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Home→Tags Fitzwilliam Museum

Tag Archives: Fitzwilliam Museum

Birthday in Cambridge

Blasdale Home Posted on October 28, 2024 by SteveNovember 11, 2024

28th October 2024

For my birthday, we headed to Cambridge to stay in a campsite near Trumpington. This was a change to tradition, because normally we venture into Suffolk and stay in Southwold. Last year, in the weeks before my birthday, the weather had been terrible, and the campsite eventually cancelled our booking because of flooding, requiring us to stay in a hotel.

We booked the Cambridge campsite for six nights, leaving the site on the Monday when it was closing for the winter. It seemed strange to close at the start of a school half term, we later heard this was because of the early Easter, and the number of days they are licensed to open, which forced them to close for half term. Even so, the campsite was terribly busy.

We arrived on Tuesday and put up the awning. The mild dry weather allowed us to sit outside after dark.  Talking of dark, I wish it was dark, I wish there were less lights around the campsite, and why oh why do caravanners and motorhome owners insist on leaving a light on over their doorway?  Moan over.

Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday

Wednesday – Granchester

We decided to walk into Cambridge, first towards Trumpington, then onto Grantchester, and finally Cambridge and along the River Cam. It was a lovely day. Blue sky and a light wind. We headed into Trumpington and turned left after the Waitrose onto Grantchester Road. Some lovely houses along this street along with a wedding venue. Before crossing the River Cam, we paid a visit to the Wildlife Trust Trumpington Meadows, basically a lovely walk along the Cam to Byron’s Pool, which turned out to be a weir, and then back to Grantchester Road to cross the river Cam.

The walk continued into Grantchester, past the church. Something was happening here, filming for ITV’s Grantchester was in progress The church was surrounded by lights, a nearby house was newly decorated, and covered in Wisteria flowers, in full plastic bloom. We stopped for lunch at the Red Lion, where we could watch the vans and production crew walking up and down the street. After a good lunch, we had an espresso from a popup near to the Cambridge distillery. There was the odd actor and acolyte around here. People running around with boxes of food & laundry. At the coffee stall we bumped into Robson Green. The coffee stall was not meant to be there, his day off? I suspect he’d heard the film production was in town and decided to make a profit. Excellent coffee by the way. He used a distributor before using a tamper

We continued our walk along the Cam, fairly good going with the odd little patch of mud. Despite the warm weather and sun, there were no punts on this stretch of water. There were a few below the locks, punting past the colleges.

A quick tea break at Michaelhouse Café, before setting home on the bus, hence the picture of Dame Mary Archer Way near Addenbrooke’s Hospital.

Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday

Thursday – Nish Kuma

Yet another beautiful day. Have I done something this year to deserve a beautiful day for my birthday?

No big rush to get into Cambridge, lunch was booked for 1.30 at the Millworks. We stopped off at Fatface, and looked around, not buying anything. The we headed to the Millworks where we were booked in for 1.30 Arriving early, we had cocktails at the bar before going to our table which was next to the water mill.  We had an enjoyable three course meal, complete with my 10% discount for being a Cambridge graduate, proved by my having a Cam Card. Afterwards we walked along to Caius Harvey Court where there is a coffee shop in the students rec area, open to the public. Sat outside on the brick steps and watch the squirrels run around.  So peaceful.

The rest of the afternoon was spent wandering around Cambridge, through Kings College, yea we were able to get through the Backs entrance, another useful feature of my degree and hence my Cam Card.

We were booked to see Nish Kumar at the Corn Exchange with Leila Navabi as support. Leila didn’t raise many laughs for us, she was a bit gynecological about her travel to motherhood without having sex with a man.  On the other hand, Nish was excellent and very funny. His hatred of Boris Johnson and the Tory Party knew no bounds.  His rate of talking was so fast! Then when a poor woman in the audience had to leave to go to the loo, he adlibbed at her expense for the duration of the time she was out of the auditorium, so she never missed any of the show.

When Nish had finished his show, the police requested that we did not leave because of an incident outside, so Nish came back on stage to answer questions. As he said, the lengths he went to to get an encore.

Having missed our bus due to the incident delaying our departure, we popped into The Pint Shop for some craft beer before catching the last bus back to the campsite.

Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday

Friday – Kettles Yard

We headed into Cambridge to visit Kettles Yard, and the nearby church of St Peters. St Peters church is very small with a quaint baptismal font, complete with mermen.

We also looked around Kettles Yard, where there was an exhibition of art by Portia Zvavahera. Her art draws on southern African culture and Christian iconography. All I can say, is that it does take up a lot of wall space and wouldn’t suit a small modern house.

We revisited the house where Jim and Helen Ede lived. Their residence there coincided with the first year of my life at Cambridge. R asked how they dust certain objects. An air puffing device was the solution.

R wanted to stop off at a bookshop she’d noticed. There was a British Library Crime Classics book ste in Cambridge in the window. The Bodies in the Bookshop had R in raptures. New & secondhand books. She exited with only five books, saying she could have bought more. A lucky escape for me.

Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday
Cambridge Birthday

Saturday – Saffron Walden

Saturday was earmarked for visiting Saffron Walden. We sat at the front of the upstairs of the bus  We arrived at and headed to the Fry Gallery. They had a special exhibition of local artists from their collection. It was called ‘Great Barfield and Beyond: A working Landscape”.

Olive Cook, in her book about North West Essex Artists, called Great Bardfield a “paradise”. But Edward Bawden and Eric Ravilious, who moved there in 1931, saw it differently. They saw the countryside as a place to work and develop their watercolors.

Later, Bawden brought other artists to Bardfield and nearby villages. These artists also liked the countryside and used their homes as studios. They would take the bus to London to teach part-time at art schools. By the 1970s, when Bawden moved away, many of the other artists had also left.

This exhibition shows the work of many different artists who lived and worked in the area, including Bawden, Ravilious, and others. They all found inspiration in the landscape, buildings, farms, and villages around them.

After our viewing, we walked around the market, and decided to have lunch at the Cross Keys Hotel.  What a disaster,  it was quite busy, but we agreed with a waitress to eat at a small table by the bar.  We ordered a drink directly from the bar, which took a while to turn up. The barman was rather overrun with orders. Then we were ignored by the waitresses for a very long time. R got her attention, by asking for a menu, and we were moved into the main part of restaurant.  We ordered, after a further wait for a waitress to take our order, and then we waited and waited and waited.  Eventually we gave up and left. If only someone had kept us informed as to what was happening. Perhaps warned us in advance about a long wait or even apologised during our frustrating wait. Google maps tells me that we were there for 1 hour and 40 minutes. Ended up getting a bite to eat from Gregs

Sunday – Little Rose

A more successful day on the food-side.  Caught the bus into Cambridge, had a coffee at the Café Nero, a large number of students sitting there working on their laptops. I can’t remember Sundays being like that, they were a day off. After coffee, the Fitzwilliam had opened, so we went inside to see the exhibition on the Paris 1924 Olympics. Fascinating seeing what outfits the women were allowed to wear and the limited array of sports they could participate in. Of course, it featured the Cambridge university participants and medal winners.

We headed ccross the road to the Little Rose restaurant for Sunday lunch. The Little Rose had been a Loch Fyne, but now its name had reverted to the original pub name from my days. This restaurant had exemplary service. Never left waiting to order, never waiting long for food, and at the same time not feeling rushed. A definite change from the previous failed day.

Cambridge Birthday

Monday

Packed up and left for home. Filled up with fuel on the way home. There is bound to be a fuel tax rise at the next budget. It is about time fuel duty is increased, it has been static for years, with even a 5p reduction.

Addenda

1 – Tax has not gone up.

2 – A few weeks before we left for Cambridge, I had to have a puncture repaired on the front drivers-side tyre of the VW. A few days after arriving home, I see there is a screw in the rear drivers-side tyre. Those two punctures and a third puncture in a Polestar tyre earlier make for three punctures this year. I haven’t had any other punctures in the last 10 years.  

Posted in Art, Cambridge | Tagged Birthday, Cafe Nero, Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, Fry Gallery, Gonville and Caius, Grantchester, Kettles Yard, Little Rose, Pint Shop, Safron Walden | Leave a reply

Cambridge Folk Festival the Saturday

Blasdale Home Posted on July 30, 2022 by SteveJanuary 7, 2023

30th July 2022

Another fine day for the festival. Today we were meeting up with Andrea and Richard again, but this time at the festival. So, we plonked ourselves outside the arena where we could place our chairs and listen to the bands in peace. Drinking, eating and several jugs of Pimms.

