Thursday 29 July 2010

To the End of the earth

I had a delightful trip last weekend out to Audley End, in the far north-western reaches of Essex.


Essex has a bad reputation, but the bits furthest away from London are delightful -- proper East Anglian* countryside, the land of my origins.


It's also, of course, lush agricultural land, a place of giant Euro-fields and heavy crops. The effect can be reminiscent of a Rothko painting, all sharply-delineated horizontal bands of colour:


My objective was this, a vast Jacobean palace, newly re-opened by English Heritage after a major restoration project lasting a couple of years:


Extraordinarily the house you see today is just one-third of the size it attained at its largest extent.


The rooms inside are delightful (although for some reason English Heritage forbids any photography. Which is both churlish and annoying, especially after paying more than £11 for an entrance fee). Although I couldn't resist illegally taking this snap, part of an unexpected suite of Adam Brothers rooms tucked into the ground floor:


The house is in vast grounds which, even though they had large numbers of families enjoying picnics looked, as you can see, deserted -- an effect I rather like:


But then, this sort of countryside feels utterly familiar to me.


On a warm summery day it is completely beguiling, and I wouldn't even have needed to have the Jacobean pleasures of Audley End.

*Well, yes, alright, if you're going to be pedantic, Essex is not in East Anglia (the clue being in the name -- Essex = East Saxons, not the South Folk (= Suffolk) part of the Angles or the Cambridgeshire/Hertfordshire bits of (presumably) West Anglia). But at this point Essex is so close that it's good enough for me.

5 comments:

bubu said...

wunderbar !

Anonymous said...

What is the name of the house?
Enjoy your blog.
Stephen
Auckland
New Zealand

Anonymous said...

Beautiful photos!
A question regarding the photograph of the Jacobean palace. For me the walls look flat; it seems like the windows have been painted/printed to the wall with all those shades? Especially the windows and the door on the ground floor look like being painted on the wall. As a matter of fact for me it looks like a printed model card kit in glossy photo quality. Do i need new glasses?

LeDuc said...

Stephen: Apologies for being unclear. The house is called simply Audley End -- full skinny here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audley_End

Anonymous: yes, I'm afraid you do indeed need glasses. See link above!

Stewart Jackel said...

Bugger the no-photograph facista.
Turn your flash off and aim roughly from waist-height. This gives you wonderful ambient light shots (eg your petra-leo shot) and you can frame later ... but I tell you nothing. :-)