Monday 22 February 2010

Gardner gothic at St Mary's Church, Warwick

A visit to the folks in Warwick during the weekend, and a special trip to the Collegiate Church of St Mary's, which towers over the medieval-and-Georgian town centre.


I was on the lookout for a bit of Gardner family history - an inscription bearing the tribe's name. And after much searching, there it was, carved into the back of a seat. Dedicated to E.A. Gardner, the seat was endowed by my great-grandmother as a memorial to her husband Ernest, who died during the Great War.


My father is Welsh - from a small mining town in South Wales - but clearly the links with Warwick and Leamington Spa can be traced back a long way.

The church itself is fascinating, and definitely helped to spark my interest in architecture as a nipper. It is one of the largest (non-cathedral) churches in England - not to mention the only one with a chapter house - and its tower can be seen from miles around. Much of the church was razed to the ground during the Great Fire of Warwick in 1694, and was rebuilt in a curious hybrid of classical and gothic (clothic? gothical?), with the assistance of Sir Christopher Wren, who was paid a princely £10 for his trouble – plus an extra £1 for his "man". 

The Gardner memorial chair is located in the diminutive Dean's Chapel, which is squeezed inside the buttresses between the church's 14th century chancel and celebrated Beauchamp Chapel, a grand 15th century mausoleum. It has extremely intricate plaster fan vaulting, and provides an intimate interlude while touring the monumental interior of the church.


The chancel is best-known for its vaulted ceiling, which features "flying ribs" of stone. A similar feature is found in Bristol Cathedral. Meanwhile, the Beauchamp Chapel houses tombs and other sculpture that are of unparalleled quality in Britain. The famous gilded effigy of Earl Richard was recently borrowed by the V&A for its Gothic exhibition, and was described by the museum as "the finest 15th-century funerary monument in England".

Meanwhile, the chapter house is home to the oversize tomb of Tudor poet, dramatist and statesman Fulke Greville, who was murdered by his servant in 1628. It is currently the focus of an investigation into whether Fulke Greville was actually author of several plays by his contemporary and friend William Shakespeare. Permission has recently been granted to insert an endoscope video camera into a crack in the tomb, to see if it houses a casket of documents including a first edition of Antony and Cleopatra.

Wednesday 17 February 2010

Bank of New York Mellon offices: Images in onoffice, March 2010



Some of my images of Bank of New York Mellon's offices at Canary Wharf, designed by BDGworkfutures, are featured in the latest issue of onoffice magazine.

The project is a case study as part of a wider feature on how workplace design can support corporate mergers and acquisitions – particularly from the point of view of introducing new brand identities and business culture. BDGworkfutures also designed offices for BNYM in Dublin and Manchester, all as a result of the 2007 merger between Bank of New York and Mellon Financial Corporation.

Photos of Project Orange's Whitecross Street project featured in archinnovations

I've just come across online architecture magazine archinnovations, which has recently published a feature on Project Orange's Whitecross Street project, which I photographed last year. You can read the full article here>

Wednesday 10 February 2010

V&A Medieval and Renaissance galleries

To the Victoria and Albert Museum yesterday, to see the exhibition Gargoyles and Shadows: Gothic Architecture and 19th-Century Photography. I'd read about the exhibition in Building Design and thought it was worth a look. And indeed it was, although exhibitions in the V&A's architecture galleries always suffer from their diminutive size. The temporary exhibition space is tiny, which means that you never get more than a snapshot (excuse the pun in this context) of your chosen specialist subject.



However, my trip also provided an opportunity to view the new Medieval and Renaissance galleries, which opened in December. I'm usually a bit suspicious when the press is particularly effusive about a project (my PR hype radar starts bleeping like mad). In the Guardian, Stephen Bayley had declared: "If these galleries were a standalone in any other country, it would immediately become one of the world's great museums". The Telegraph gushed that "the whole project... is a triumph". How could it possibly live up to these expectations?


Above: Container from Cologne, dated 1180

Several hours later, and I was able to conclude that, if anything, the press had understated the scale of success. As a member of the channel-surfing generation, I have an attention span that can be best described as abbreviated. Yet I was gripped from start to finish. In fact, I didn't get to see everything and will need to return for another fix (I spent most of my time in the Level 0 galleries, covering the earlier medieval period).







It is to be expected that the V&A is home to a world-class collection, but what really impresses is the design and curation of the galleries, plus the excellent (and mercifully low-key) interpretation. Architect of the scheme is MUMA (McInnes Usher McKnight Architects), who previously designed the museum's cafe - you can see some of my photos of that scheme on my website.



Connecting the three main sequences of spaces is a new vertical "circulation hub" that occupies a former lightwell to create a new gallery space. The crowning glory is a monopitch glazed roof, bringing daylight deep into the exhibition spaces.

Monday 8 February 2010

House, South Kensington, by Popularchitecture



A rather sexy and sinuous staircase is at the heart of this house in South Kensington, designed by Popularchitecture.



 The photo shoot was particularly memorable thanks to the owner's maine coon, who followed me dutifully from room to room, sat on my chest when I was lying on my back to get a shot, and also dug her enormous claws into me as a braking mechanism when sliding down the balustrade!








Friday 5 February 2010

Murphy's law



Our friend's gorgeous 11 week old goldendoodle, Murphy, paid us a visit today. He was too cute!

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