Flatlanders

Design, Art, Culture & Food in East Anglia

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PD James

December 27th, 2009 by booglysticks
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“East Anglia has a particular attraction for detective novelists; the remoteness of the east coast, the dangerous encroaching North Sea, the bird-loud marshes, the emptiness, the great skies, the magnificent churches and the sense of being in a place alien, mysterious and slightly sinister, where it is possible to stand under friable cliffs eaten away by the tides of centuries and imagine that we hear the bells of ancient churches buried under the sea.”

from Talking About Detective Fiction
by P. D. James

image by s_gibson72 on flickr

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Snow!

December 18th, 2009 by booglysticks
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The garden under snow

My relatives in Colorado and Vermont will snigger, but I’m excited. We had nearly four inches of snow fall overnight, I got stuck on a train in a blizzard for several hours, and this morning I did the obligatory running round the garden in pyjamas and wellies, photographing the snow.

snow_on_the_hazelUnfortunately it was too cold to stay out long, but it seems like there will be plenty more to come.

snow_on_fennelBrrr.

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Purple Podded Peas

December 12th, 2009 by booglysticks
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Celia Hart is a printmaker and illustrator born and bred in East Anglia. She translates the world around her into block prints in hazy colours reminiscent of old book illustrations, as well as blogging about cosy studio life and the rich harvest of her walled garden.

She edits out the sad things of life away from her blog, instead using it to celebrate good things and showcase the stages of printmaking that the printbuying public don’t normally get to see. It has become a story of the studio assistants (feline), the under gardeners (chickens) and life lived close to the land – very comforting.

Celia Hart cutting a block“My family comes from Willingham, on the fen edge just north west of Cambridge, and that’s where I was brought up and learnt the names of wildflowers and varieties of plums, apples and chrysanthemums before I went to school. So I’m definitely a true Flatlander. I now live in the corner of Suffolk bordering on Cambridgeshire and Essex and I think it’s hilly!

“The subjects for my prints are inspired by things around me – in my garden and the surrounding countryside, with influences from travels abroad playing a part. I can’t imagine not gardening – it’s in my genes. Keeping hens was along standing dream too, but only became a reality since we moved to Suffolk – they’ve brought the garden to life (and made it more messy!)

Prints drying

“Being in East Anglia definitely influences my work.  Apart from the obvious – the landscape, plants and animals I see when I go for walks along the footpaths – there are all the beautiful buildings and museums we have in and near Cambridge. The Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge is full of wonderful things that have become familiar ‘friends’ since I first saw them on school visits – that gorgeous jade water buffalo, Cezanne’s apples, the slipware pottery and illuminated manuscripts … it’s great to be able to pop in to see them regularly. One of my favourite walks is along the Devil’s Dyke, it’s sparked off a fascination with Anglo Saxon art and culture and this region’s links with Scandinavia – I’m sure this will start to appear in my work soon…

“I do think where I live influences my work. Just think how the landscape in the background of an Italian Renaissance painting or the trees and rocks in a Japanese print really come alive once you’ve seen the countryside around Florence or the pathways around Kyoto. If I lived somewhere different for a long time of course my work would change, but it would be a fusion of my inherited culture and the new things I encountered.”

Celia Hart, Sleeping Hare

What are your goals/future plans as a printmaker and artist?
“After working as a freelance book illustrator since 1991 I’m still very much involved in supplying digital illustrations for publishing projects – and I never know what’s coming along next, that makes it interesting! As for my own printmaking work – I feel my own voice is emerging through the linocuts and I can now build on this. I have developed a style of digital illustration influenced by traditional printing methods, this is something to take further. And I also want to return to painting – I think concentrating on block prints for a few years will have changed the way I approach working in watercolour and acrylics.”

What about as a gardener?
I love growing vegetables, fruit and herbs and using them in the kitchen – each season is different and there’s always the next season to look forward to. I’m completely hooked on growing heritage vegetables, they are part of our culture just as much as vernacular architecture or regional recipes. And I enjoy supplying novice veg growers with ‘Purple Podded Peas’  – children especially love vegetables that look colourful, who can resist sweet bright green peas in little purple purses!

Celia Hart, Salford Black Arch

And a blogger?
I started blogging in March 2007. I’ve always liked the idea of keeping a garden diary and a record of my work, but apart from travel journals I’ve never sustained a diary longer than a couple of weeks! But the ease of including images and photos into a blog seems to have inspired me to keep at it – the comments from and contact with other artists, makers, gardeners and cooks were a big surprise and make posting on my blog even more fun. More seriously, I like to show the creative process and inspirations behind my prints – ‘limited edition hand pulled prints’ is a meaningless term to lots of people and confusing when there are so many scanned and digitally reproduced images. The process is so much part of a hand printed image and you can show this step by step on a blog – like an on-line ‘open studio’.

Are there any gardens other than your own that particularly inspire you in the area?
As a member of Garden Organic and The Heritage Seed Library, I love visiting their showcase walled kitchen garden at Audley End. As for influences on my own garden, Joy Larkcom is my all-time gardening hero. She used to garden just north of Bury St Edmunds, she now lives in Ireland. I would recommend any of her books, but ‘Creative Vegetable Gardening’ is my favourite and it’s the book that has most influenced my garden. Other gardens which influence me are the plant combinations of Piet Oudolf at the Millennium Garden at Pensthorpe and the wonderful containers and gravel garden at East Ruston Old Vicarage, both in Norfolk.

How about printmakers?
A visit to Japan and interest in Japanese printmakers sparked off my return to printmaking six years ago. I also love the work of Edward Bawden and Eric Ravilious – and the wonderful English tradition of block print illustrations in books. Linocut seems to be having a renaissance at the moment – is it a reaction against the ubiquitous full colour printing at the click of a mouse?

