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Essex has a bad reputation, but the bits furthest away from London are delightful -- proper East Anglian* countryside, the land of my origins.
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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:
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My objective was this, a vast Jacobean palace, newly re-opened by English Heritage after a major restoration project lasting a couple of years:
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Extraordinarily the house you see today is just one-third of the size it attained at its largest extent.
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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:
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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:
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But then, this sort of countryside feels utterly familiar to me.
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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:
wunderbar !
What is the name of the house?
Enjoy your blog.
Stephen
Auckland
New Zealand
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?
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!
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. :-)
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