The Great Tapestry of Scotland

Last week we went to the Scottish Parliament where The Great Tapestry of Scotland is on exhibition, it’s the longest tapestry in the world apparently. I meant to visit it this time last year but didn’t get around to it, due to pressure of house selling and too many people viewing our old place. It was my old family friend Isabel who recommended that I visit the exhibition, I knew that it must be good if she was impressed because she’s a really great embroiderer herself.

Of course it isn’t a tapestry it’s an embroidery, but then neither is the Bayeux Tapestry a tapestry, there seems to be a tradition of misnaming such things. I took quite a few photos of the panels which were of most interest to me, but I haven’t sorted them out yet. Meanwhile, you can see images of the panels here.

The tapestry has been wandering around Scotland for the past year or so and nobody seemed able to give it a permanent home but I just heard on the Scottish news tonight that it is going to be on permanant exhibition at Melrose eventually. I’m so glad I saw it in Edinburgh as Melrose isn’t exactly central.

The author Alexander McCall Smith was the chap who came up with the idea of a ‘tapestry’ depicting Scotland’s history and the artist Andrew Crummy designed it with the work being carried out by hundreds of embroiderers from all over Scotland.

Below you can see the first stitch being put into the design.

Pittenweem Arts Festival and The Forth Bridges Festival

Have you ever been to the Pittenweem Arts Festival? It’s very unusual because the many artists who live in the fishing village open their homes up to the public to give everyone interested a good look at their artwork. At first it seems a bit weird to be walking through someone’s kitchen to see their work but you get used to it and it’s all very enjoyable.

As a gardener I love being able to see people’s back gardens as much as their artwork. The festival runs for a week and the village seems always to be full of people trailing from house to house to view the wares. It isn’t all paintings but includes embroidery, weaving and knitting, sculpture and all sorts.

There are even courses which you can attend on things like knotting, taught by fishermen and folk music evenings. You can read about it here.

The festival runs from August the 2nd to the 10th. You can read more about it and see some photos of Pittenweem here.

There’s also a Forth Bridges Festival this year, it’s a new one and you can read about it here. It runs from 3rd September to the 13th September.

Riverside Museum, Glasgow (Transport Museum)

Riverside Museum

It’s just a short walk from the Crowne Plaza Hotel to the Riverside Museum, and a very pleasant walk it is too on a sunny day, along the Clyde Walkway.
Riverside Museum
I used to visit the old transport museum quite often when it was housed at the Kelvin Hall and I was surprised that the new museum seems smaller than that one. On the other hand they have a lot packed into it, because as you can see above and below, they have layers of displays of vehicles which are cunningly affixed to the walls.
Riverside Museum
It isn’t only transport which you can see though, there are also displays of clothing from Edwardian to the 1950s and various other bits and pieces and of course a mock up of an old street, just as there was in the original museum, with old shops which you can go into. Trains, trams, motorbikes, fire engines, horse drawn carriages, even mobility scooters feature in the museum and of course there’s a sailing ship anchored at the back of the museum.
Riverside Museum of Transport

Riverside Museum

Riverside Museum

I was particularly pleased to see the original Peace Camp caravan which had been parked opposite the nuclear submarine base at Faslane for years. After all, it’s part of Scottish history and we drove past it often as we lived nearby in our young days. The peace camp was set up in the 1970s by people who were against nuclear bombs and didn’t want anything like that on Scottish land or water. Every time we went past this caravan at Faslane Peace Camp my father-in-law would huff and puff with fury – what an eyesore that is – why are they allowed to park it by the roadside? – it’s a blot on the landscape!
The Peace Caravan at Riverside Museum.

He was an old Tory but even so, his reaction always amused me as I looked at what was on the opposite side of the road – miles and miles of enormous razor wire fencing surrounding what is genuinely a beautiful landscape, completely spoiled by the Ministry of Defence who saw fit to dump nuclear weapons in Scotland, when nobody here wants the ghastly things.
Riverside
Apparently the peace camp is still there, with newer caravans, but it’s ages since I’ve been along that road. I would really like a caravan like this one for my garden though, it would be better than a summerhouse, but I don’t think it would be very easy to get it over the fence.

The car below was made at the Argyll Car Factory which was near where I was brought up. The car factory didn’t last long though, they were just too expensive and the factory itself had been so expensively built, the staircases inside were made of marble! it looked like a palace, not a factory and I know this because when my dad’s wee shop in Glasgow was flattened in the 1960s he ended up working in this factory. It must have been hellish for a man who had always been his own boss, by then the factory was government owned, making torpedoes of all things. Dad just pushed a pen there, I suppose it was what people have to do to get food on the table for the family.
Riverside Museum
Anyway, the Riverside Museum is well worth visiting if you find yourself in Glasgow. It is European Museum of 2013.

