James Lees-Milne, "chaste", that
the smaller, more intimate rooms in the family's private south-west wing were
decorated in similar vein, without being overpowering. The long library running
the full length of the wing still contains the collection of books acquired by
Thomas Coke on his Grand Tour through Italy, where he saw for the first time
the Palladian villas which were to inspire Holkham.
The Green State bedroom is the principal
bedroom; it is decorated with paintings and tapestries, including works by Paul
Saunders and George Smith Bradshaw. It is said that when Queen Mary visited,
Gavin Hamilton's "lewd" depiction of Jupiter Caressing Juno "was
considered unsuitable for that lady's eyes and was banished to the attics"
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