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Showing posts with label Brighton Pavillion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brighton Pavillion. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17

Brighton Pavilion's Mother's Day Tours Features Costumed Guides

Guides at Brighton Pavilion wear Regency costumes. Image@The Jane Austen Project
Mother's Day in the UK runs on the fourth Sunday of Lent. This year it is Sunday, March 18th. What better way to treat one's mama in England than to take her to Brighton Pavilion?

Image @Wikimedia Commons

From the BBC website: Things to Do:

Experience the splendour of the Royal Pavilion and learn all about Regency elegance on a tour conducted by a costumed guide from the Jane Austen era.

Various Times
This activity runs at these times:

Sun 18 Mar
11:15–12:00
12:30–13:15
14:15–15:00
15:30–16:15

Cost
Admission fees apply 03000 290900 visitor.services@brighton-hove.gov.uk www.brighton-hove-pavilion.org.uk

Saturday, May 14

Brighton Pier

Jane Austen fans know about Lydia Bennet's escapades in Brighton, which resulted in her elopement with Wickham. Tony Grant. a frequent contributer to this blog, took images of the pier in that ancient British resort town, whose origins go back to the days of the Saxons when the town was known as Brighthelmstun (although it is conjectured that it was a place of some note for the Romans a well).
Royal Pavilion close up. Image @Tony Grant
The town grew in popularity after the Prince Regent made it his resort of choice. In 1822, five years after Jane Austen's death, a Chain Pier was erected. At 1,134 feet in length, with a promenade 13 feet wide, and with an admission fee of 2 pence (or subscription fee), one can imagine that visitors had ample opportunity to meet new friends and greet acquaintances along their leisurely stroll.
Chain Pier, 1836
Today,  Brighton looks vastly different.

Image @Tony Grant

Image @Tony Grant

Under Brighton Pier. Image @Tony Grant

Along Brighton Pier. Image @Tony Grant

Antique Centre. Image @Tony Grant
Looking out a window at Brighton Pier. Image @Tony Grant

Saturday, December 2

Brighton Pavilion


In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
A stately pleasure-dome decree :
Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
Through caverns measureless to man

Down to a sunless sea.

So twice five miles of fertile ground
With walls and towers were girdled round :
And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills,
Where blossomed many an incense-bearing tree ;
And here were forests ancient as the hills,
Enfolding sunny spots of greenery.
--Samuel Taylor Coleridge






When I visited Brighton Pavilion in Brighton, a charming seaside town in Sussex's South Downs, I found it more beautiful and fantastic than the drawings, paintings, and photos I'd seen. The building, rebuilt between 1815-1822 by John Nash, the Prince Regent's architect, is starkly white and stands in the center of town. Approaching it on foot, one is astounded by the intricacy of the architectural details, from the exterior domes, spires, and columns, to the interior with its gothic touches, fantasy rooms, and exquisite color combinations and patterns.

The Prince Regent was known for his excesses and expensive tastes, and his architect John Nash succeeded in fulfilling the Prince’s most outrageous wishes. The Gothic Revival was in full swing during the Regency Era, including the love for all things mid-Eastern, Chinoise, and Arabian. This Arabian Nights fantasy in stone has been well documented in picture books and on the web. I will merely point out a few spectacular rooms and some of the details that struck me as being particularly beautiful or unusual.

The kitchen, a cavernous room created to comfortably accommodate the Prince's idea of an intimate dinner, is depicted on this web page. Click here and scroll down to the kitchen. You can also see a panoramic view of the kitchen on the page if you have a real player. It was not unusual for the Prince to throw a banquet with 36 courses, hence the kitchen was designed to accommodate the scores of cooks and enormous amounts of food stuffs and ingredients required to prepare these foods.

The long gallery is indeed long. The colors are riotous, and one feels as if one is traipsing through a fantasy land.






On the left is a picture of John Nash's long gallery. On the right is a photograph of the long gallery today.

The banquet room also lingers in my memory, with its long, long banqueting table, the exquisite details in the ceiling, and the fantastic carved dragons peeping out from chandeliers disquised as palms.

















Salon & Music Room














Images of Brighton in the 19th Century:
Evening Gathering at Brighton Pavilion in the Yellow Room




















Brighton, a seaside resort