I have been back in the Deep South
for a couple of weeks, which has not been compatible with maintaining the blog.
As usual, much of this time has been spent speed reading in the British
Library, but we also did a certain amount of gadding about, chiefly in search
of Rex Whistler. Thus we went to Mottisfont, to see the elegantly lifeless
grisailles in the drawing room, to Salisbury ,
where there is an exhibition of his paintings and drawings, and (the Professor
having meanwhile gone off to darkest Lancashire) to Port Lympne, which must
surely be a contender for Queerest House in England . It’s, inevitably, in the belt
of Kent/Sussex where interwar homosexualists had their county retreats, and it
was built as a party house, no expense spared, halfway down a cliff,
overlooking Romney Marsh and the Channel. There is a bizarrely sumptuous
Italianate garden full of giant masonry, some of which looks as if it was
nicked off the Gésu, and the interior (complete with an elaborately patterened
floor of black and white marble, a many-pillared hall in the Moorish taste,
marble baths, and a library copied from the Radcliffe Camera) breaks out in
murals: there was once a room decorated with charging elephants and other symbolic
fauna by José Maria Sert, and a dining room which originally had lapis walls,
opalescent pink ceiling, gilt-winged chairs with jade-green cushions, and a
black, white and burnt-sienna frieze in the Egyptian taste of nude Africans
processing with bullocks, amphoras etcetera, by Glyn Philpot. The Africans now
wear little drawers, due to a hasty day’s repainting after Queen Mary announced
her intention of visiting, but the effect is still camp beyond belief. The house is now
owned by John Aspinall’s foundation, and used as a wedding venue, which is
something of a come down, though probably the
best a place like that could hope for these days. The Sert room has been
replaced with a rather worrying, very brightly coloured mural of assorted Asiatic fauna, and though the Philpot frieze survives, it has been moved out of
the dining room, which is now blandly corporate (and currently in the middle of
a refit, which self-evidently will substitute another variety of Neutral Hotel
Taste for the slightly shabby NHT now on offer), and into what was Philip Sassoon’s
bedroom which is presently being transformed into a bar. And there is also Rex
Whistler’s Tent Room, which is what I had gone to see. It’s very fine, and very
sad, whereas Philpot’s black boys, even in their present somewhat reduced
circumstances, are rather jolly. It gives the strongest impression that all the
figures are revenants, something which derives, I think, partly from the colour
scheme – the prevailing tone is dusty turquoise – and partly from the fact that
the figures are wearing clothes of different periods. I’m very glad to have
seen it, and the Aspinall people could hardly have been nicer or more helpful. Another excursion, which was not Whistler
related, was to Campion Hall to see the notorious ‘objets d’Arcy’ – this too
well merited the detour. We are assured by the Society of Jesus that Father’s Christian
Dior sequinned op-art cope is still worn on occasion (though it has to be
admitted that orange is not, conventionally, a liturgical colour, especially
not in combination with mauve and bright green…) Ahem. Campion Hall itself is
terrific – Lutyens letting his hair down. The ceiling lights in the chapel are
in the shape of cardinal’s hats, and there’s a lifesize, baroque Spanish high-relief
sculpture of Ignatius Loyola and companions in the middle of the hall, which in
Oxford , comes
as a bit of a surprise. It was all very interesting, but it was also nice to
get home. Tony & co had looked after the house and the beasties beautifully
(Miss Dog, by the way, made a swift and uproblematic recovery from her
operation and has forgotten all about it), and everything was looking in
splendid fettle. The only remotely unpleasant surprise was something which turned up in the post yesterday –
an Amazon package which proved to contain a surreal looking CD of a heavy metal concept album on
the life of Charlemagne by Christopher (‘Dracula’) Lee. I could of course think
of several wags who might have sent me such a thing as a joke or a wind-up, but
what was rather worrying was the invoice indicated that it has been ordered by me. A hasty examination of conscience
suggested that I had not been plastered enough to order Amazonia
at random and forget about it within memory, and I followed up with an examination of my
back-orders file which confirmed as much. Even Aunty Amazon can make mistakes, but it
was momentarily rather disconcerting, like something dropping out of a parallel
universe, especially since I have been brooding extensively about the intrinsic
spookiness of Rex Whistler’s murals. Fortunately, there was no time to give it any further thought: we were going to New Deer,
since yesterday was the Feast of St Peter and St Paul, which we celebrate annually
with our composer friends (Peter and Paul respectively), so along with shopping
at the rather nice New Deer deli, we nipped up to the post office to return it to from whence it
came. The party was lovely. Like all dos involving musicians, it ended round
the piano and broke up at one in the morning.
Good grief - a heavy metal album of the life of Charlemagne by Christopher Lee? I'm astonished you despatched it to from whence it came. Not only would a review of said opus have graced this blog, it would have relieved the rest of us from the burden of having to go & actually listen to the thing ourselves.
ReplyDeleteI'm disappointed by the demise of the charging elephants from the Port Lympne wedding (surely civil partnership?) location of choice. It would have given it an air of Elvis Costello c his Armed Forces period, which is never a bad thing . . .
The elephants room now has tigers, leopards and all sorts. You can't turn round without catching the eye of some wildlife - it has to be said that it's even tackier than the Sert though in a quite different way. I do understand your vulgar curiosity about Christopher Lee's Charlemagne album. If you had been me, etcetera, I would have felt just the same. But when one's actually looking at the damn thing there's really quite a strong impulse to put it down carefully and walk away. Anyway, according to my Amazon account, I hadn't paid for it.
ReplyDeleteYes, I can hear the Taste Police's loudhailers even now: "Just put the CD down Ma'am, and stand away from the player. On the count of three, put the CD down . . "
ReplyDelete