Showing posts with label Trafalgar Square. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trafalgar Square. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Selfies in Selfridge's and Peacocks in the National Gallery

| The stunning National Gallery during the day. |
| The stunning National Gallery during the day. |

2015 England Trip Travel Journal Entry

Monday, March 9

Logistics: 

  1. The Tube from Stockwell Station to Charing Cross Station on the Northern Line
  2. Walk to Trafalgar Square and up The Strand
  3. The Tube from Chancery Lane Station to Oxford Circus Station on the Central Line
  4. The Tube home from Oxford Circus Station to Brixton Station on the Victoria Line


Selfies in Selfridge's!
Selfies in Selfridge's!

(8:24 PM) We have at last made it to the most historical department store in existence: The one and only Selfridge's! It is far more fascinating after having seen the dazzling TV series by ITV. It is quite as dazzling a century later, although in a 21st century way. We are in Dolly's Tea Room on the lower ground floor, which is situated next to the tea counter, where I almost expect to see Gordon Selfridge appear - as he works there on the TV show. :) It is stocked with a myriad of brightly colored tins from Mariage Fréres in Paris. It is really, truly dazzling! It makes one feel quite fashionable - or perhaps one feels they become more fashionable by simply being here. :) I think Harry Selfridge would be pleased.

Selfridge's looking fabulous at night.
Selfridge's looking fabulous at night.
Four of Selfridge's six floors...
Four of Selfridge's six floors...























 (10:30 PM) Back home again safely! We left the flat around 12:30 today and took a brisk walk in the cold to Stockwell Station. Once again I was reminded of why people wear scarves here: it is not simply to be fashionable, it is a necessity. It was overcast all day without even a peep of sunlight and with a chilling wind until just after dark, when it strangely became warmer - which oddly happens nearly every day after dark. I cannot explain English weather. But I have learned to trust the weather people on TV! They have been proved to be accurate every day so far, which gives me hope that tomorrow will be more Spring-like!

Trafalgar Square in the light of day.
Trafalgar Square in the light of day.
Costa coffee in Waterstone's.
Costa coffee in Waterstone's.
Lunch at the Trafalgar Waterstones was nice - I should say "the lunch we brought to Waterstones," since we only bought a coffee. It was a mocha, and the barista had put a heart on the top made out of cocoa. :)

We finished just in time to miss going into the Banqueting House on Whitehall, and had spent just enough money to be unable to afford the Churchill War Rooms, so we just turned around to finish looking in the National Gallery. 

Some of the lovely government buildings along Whitehall.
Some of the lovely government buildings along Whitehall.
We still had the 17th century to see: all the Rubens, Carvaggios, Rembrandts and Van Dycks. I enjoyed all the Claude Lorrains, whose landscape paintings evoked the feeling of "the sublime" that was so eloquently described by Edmund Burke and that had inspired the Gothic romance novel of Jane Austen's youth.

Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba by Claude Lorrain
Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba by Claude Lorrain
An understated portrait by Rembrandt of an old man drawn as the Apostle Paul was my favorite of his work hanging in the gallery.

My favorite Rembrandt.
My favorite Rembrandt.
But to my eyes the most impressive of those 17th century canvases belonged in the Van Dyck room. Wow. It is no wonder why Charles I hired him! The pride as well as the centerpiece of the room was the king himself on horseback. That painting must have been ten feet tall!

Charles I on Horseback by Anthony Van Dyck
Charles I on Horseback by Anthony Van Dyck


Lady Elizabeth Thimbelby and her Sister by Anthony Van Dyck
Lady Elizabeth Thimbelby and her Sister by Anthony Van Dyck

My favorite of Van Dyck's, though, was of John Stuart and his jaunty younger brother who was quite the peacock. John looks pretty unaware of his own impressive appearance, looking like a fashion plate with all of his lace and golden silk. But his brother has a look on his face as if he's saying, "Oh, I'm sorry. You just caught me in the middle of being fabulous." :) I love it.

Lord John Stuart and his brother, Lord Bernard Stuart by Anthony Van Dyck
Lord John Stuart and his brother, Lord Bernard Stuart by Anthony Van Dyck (Or: Peacocks in the National Gallery)


The Royal Courts of Justice located on The Strand.
The Royal Courts of Justice located on The Strand.
Not much happened on our walk to Oxford Street, besides us going in a totally different direction than we were supposed to, and being kindly helped in going the right way by an observant man on the street. I am more convinced every day we're here that the English reserve is exaggerated. He was one of the friendliest people I've ever encountered! We found the Chancery Lane Station and took a very brisk walk to Selfridge's, arriving by 8:13! I was quite relieved! Although my mistake reminded me of the quote: "Attitude is the difference between an ordeal and an adventure." So I stopped fretting and remembered to enjoy myself - we were walking around London, after all. :)

Friday, 29 May 2015

Hello London!

