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fiona

Le Mans Brocante (originally posted 26th February 2012)

April 5, 2020 By fiona

I set off early on Wednesday morning: up at 5am in France (4am as far as I was concerned), to go with friends to the ‘brocante’ at Le Mans. I hadn’t been to it for a long while– it’s not much fun going on your own, struggling up at that time of the morning, driving for an hour and a half and then fighting for a parking space in the middle of a muddy field, so I was looking forward to going with the others. Of course once we arrived and had a quick cup of espresso to warm up, it was down to work and then you’re on your own: unspoken etiquette demands that you separate and go your own way to avoid the difficulties of everyone wanting the same thing. So it’s first come first served until the initial rush is over and then everyone meets up for another coffee and to compare notes.

I’m told that I’m very fussy about what I buy…. and there were lots of attractive things which, on the whole, weren’t as outrageously priced as I had expected. But it always has to be something I love for one reason or another and this dish from Provence was one of them. Partly it is the shape: I have two plates in the shop at the moment with the same glaze, so I was pleased to find a serving dish. Then there is the colour: such a suggestion of summer warmth against which any food would look good. But one food sprang to mind as soon as I saw it – asparagus. It’s not only that English asparagus is delicious, but the fact that it is only around for such a short time heightens my anticipation. And it is soon followed by broad beans, peas and all the other harbingers of summer. More than anything else though, it is the fact that asparagus would look perfect against the warm yellow of this glaze.

 

Filed Under: Blog

Town House Open Summer 2021

February 19, 2020 By fiona

Submissions call for Town House Open 21

Town House is having an Open exhibition again this summer! We had lots of visitors to our first one last year and I’m hoping this one will be even more popular.

I’d like to encourage as many artists as possible to submit as I want to have a wide range of artists’ work here over the summer, with many different interpretations of the theme: one thing that was important to you in lockdown. It can be a person, place, object or idea, just something that really helped over the past year, with an explanatory statement of up to 500 words.

Please tell anyone you know about it who might be interested….

It is open to residents of the UK who wish to submit an original painting in oil, acrylic or watercolour  up to A1 in size (including frame), or an original (portable) sculpture. Submission ends on 16th May and for more details and the submission form see

http://bitly.com/THOpen21 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Eleanor Crow’s Shopfronts of London

September 27, 2019 By fiona

An exhibition to accompany publication of the book of the same name featuring over eighty of Eleanor’s watercolours from the book, including some new ones

At a time of momentous change in the high street, Eleanor’s witty and fascinating personal survey champions the enduring culture of Britain’s small neighbourhood shops. Eleanor’s collection includes eighty of her watercolours of the capital’s bakers, cafés, butchers, fishmongers, greengrocers, chemists, launderettes, hardware stores, eel & pie shops, bookshops and stationers. Her pictures are accompanied in the book by the stories of the shops, their history and their shopkeepers – stretching from Chelsea in the west to Bethnal Green and Walthamstow in the east.

The watercolours are £150 framed (A5) and larger ones are £210 framed.

The exhibition opens on the 3rd October with a book launch and signing that evening 6 – 8pm and the exhibition continues at Town House until Sunday 20th October.

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Gallery, Paintings

A Botanist takes to Paint

May 2, 2019 By fiona

I first came encountered David Stuart as a writer on garden history many years ago and was delighted to discover last year that he has now taken to paint . As a result I’m happy to announce that the summer exhibition at Town House shows recent work by David – botanist, author and now artist. Much of his work uses plants as a central motif and though treated with great expression, all are based on an intense knowledge of plant design and an equally intense love of their beauty.

David has always loved plants. After frequent painting trips to Kew Gardens as a child, he became a botanist studying plant structure and relationships and has a PhD from Edinburgh University, working at the Royal Botanic Garden. Thereafter, he spent many years as a writer and journalist specialising in gardens, garden history, plants and their influence on all our lives.

He has had columns in national newspapers and has published fifteen books, many hugely well reviewed. They include Georgian Gardens, Plants that Shaped our Gardens, Dangerous Garden, and Classic Garden Plans. Recently though, he has returned to painting and print making.

Exhibition runs at Town House 18th May – 8th September

Three Cans

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Maps of London and Beyond by Adam Dant

July 1, 2018 By fiona

An exhibition of some of Adam Dant’s maps giving his unique view of our history and life today, to accompany publication of the book of the same name published by Batsford in conjunction with Spitalfields Life.