Saturday Performances

You can see a number of bands from the previous day performing on various stages tonight. We spent the day on the main stage, making excursions to the food stalls, the bar and the loos.

Programme

Main Stage 1

Chico Trujillo – Passenger – Afro Celt Sound System – Spell Songs – This Is The Kit – The Young’uns – VRï – The Magpie Arc

Main Stage 2

Dustbowl Revival – Elephant Sessions – Flook – Admiral Fallow – Elles Bailey – The Spooky Men’s Chorale – Julie Fowlis – Festival Session with Brian McNeill – Urban Folk Theory’s Silent Live Ceilidh Band

The Club Tent

Gasper Nali – Lady Nade – Maddie Morris – Feis Rois – Gwenifer Raymond – Eve Goodman

The Den

Bandits On The Run – Becoming Branches – Limerance – Katie Spencer – Memorial – Moore & Moss – Burd Ellen – Jodie Nicholson – The People Versus – Zoe Bestel

The Magpie Arc

VRï

This is the Kit

Afro Celt Sound System

Gallery

Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Posted in Cambridge, Entertainment | Tagged Afro Celt Sound System, Cambridge Folk Festival, Fitzwilliam Museum, The Magpie Arc, This is the Kit, VRï | Leave a reply

Cambridge Folk Festival the Friday

Blasdale Home Posted on July 29, 2022 by SteveJanuary 7, 2023

29th July 2022

The toilet failure had progressed, the showers were flooded, I managed to get a shower, but as Rosemary entered the shower, the electric pumps made one last spluttering sound and fell into silence. There was a small additional toilet block in operation, but it soon failed. Lots of complaining is going on.

I watched the small caravan next to us with a degree of envy – they had a toilet & a shower, and, better still, a bacon & eggs cooked breakfast.

Today, we caught the festival bus to Cherry Hinton Park, and then waited for a bus to take us into Cambridge city. We met up with Richard and Andrea for a visit to the Fitzwilliam Museum for the Hockney’s Eye: The Art and Technology of Depiction. We were overly impressed with the images and the understanding of their perspectives. We had tea and lunch before Rosemary, and I headed back to Cherry Hinton and the Folk Festival.

After the main act we headed back to the campsite. New equipment, generators, had been installed and the showers and toilets were back in action.

David Hockney Beach Umbrella
David Hockney - Tall Dutch Trees After Hobbema
David Hockney California Bank
David Hockney: Huggate's St. Mary's Church Spire
David Hockney, Le Parc des Sources, Vichy
David Hockney, Annunciation 2
David Hockney Self-portrait
David Hockney - Portrait of Sir David Webster
David Hockney - Portrait of Martin Gayford

Friday Performances

It was another warm, sunny, dry day. We spent much of the afternoon sheltering from the sun under a tree, with brief sorties to the stage to take some pictures. We saw all the bands from Findlay to Seasick Steve on the main stage. No pictures of Findlay. I did make some sorties to buy Rosemary refreshing Pimms.

Programme

Main Stage 1

Seasick Steve – Suzanne Vega – Dustbowl Revival – Spiers and Boden – Findlay – Show Of Hands – Tapestri – The Copper Family

Main Stage 2

Show Of Hands – The Magpie Arc – The Breath – Ballet Folk: The Tears of Jenny Greenteeth – Simon Care Trio ceilidh – The Young’uns – VRï – Stumpy Oak – Maynard Flip Flop

The Club Tent

Trousdale – Ferris & Sylvester – Brian McNeil – Jinda Biant – Conchur White – Songlines Interview with Spiers and Boden

The Den

Bess Atwell – Nati Dreddd – Bird In The Belly – Pearl Fish – Rachel Croft – Cynefin – Guise John Dhali – Ceitidh Mac – Loris and The Lion

Findlay

Spiers and Boden

Dustbowl Revival

As the evening progressed, the music became better, Dustbowl Revival were definitely worth watching.

