Sunny though it was, Thursday turned out to be a day of
Gothic concerns. I sped up to London on the train with Is This Desire? on the
headphones (a good start) and by noon was at the V&A for ‘Opus Anglicanum’,
its show of material from the time – the 14th and 15th
centuries – when English needlework was the envy of Europe. Amid the dark of
the V&A’s temporary exhibition space, islanded within pools of light were
works of such sumptuous detail and grandeur that they made one gasp. Of course
I’ve seen a lot of this before, illustrated, but to see it in the flesh, in the
thread and the silk, is a different matter. I was caught out by how long the vestments are: the great Clare
Chasuble would come down nearly to my feet, and your average medieval clergyman
would have been a bit shorter than me. Catherine-spotting was rewarding: she
was present quite a bit. The ‘Embroiderers’ Lantern’, a hanging table-top-sized
lamp with the known names of craftspeople picked out in black fretwork, managed
to move me rather: these were the people whose fingers made these beautiful
things, whose minds planned them, whose hearts rejoiced to see them complete
and ready to be used.
The only one of the ‘magnificent seven’ Victorian cemeteries
ringing the capital I’d never visited was Abney Park, so from Kensington that
was where I went. The great Egyptian piers of the entrance are rather grander
than anything you find inside the rails: there are no big, elaborate monuments
or characterful culturally-distinct sections such as you find at Highgate,
Kensal Rise, or West Norwood. The cemetery’s status as a nature reserve (like
its cousin at Tower Hamlets) means that much of it is even wilder than it would
otherwise be, and straying off the main paths is a hazardous enterprise. The
tree cover is such that even Abney Park’s grandiose centrepiece, the heroically
unattractive Chapel, can easily be missed if you don’t know it’s there, no
matter that it’s winter. The sun filters through somewhat reluctantly. There
are many moving and pretty corners, though. The Chapel’s being renovated at the
moment, hopefully rendering it a bit less dangerous than it is now: my Goth
accountant friend Ms Death-and-Taxes was once photographed posing inside it for
the cover of Accountancy News, and it
looked as though the arches could collapse any moment. In the Visitor Centre I
met the custodian, a middle-aged gentleman in a black leather coat and a pair
of New-Rock boots who clearly has his ideal job. He was touchingly uncertain
what to do when I requested to buy a guidebook and a handful of postcards,
implying it was an unexpected eventuality.
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