From the Guardian

It’s ages since I’ve linked to anything from the Guardian Review, in fact I haven’t even had the time or inclination to read it, I’ve just been too busy with domestic stuff. Anyway, here’s a selection that I thought some people might find quite interesting.

The MY HERO article is by Michael Ondaatje and Jhumpa Lahin and their hero is the writer Mavis Gallant. I must admit that I haven’t read anything by her, but it looks like I should rectify that.

Kathryn Hughes enjoyed reading Dreams of the Good Life: The Life of Flora Thompson and the Creation of Lark Rise to Candleford.

There’s an article about a new exhibition at the British Museum – Vikings: Life and Legend. And by the way – we in Scotland would like our Lewis chessmen back thank you!

There’s a new book out about that perennial mystery ship the Mary Celeste, you can read about it here.

This year is of course the centenary of the beginning of the First World War. Did you know that over a million Indian soldiers fought on the British side. Find out more in The last post by Daljit Nagra.

And from the main section of the newspaper an article about independent bookshops being in decline. Well we all know that but thankfully some are still struggling on.

I hope you find something to interest you in those links.

Perth Museum and Art Gallery

We went to Perth yesterday to have a look at the sales, but there wasn’t anything worth buying in the shops, unless you are teeny weeny or enormous, there seemed to be no sizes in between, I supppose I didn’t get there fast enough! The Oxfam bookshop had a few good books, as usual, so it was worthwhile going there just for that. I got two by O. Douglas and a Virago.

Luckily the Perth Museum and Art Gallery is a very short walk from the high street so we ended up having a look around there. They always have some lovely Scottish glass and silver on permanent exhibition as well as lots of other interesting things but at the moment they have two travelling exhibitions on which are worthwhile seeing but you can get a bit of an idea of them online if you can’t manage to get to Perth yourself.

The first one we looked at was the Robert Mapplethorpe photograph exhibition.

The second one was the story of the excavation, recovery and conservation of a 3,000 year old logboat. Apart from the Carpow log boat itself, which is in incredible condition, you can also see videos of the actual excavation from the River Tay.

Well, the museum was more enjoyable than the high street, and a lot less crowded!

Gardening Scotland

I said in an earlier post that the next big gardening show was the Hampton Court one but before that there’s the Scottish one at Ingliston near Edinburgh. I’m not even going to that one, despite the fact that for me it’s only about a 40 minute drive away. If I could’ve gone today I would have because it wouldn’t have been so busy, but I just know that I couldn’t stand the weekend crowds and more particularly, being stuck in a traffic jam on the Forth Road Bridge would do my head in so – maybe next year we’ll go on the Friday if Jack has retired by then.

Anyway, I looked at the website and as you can imagine it isn’t up to much compared with the Chelsea one but there are lots of photos of people with plants, not much in the way of actual gardens though. If you’re interested have a wee keek here.

Something else which is going on this weekend which I won’t be going to because it means travelling south is the Spring Fling which goes on mainly in Dumfries and Galloway. Have a look here.

I really quite fancy going there too – some year. Don’t ask me why they call it the Spring Fling when it’s in June! But there’s some interesting art and craft work going on down there and there’s also a nice video of the area, it looks very scenic but whenever we drive through we’re always in a hurry to get somewhere further south.

So what are we doing this long, long Diamond Jubilee weekend? I haven’t a clue, but I do know that we aren’t going to a street party. Are you?

Creative Stitches – at Glasgow

I went to the Creative Stitches Exhibition at the SECC in Glasgow on Sunday, it was the first time I had been so I didn’t really know what to expect. It was hoaching/heaving with women and just a few men (not mine)! All sorts of crafts were featured and there were plenty of knitters and crochet folks about but I was a wee bit disappointed by the knitted things which were on display. As far as I could see there didn’t seem to be much in the way of traditional knitting nor anything really innovative. Thinking back to the 1980s which was when there was a last big resurgence in the craft I remember it as being more exciting somehow – yes knitting can be exciting!

It was quite difficult to get photos but I did just manage to snap some of the Downton Abbey costumes – as you can see.

Downton Abbey costumes

Downton Abbey costumes

Downton Abbey costumes

I took lots of photos of quilts and embroideries as that’s mainly what I’m interested in and I thought I’d start off with this one, a tribute to Jane Austen. It’s about a metre square I think and although this was part of the Quilter’s Guild Exhibition it also has a lot of embroidery on it.

Jane Austen Tribute

In fact I think it’s often quite difficult to figure out what is meant to be embroidery or quilting. The two crafts seem to cross over into each other’s territory a lot. I would call quite a lot of the exhibits collages, but whatever they’re called I’m just awestruck by the beauty of some of them. I’ll be posting some real crackers soon!