Suzanne Vega

I said the music was getting better, seems the Cambridge Folk Festival put the headliner on as the one before the finale. So here was Susan Vega, the headliner. It was very crowded, and I couldn’t get to the front. But I didn’t like her. I really don’t like this type of music. After Suzanne, there was Seasick Steve, much better. I saw him a couple of times before. Why no videos of him. Not at all sure. Maybe I was enjoying myself too much.

Gallery

Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Cambridge Folk Festival
Posted in Cambridge, Entertainment | Tagged Cambridge Folk Festival, Dustbowl Revival, Findlay, Fitzwilliam Museum, Hockney, Spiers and Boden, Suzanne Vega | Leave a reply

Birthday weekend in Cambridge

Blasdale Home Posted on October 24, 2018 by SteveNovember 21, 2018

To celebrate my birthday, we decided to spend a couple of nights in our Campervan in Cambridge. Our first stop was in St Neots, parking on the Bedfordshire side of the river Ouse where we had a coffee at the Ambience Café. Rather an insipid Cappuccino.  On then to Cambridge where we were camping at Cambridge Camping and Caravan Club Site in Trumpington. It is well served by buses running during the day every 15 minutes, and in the evening, one an hour until quite late.

We were soon into Cambridge and visited the Fitzwilliam Museum. Rosemary wanted to see a Virginia Woolf exhibition. Unfortunately, the exhibition was not what she wanted. R had failed to read the small print, “An exhibition inspired by her writings” Next, a stop at the Eagle for a beer. We drank in the bar at the back, which is very much themed on American airmen. The walls are covered with signatures and dedications. Next stop was dinner. We chose the Cambridge Chop House and had a good meal. The Chop House is mainly underground. Its basement extends under several of its neighbouring businesses.

Back then to Emmanuel Street to catch the bus back to the campsite.

On Wednesday, after an al fresco breakfast, we again caught the bus into Cambridge, admiring the new Medical research building around Addenbrooke’s Hospital, and the new student flats near the rail hub. Once in Cambridge we had a walk around Caius College, and even visited the LNB (Late Night Bar). No longer the LNB, now a bike shed. The porter knew it had been the LNB.

We then walked on to Kettles Yard which reopened this year after some modifications. An exhibition of Richard Pousette-Dart work was on show. He was a key figure of Abstract Expressionism. Jim Ede, creator of Kettle’s Yard, first met Pousette-Dart in New York in 1940. Of course, we visited the house of Jim Ede, which continues to surprise & delight.

We now walked along side Jesus Green, Midsummer Common and the river, looking at the canal boats and Cambridge Boat Houses. The canal boats appeared to be stocked up with coal for the winter. Spotted the new Gonville and Cauis Boat House, well Google maps did.  Back across Midsummer Common and down King Street. I was telling Rosemary about the King Street Run, and oddly we met a Cambridge graduate several days later wearing a King Street Run tie. The basic objective drinking a pint of ale in seven of the street’s pubs before returning for an eighth in the pub you started. One of the club rules state a penalty pint is awarded for the commission of either of the two Ps, “peeing or puking”. Successful members of the club wore a special navy blue tie decorated with the image of a tankard surmounted by a crown. This tie is also decorated with a ‘P’ for each penalty pint drunk. The tie soon became a highly sought-after item of apparel.

Finally, a pint at the Anchor, overlooking the mill pond, then the University Museum of Zoology where we had a few minutes before chucking out time. Ah well on to the Eagle for another drink before going for my Birthday treat at  the Loch Fyne Restaurant. Yes Rosemary embarrassed my by having a candle placed in my dessert. Then it was back on the bus to the campsite.

Our final day, Thursday, started with a lovely bright morning with a slight frost, but we’d been snug. We visited Grantchester and the Orchard Tea Garden. Another bright and sunny day encouraged us to walk down to the river and admire a couple of punts moored up. You can see where Roger Waters from Pink Floyd found their inspiration for the song ‘Granchester Meadows’.

Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge
Birthday treat to Cambridge

 

Posted in Cambridge | Tagged Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, Gonville and Caius, Jesus Green, Kettles Yard, Loch Fyne, Midsummer Common, The Chop House | Leave a reply
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