From Renishaw Hall on the eighteenth of June we made our way to Stratford upon Avon where we checked in at our hotel in time to wash and brush up before heading on foot (only a few minutes distant) to the Royal Shakespeare Theatre by the River Avon. It was a lovely warm evening and there were lots of people about enjoying relaxing by the River and the Canal.
We were booked for supper at The Rooftop Restaurant followed by a performance of Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part Two by the Royal Shakespeare Company. This was no dull, boring history play rather it seemed to me dominated by comedy. Anthony Sher played Falstaff and the whole performance was being filmed and relayed simultaneously to a greater audience in cinemas throughout the country. This meant that the director, Greg Doran, came on stage at the beginning to introduce the play.
The Swans of Avon and Clopton Bridge from The Rooftop Restaurant
River Avon and Spire of Holy Trinity church from The Rooftop Restaurant
The Shakespeare Hotel – one time I stayed here
The Grammar School, Stratford upon Avon
The Birthplace
The next morning after a leisurely breakfast and opportunity to take a walk in Stratford we headed off to nearby Compton Verney where we had a full programme of tours, a sandwich lunch and time also to walk in the park, visit the chapel and spend time (and money) in the attractive gift shop.
“10.30am Depart for Compton Verney. Set in a park designed by the ubiquitous ‘Capability’ Brown, this long-derelict house of the Willoughby de Broke family is now resurgent under the inspiration of the [Peter] Moore’s Foundation. The collections are numerous and varied. The morning will be given over to the current display of sculptures by Henry Moore and Auguste Rodin, while the afternoon will feature a guided tour of salient points of the main collection which encompasses British Portraits, Chinese Ceramics and Bronzes, British Folk Art and for Textile-buffs The Marx-Lambert Collection. You will be free to visit those parts of the collection which are your particular interest. www.comptonverney.org.uk” [Our Programme]
Moore – Rodin
Rodin’s Burghers of Calais
Exhibition
Moore Rodin
15 February 2014 to 31 August 2014
10th Anniversary Year – Moore Rodin at Compton Verney
This ground-breaking international exhibition compares the work of two giants of modern sculpture: Henry Moore and Auguste Rodin. This is the first exhibition to be devoted exclusively to these artists, with major works being displayed in our ‘Capability’ Brown landscape as well as in our exhibition spaces.
Fallen Caryatid by Rodin
Reclining Figure : Bunched by Henry Moore
In the grounds
Enjoy eleven large scale works which complement, challenge and create new perspectives to vistas ‘Capability’ Brown formed in the 1760s. Amongst these amazing pieces is one of Rodin’s most famous works, Monument to the Burghers of Calais (usually on display outside the Houses of Parliament), Moore’s magnificent monumental Three Piece Sculpture: Vertebrae and The Arch.
Rodin’s Walking Man on Column
Henry Moore Upright Motive No. 9 with Chapel
Inside the galleries
Gain an amazing insight into the works of these two artists. Explore the parallels between their treatment of the figure through a beautiful collection of drawings and models made for larger works. See a special display curated by Moore’s daughter Mary which reveals both artists as keen collectors of antiquities and found objects which profoundly influenced their work. The final treat is a display of rarely seen archival documents and photographs taken by Henry Moore revealing that … ‘as time has gone on, my admiration for Rodin has grown and grown’.
After our sandwich lunch I wandered round the grounds and visited the Capability Brown Chapel. This was built in 1776 as part of the relandscaping of the site and is one of the few surviving Georgian chapels in Britain, and one of the very few remaining architectural works by ‘Capability’ Brown. It is currently undergoing a restoration project and more funds are needed to support this work as it’s hoped to use the building in future for music and learning.
The Chapel Interior
And in the afternoon we had a tour of the permanent collection – British Portraits
Beautiful Displays
and British Folk Art. Currently there is an exhibition of British Folk Art at Tate Britain and this will then come to Compton Verney from 27 September 2014 to 14 December 2014.
British Folk Art
Weather Vane
Quilt
And finally, the Marx-Lambert Collection.
“Enid Marx (1902-1998) was one of the brightest design stars to emerge from the Design School of London’s Royal College of Art (RCA) during the interwar years. She was an author and illustrator of children’s books, a book designer, a printmaker, a textile designer and a painter.
The Marx-Lambert collection at Compton Verney features both work produced by Marx and a large number of pieces of folk or popular art which were collected by Marx and her friend Margaret Lambert (1906-95). These then inspired Marx’s own work -sometimes directly, as seen in the pair of ceramic wall-mounted cornucopia cases which inspired her ‘Cornucopia’ textile design.”
Canal Art and Wallpaper
A wonderful trip full of interest and variety marred only by a 3 hour delay on the M1 due to a lorry on fire.
I love the Folk Art at Compton Verney, it is my special interest. I’d been wondering if we could get to the Tate for the exhibition, but it will be easier for us to see it at Compton Verney – thank you for the info!
I hope you get to it, nilly. I’m not sure that I will so I look forward to reading your report eventually.
I enjoyed an exhibition of Enid Marx linocuts at the Pallant Gallery in Chichester a couple of years ago. Good to see another exhibition of her work and inspiration as she seems to have rather “forgotten” for many years.
Needless to say, Fran, I had never heard of her before and yet I was quite familiar with her work which was so varied in design and in medium. She designed bus and tube seat fabrics.
I’d have have liked to have seen Henry IV and have fancied visiting Compton Verney for a while, but I’m always put off by having to drive down the M6 through Birmingham! So I’m a little jealous. Whats the RSC like now they’ve had the refit? I’ve been to productions there a couple of time once sat near the front but also on the balcony and in the latter case the stage felt a long way off.
You’ll get to CV one day, I’m sure, and I look forward to reading about your visit. Get on their emailing list and something will turn up that you can’t resist seeing. For me the old Fosse Way (alongside which CV stands) might make a pleasant alternative to motorway driving between home and the southwest when time is not too much of a premium. I’m going to try it later this month. On my previous recent visit to Stratford I was in the Swan. The new RST is very similar to that now. Gone is the old Proscenium stage of the Memorial Theatre and in is the ‘new’ thrust version. (I hope I have the terminology correct!)
Thanks Barbara. Yet another place to add to my list of places to visit!
[…] upon Avon Canal outside the Landmark property Lengthsman’s Cottage. Or whether to call in at Compton Verney House to view the exhibition “The Arts and Crafts House; then and now”. In the end the […]