Browsing Tag

Farringdon

Design

Sunday Morning Farringdon Road

I’ve worked in and around Farringdon on and off since 1999, and I’ve long loved a painting by East London Artist Cecil Osborne. I’ve spent an unfeasibly long time trying to work out where the view it depicts through this open window, on a road I now know so well, is.

I find that it’s very easy to get lost in this picture. I’m drawn in by the warm, restricted palette of browns and reds, the absence of people and the stories behind the doors of the shops and dwellings. An early morning in 1929.

Cecil Osborne was a self-taught artist who was part of a fascinating 1920’s art collective called The East London Group, which featured working class male and female artists of the east end. Born out of an art club in Bethnal Green, the artists mostly came from all walks of local life and captured street scenes of the local areas. They exhibited and enjoyed popularity in the 1930’s, but post-war that popularity waned until an exhibition in 2014 brought them some overdue recognition:

“The Group painted the East End’s streets, alleys, mills, factories, pubs and churches with the same fascination that other artists have for the English countryside. The streets, in their paintings, look interesting, like places you want to see…and this without prettifying the essential industrial, poor reality. This is the real accomplishment. Somehow the character of the area, the vibrancy of its community, is communicated through these representations of its buildings.

Partly this is achieved by the flat colour and the way they all seem to have of capturing light. It suggests, to me at least, a parallel with that other great painter of the built environment, the American artist Edward Hopper.”

– John Rees

Osborne’s painting pre-dates Edward Hopper’s by a year, and it is the only one of his available in a public collection, owned by the Brighton and Hove Museum.

It’s said that the East London Group’s artists were able to see beauty in the most unlikely subjects, bringing ‘a warm feeling to their art which is transmitted to the viewer’. There are many parralels to me with the modern street photographers, who still find the east end such fertile creative ground.

As well as painting, members of the East London Group also made a documentary film, advertising posters for Shell and Phyllis Bray painted large murals which are now at Queen Mary, University of London.

I’m very excited to learn, through researching for this blog, that ‘Sunday Morning Farringdon Road’ lives not too far from me in Brighton and I’m definitely going to take a trip to visit it in person, if it is on display.

There’s lots of fascinating material about the East London Group:

The East London Group and their Contemporaries

The famed painters who vanished into obscurity

Cecil Osborne’s Lost Murals Rediscovered

I’m definitely keen to find out more about these artists. But this morning, I’ll just keep losing myself in Osborne’s best-known work.

 

Work

New term, new year, new office

I’ve always loved the new term feeling that you get at the beginning of September. It’s a feeling of new-ness and starting over, with the added bonus of it also being my Birthday early in the month. So, literally the start of a new year for me. This year, it’s not just new pencil cases and pens though, there’s an extra reason for excitement – We Are Friday has moved office.

Our last day at Harella House was the day before my holiday, so returning to work tomorrow is going to be fun – new desk in a new building, though thankfully still in my beloved Farringdon. In fact, the new building is one I used to see everyday when I worked directly across the road from it, so I know it well. I’ll be able to visit old, favourite haunts up on Leather Lane and find new places for lunch.

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Eat

Hix Farringdon

I’ve been wanting to go to Hix for ages. It must be the only restaurant in Farringdon I haven’t been too, which is crazy considering how long it’s been there. So when I got a chance to go out for dinner in the area with a good friend I didn’t hesitate in booking.

It didn’t disapoint – I loved the inside of the restaurant – great decor, and a lovely looking bar. While they specialise in fish, it isn’t the only thing on the menu and I thoroughly recommend their ‘Heaven and Earth’ starter, which is a little ball of black-puddingy delight. I followed the starter with a beef flank and ale pie – minus the optional oysters, and we shared a gold chocolate mousse and new forest trifle.

I loved all of the food, and I especially loved the cute martini – which came with extra martini. Smooth and strong – exactly how it should be.

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PS – I’ve even been back once already – and it was just as good the second time 🙂

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Live

First of the season

Aperol Spritz. First one of 2016 at Polpo, Farringdon.

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A lovely lunch of meatballs and other tapas-y things, followed by a double-desert of ‘Panna cotta, Campari and rhubarb’ and a ‘Tiramisu’. Washed down with a lovely Old Fashioned.

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Live

Tuesday Thursday

Today I attended a Barnardo’s conference at the Royal College of Nursing in London. It was interesting, and nice to be going into the west end, rather than EC1 in the morning for a change. After the conference we went for a few drinks, as with Thrusday and Friday off work, Tuesday was our Thursday. We got the train home from Farringdon and were indoors by 9.45pm – pretty good going.

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Travel

Lost London

On Saturday morning we found ourselves slightly hungover and on the way for dim sum in Chinatown, when we walked past Ely Place in Holborn. I’ve walked past it many times and have also had drinks in Ye Olde Mitre which sits in the middle of it, but I never realised there is a chapel a bit further down.

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We went to have a look at the outside of the building, not expecting that we could get in to see the inside, but the sign on the door said the building was open.

Inside we found a magical small chapel, with two of the most amazing stained glass windows I’ve ever seen. The windows were so powerful and dominating because of the size of the church. St Etheldreda’s is a tiny, beautiful Roman Catholic church, which dates back to the Middle Ages, and is the oldest Catholic church in England. It was built in 1290 and formed part of the grounds of Ely Palace, the Bishop of Ely’s London residence.

More about the history of St Etheldreda’s can be found on their own website, especially about the stunning windows, which were replaced in the 1950’s, after the church was hit during the Second World War. The thing that amazed me so much was the fact this building was here – had been here for over 800 years – in a place I’ve worked for about 15 – and I didn’t even know it existed.

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As well as the beautiful church itself, we had a nose around in the crypt, which is used as a venue for parties. I found out later that the catering for the venue is done by one of my favourite Farringdon restaurants, The Bleeding Heart Tavern. If I were planning a party I would definitely want to host it here. Looking at their website it looks fantastic when it’s all fully laid out.

I love those moments when you are wondering around London, on your way to somewhere else, and you stumble upon a hidden gem. It’s not often I take time to look around me, but it’s pretty much always worth it when you do.

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