Edinburgh

You might know that I’ve been intending to visit the Royal Yacht Brittania for some time now but things just keep getting in the way. As yesterday was the last day of the Christmas/New Year school holidays here we thought we would go for that overdue visit. Then on the way to Edinburgh the radio news report said that Britannia was being taken to a dry dock to be repainted that morning but she was taking on water and listing badly! So, that was that, luckily the fire brigades managed to deal with the water which was leaking into it and she should be open to visitors next month, when we’ll try again.

We were halfway to Edinburgh so decided to park at the Botanic Gardens and walk into town via Stockbridge. The National Gallery was having its annual Turner in January watercolour exhibition. The paintings were donated to Scotland by a collector who stipulated that they must only be on show during the month of January to stop them from being damaged by strong light. He needn’t have worried because there’s no sunlight at all where they are being hung, in fact it’s very dimly lit but if you’re in Edinburgh you should make time to have a look at them. They’re beautifully delicate looking, I think watercolour painting is far more difficult than painting with oils but for some reason people tend not to be so impressed by them.

The National Gallery of Scotland

This chap was just beginning to play his bagpipes so there was that usual caterwauling until he won the fight and managed to squeeze a recognisable tune out of them. The Walter Scott monument is in the background and the big wheel which was there over the Christmas/Hogmanay period is half-way through being dismantled. I once saw a Japanese man playing his pipes in Princes Street, in full highland regalia. I think he must have been fulfilling a lifetime’s ambition – well either that or he was trying to collect his fare back to Japan!

A bagpiper

Anyway, after that we had a swift look around Marks and Spencer, there was nothing worth buying as the sale things are now only in size 8 or 20 and thankfully I am neither. To George Street and Waterstones where I didn’t find any books I wanted to buy. I know, I’m not supposed to be buying any. Then back on down to Stockbridge again on our way to the car.

You know I can’t resist those bookshops but it was extremely slim pickings this time, just as well really as I have so many to read. Spookily though I did find a copy of The House with the Green Shutters which Peggy has just downloaded from Project Gutenberg. So I bought it, it’s just a paperback but it’s a nice big one with very clear print, published by James Thin of Edinburgh in 1986 but in perfect condition. It may well jump my reading queue.

I also bought a McCalls Needlework book, it’s sort of nostalgic really and I didn’t realise that it was published in 1963 until I looked at it at home. It’s nearly 50 years old but looks like new and it cost me all of 50 pence! The only other book I couldn’t say no to is a very old copy of Brand by Ibsen. I thought it was a play, I like his plays but it’s actually a poem, so I’m not sure about that. It’s an Everyman’s Library edition from 1917 though and has never been read by the looks of it. It still may not be! It was another 50p buy in a charity shop. So that was a very cheap but tiring day out in Edinburgh, not at all what we expected to be doing that day but we both need to whittle a few pounds off after the festivities so the long walk will have done us some good – I hope!

A Charles Jencks Landform

Gallery Water Feature

The above photograph is of the land at the front of the Scottish Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh and I think it’s really stylish. You can see more photos of Landform here.

It’s the view which you get if you are standing at the front of the building. We visit the gallery quite often and I have to say that some of the modern art on display is just not to my taste but you can’t like everything. I’m sure we’ve all looked at some modern exhibits in the past and said to ourselves – I can do better than that!

Anyway the view above is right in front of the gallery building so if you turn around this is what you see.

Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art frontage close

Charles Jencks is an American landscape architect, born in Baltimore to a Scottish mother and you can read more about him here.

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum again

The best laid plans of mice and men gang aft agley – as good old Robert Burns said, and so after really looking forward to the autumn holidays we ended up not being able to go away, just as well we hadn’t actually booked anything. When a good builder knocks on your door and says he can fit you in earlier than planned you just have to grab him rather than wait until the spring. So the west, Oban and the Isle of Mull will have to wait. We only managed one day in Glasgow instead and chose to go to the Kelvingrove, my home from home.

They are very relaxed about people taking photographs unlike some places and I thought you might like to see some Charles Rennie Mackintosh designs and other Scottish art nouveau designers.

This is from the original Miss Cranston’s Tearoom. I love the designs but I’m sure that Miss Cranston must have asked him to design chairs which were uncomfortable to sit in for any length of time, fair enough I suppose, she obviously wanted people to move on so she could make more money.

These gesso panels by Mackintosh’s wife, Margaret Macdonald, are lovely – ethereal women are a recurring theme.

I think the stained glass is my favourite, it’s such a pity that the chair is positioned so badly here.

This type of stained glass is typical of what you commonly find in a ‘middle class’ Edwardian tenement building in Glasgow. This one is small and quite plain compared with some. The front doors and vestibule doors usually have stained glass or painted glass panels in them. I think this one came from the bottom of a window. The panel would have been fitted over the bottom of the glass from the inside. You can still buy panels like these quite cheaply from reclamation yards. I’ve got a few painted glass ones which I intend to make into light boxes – some day!

If you’re into CRM and The Glasgow Style you’ll want to visit Kelvingrove.