Artist and cartographer Adam Dant surveys London’s past, present and future from his studio in the East End. Beautiful, witty and subversive, his astonishing maps offer a compelling view of history, lore, language and life in the capital and beyond. Traversed by a plethora of colourful characters including William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Mary Wollstonecraft and Barbara Windsor, Adam Dant’s maps extend from the shipwrecks on the bed of the Thames to the stars in the sky over Soho. Along the way, he captures all the rich traditions in the capital, from brawls and buried treasure to gin and gentlemen’s clubs.

Adam Dant studied at the Royal College of Art, London and the MS University Faculty of Fine Arts, Baroda, India. He creates elaborate narrative drawings that examine and depict public contemporary life, space, mythologies and histories. Extensively researched and wittily perceptive, these works of art draw on a deep well of historical and visual sources. Adam Dant was the official election artist in 2015 and he lives and works in London.

Exhibition runs 5th – 22nd July 2018 at Town House

Maps of London and Beyond
Maps of London and Beyond by Adam Dant

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Doreen Fletcher: In Between, Almost Gone

October 15, 2017 By fiona

Doreen Fletcher arrived in the East End of London in the early 1980s and was immediately aware that the dilapidated buildings and small businesses in the streets around her were about to disappear. The sense of community in the area reminded her of her Midlands childhood and, inspired by the excitement of being somewhere new, she started a series of paintings of the East End that continued for the next twenty years.

Aware that she was documenting an urban landscape that would be lost forever, she regularly contacted galleries and magazines to promote not only her paintings, but also an awareness of what was happening in the East End. The negative response reflected the wider attitude at the time and was the culmination of centuries of neglect of an area that had long been regarded as a vast slum. Dispirited by the rejections and the overwhelming changes to the area, Doreen put all her work in the attic and stopped painting in 2003.

A chance contact put Doreen in touch with the the Gentle Author of Spitalfields Life and her paintings were featured on the blog, leading to a storm of interest and the near sell-out exhibition here at Town House in June last year. The sudden interest in Doreen’s work prompted her to start painting again and the latest work, retracing her East End footsteps, reveals how much of the area remains an edgeland balanced between demolition and regeneration, between past and future. It is an intensely human landscape that forms the essential backdrop to the lives of people still struggling to find their place in a built environment that is rapidly changing: an edgeland in between.

In Between, Almost Gone an exhibition of Doreen Fletcher’s latest work 13th – 29th October 2017 at Town House

 

Tyre Shop, Salmon Lane (2017)

Emporioum, Commercial Road (2017)

Masala Café, E14 (2017)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Botanicals in a Bottle

May 1, 2017 By fiona

Stephen Nelson

A workshop in which plantsman and perfumer Stephen Nelson will discuss the shared disciplines of the perfumer and the gin maker – distillation, blending and composition – and will give a potted history of London’s early perfumery and distillery trades and the supply of herbs and spices for it.

You will be able to sample and compare some ‘elixirs’ and perfumes with Stephen, considering the structure and common notes in each and each participant will get the chance to blend some botanicals and essences to take home. This can either be in the traditional form of a sachet powder to scent a space in the home or it can be a blend to make a botanical gin. Each of the audience will choose their own ingredients for whichever they choose with help and direction from Stephen, for example: angelica, cardamom, citrus peel, juniper, liquorice, lovage, orris, rose or tonka bean.

All ingredients and materials will be supplied (but not including the vodka/gin base required for the maceration at home!).

Botanicals in a Bottle

Date: Thursday 1st June 2017
Time: Two workshops of around 90 minutes at 11.30am and 2.30pm
Cost: £15.00 to include materials, tea and home-made cake, tickets limited to two per person.
To book: Eventbrite: https://bit.ly/2nDJ2Mi

Filed Under: Uncategorized

A Meadow in a Marmalade Jar

May 1, 2017 By fiona

A flower arranging workshop with florists Katie and Terri of Worm London

Join us in the beautiful 18th century surroundings of Town House Spitalfields for this creative floral workshop in which we’ll be celebrating the coming of summer, using colourful and seasonal British flowers for the table arrangements you’ll be making.  You will learn all you need to know about choosing and preparing your flowers, plus some tricks on how to make an interesting arrangement. Everyone will make their own piece to take home with them in vintage, ceramic marmalade jars and we hope you’ll leave inspired by the arrival of the summer flowers and your new skills to continue what you’ve learnt at home.

To learn more visit www.wormlondon.com

A Meadow in a Marmalade Jar

Date: 20th May 2017
Time: Two workshops each around 90minutes at 12pm and 3pm
Cost: £15 including the workshop and materials, tea and home-made cake, tickets limited to two per person
To book: Eventbrite: https://bit.ly/2nLl5zm

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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