There are no foreign lands, it is the traveler only who is foreign.
Robert Louis Stevenson

London Blackfriars
Getting off of the train at London Blackfriars Station

2015 England Trip Travel Journal Entry

Thursday evening, March 5

Logistics: 
  1. Train from London Gatwick Airport to London Blackfriars Station
  2. Circle/District Tube line to Victoria
  3. Victoria Tube line to Brixton
  4. Bus to our final destination, a flat rented on AirBnB
 (1:20 AM) It has been a long day, with some learning curves, a lot of excitement and a lot of hunger. :) But we have at last gone to the store and shall not starve! Thankfully our closest Tube stop has grocery stores galore just feet away, and we found a Sainsbury's Local that was still open after 10:00.

Blackfriars Tube Station
Back on the Underground!
We got to wander around a lit-up Oxford Street (for a rather long time, since I had us start off in the wrong direction...) and saw Selfridge's! The outside looks just like it does in the show! We walked in fifteen minutes before closing and were met with their dazzlingly large cosmetic section. (Kitty would have been thrilled. :))

It's so, so lovely having a flat of "our own" to come back to! I am so thankful! We come in, light the gas hub with a lighter, put the kettle on and settle ourselves on the sofa. (And maybe turn on the TV...) A tribute to the Battle of Britain was on ITV tonight, hosted by Ewan McGregor and his brother [who is in the military]. Our AirBnB host was so sweet and friendly! The sort of lady who calls you "love." :) Anyway, must get some sleep so I can enjoy tomorrow.

Friday, March 6

(5:44 PM) Today was a day of recovering. I tried to get up at 8:30, but we couldn't drag ourselves out until nearly two hours later. We also enjoyed a nice leisurely breakfast/lunch. Then I had to take a shower, so it was 3:30 before we left.

Notting Hill
The classic Notting Hill

We had a nice walk in the sunshine to Stockwell Station to begin our journey to the Portobello Road Market. The Green Park Tube Station is worth avoiding in the future, as there are many stairs to climb and tunnels to walk down if you choose to switch lines. I would say the same of Baker Street Station, but is has a better-than-average atmosphere, including some retro wood decor (as in 1863 when it opened as the first underground station).

Coffee at Caffe Nero
Coffee at Caffe Nero
Most of the vendors were packing up around 5:00 when we arrived, even though the Market officially closes at 7:00. There were still some used or maybe vintage clothes, shoes and accessories, including one stall entirely filled with old military clothes and gear! I'm sure there were some WWII uniforms there.

The street is rather international and Bohemian, with lots of Italian, Mid-eastern and Asian cafes, shops selling incense, and off-beat shops stuck in between. All of this a couple of blocks from the quintessential, definitive Notting Hill streets filled with rows of beautiful white houses. Now we're in Caffe Nero, warming up with a delicious cup of coffee, a croissant and a Belgian chocolate brownie that is so delicious it should be banned. :) We're going to plan our next move before we wander around until we're starving and cold. :)

Trafalgar Square at Night
Trafalgar Square at Night

(9:57 PM) Our planning worked! We had over an hour to spend in the National Gallery. Finally we had the time and opportunity to go in. Of course the outside is fittingly splendid for such an impressive collection, even at night. All of Trafalgar Square and Whitehall have an imposing grandeur that one can't see during the day because in the dark they are lit from underneath and the shadows make them seem more mysterious, filled with secrets and history that have shaped this country for centuries.
Big Ben
The Elizabeth Tower
Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square
Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square
The Houses of Parliament are the same. Even the small glimpse I now have through the windows of St. Stephen's Tavern shows them to be hauntingly stately.

National Gallery
The splendid National Gallery

Inside the National Gallery
Inside the National Gallery



The impressive collection of paintings in the gallery were housed in equally impressive rooms. Some were long and some were small, but all had open, soaring ceilings with intricate white molding and richly colored walls of orange red, mauve and mossy green, and wooden walls and furniture. It was quite classical. I think my favorites were Gainsborough and Constable, but I was also super excited and surprised to see 'The Ambassadors," the Wilton Diptych commissioned by Richard II and the sunflowers by Van Gogh.


Van Gogh's Sunflowers
Van Gogh's Sunflowers
The Wilton Diptych
The Wilton Diptych, 1300s
The Ambassadors
The Ambassadors, 1500s

Thomas Gainsborough's Mr. and Mrs. William Hallett ('A Morning Walk')
Thomas Gainsborough's Mr. and Mrs. William Hallett ('A Morning Walk'), 1700s


The Young Waltonians by John Constable
The Young Waltonians by John Constable, 1800s




(11:53 PM) It is so pleasant to have a comfortable place to rest in after being out in the cold and blown about by the wind while getting tired feet. I get to put the kettle on, change into PJs and update Facebook as soon as my tea is made.



© 2015 Anna Morton