Celia Hart, Hazel Arch

See more of Celia’s work plus the galleries that stock it at celiahart.co.uk Her blog is at Purple Podded Peas.

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Winter

December 12th, 2009 by booglysticks
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Winter fennel heads

Back home, and picking up the pieces after the end of a big project – pottering in the garden, which is too wet to do anything with, tidying my desk, watching the birds whose feeder I’ve only been able to refill late at night by torchlight up til now.

Cambridgeshire is cold and damp right now – it gets into your bones and reminds me of Dorothy Sayers’ descriptions of the fens, raw, flat and grey. This is winter here. Yesterday the house was shrouded in fog all day, this morning I woke to heavy, straight rain falling without a breath of wind to disturb its course.

Time for fires, and seed catalogues, and getting to grips with Christmas which seems to be racing up with alarming suddenness. And plenty more blogging, hurrah. Happy winter weekend.

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St Jude’s Christmas Show

December 4th, 2009 by booglysticks
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St Jude’s in Itteringham are opening their Christmas show with mulled wine, mince pies and a glorious exhibition of prints.

Felbrigg Hall by Ed KluzFelbrigg Hall by Ed Kluz is one of the standout pieces for me in the online preview – part collage, part painting and full of joyful colour, it’s one of a collection of images of eccentric old buildings. Christopher Brown is exhibiting a series of 14 lino prints from a journey through East Anglia, and Angie Lewin a series of botanical prints inspired by time spent in the Scottish Highlands.

They will also be giving away some copies of a map of North Norfolk by friend-of-St. Judes Mark Hearld, which looks intriguing. It’s all sure to be worth a trip.

Mark Hearld's map for St Judes

St. Jude’s Gallery
Next to the Village Shop
Wolterton Road
Itteringham
Norfolk NR11 7AF
Open 11am – 4pm Thursday – Saturday

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Hiding from the weather

November 14th, 2009 by booglysticks
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I dreamed of sailing last night – the gale raged around the house all night and still hasn’t blown itself out. Rain is battering  the windows and the bright yellow leaves of my cherry tree are all over the garden. I just saw three young persons with enormous rucksacks trudge wearily past – not the weekend you’d pick for going camping.

I fired up the woodburning stove first thing and I don’t plan to move far all day. It’s the perfect time for indoor tasks, doing accounts, tidying the living room, working out what to do with the quinces I bought in a fit of optimism…

Fresh QuincesI think it’s the fur that’s alarming me. I had never seen a real life quince in the flesh before I found them in the orchard shop, and didn’t expect them to be furry. This is why they’ve been sitting on the counter for two weeks, looking at me whenever I make a cup of tea like small neglected pets.

Luckily the internet is full of intriguing quince recipes and if I had a food processor I’d surely be making Dulce de Membrillo from The Travellers Lunchbox - it comes with a beautiful, inspiring story about discovering good food. Historic food has an interesting article about quince paste – your quince can be a design item as well as food if you can lay your hands on a mould.

The Cottage Smallholder, as always, is there before me and has an easy to follow quince jelly recipe. Maybe the traditional ways are the best. I’m going to ferret around for empty jam jars.

Later: All the jam jars are still full of the grape jelly we made a couple of weeks ago, so I ended up just braising the quinces and making a wonderfully fragrant syrup. I had some on my porridge this morning and it was glorious – not too sweet, not too sour, just that beguiling quince flavour that is completely unlike anything else.

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Cambridge Festival of Ideas

October 21st, 2009 by booglysticks
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Just a quick note to say that the Cambridge Festival of Ideas starts today. Their programme is hugely wide, from a plant orchestra at the Botanic Gardens to curators at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology sharing their favourite pieces from the museum, to an Intaglio printmaking workshop, plus talks, performances, hands on workshops. It’s worth a look if you’re in the area.

Programme here.

Image of the Cam by innpictime

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East Anglian Herbal

October 18th, 2009 by booglysticks
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I’ve written before about East Anglian illuminated manuscripts – the area was a byword for particular beauty in Medieval times. Bibliodyssey (a great book illustration blog) has a wonderful post on lovely pattern book – Tudor rather than earlier, part bestiary, part herbal, a collection of interesting things that caught the artist’s eye.

The animals range from fantastical to ordinary – cockatrice and crocodile, griffon and grey hound.

Or here, reaindeer, panther and pigeon, by someone who has never seen either a reindeer or a panther. The crown is a particularly nice touch. The original is in the Bodleian Library but there are 24 beautiful pages over at Bibliodyssey – go take a look.

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Foraging in the hedgerows – Hips and Haws

October 11th, 2009 by booglysticks
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Spending a too-short weekend at home before going back to the city, loving the crisp autumn weather. I’ve spent as much time outside as possible, preparing the garden for winter, painting the arch that leads to the vegetable garden and going for a long walk today. The hedgerows are groaning under berries this year – my neighbours have stripped the blackthorns of sloes for sloe gin but there are bushels of rosehips and hawthorn berries still there.

It made me think of making jams and jellies – rosehip and apple jelly and hawthorn jelly are both classic english flavours.  There’s excellent step by step instructions on how to make hawthorn jelly here – the main thing they don’t explain is that when you are testing whether your jelly has set you should do it on a plate you’ve chilled in the fridge.

They also have a nice article on how to dry rosehips for tea.

For rosehip and apple jelly go here.

Both those jellies have lovely tart flavours – perfect with all those lovely roast dinners coming up over the winter. Enjoy the beautiful autumn colours – my overbearing project is coming to an end in a few weeks and I’m looking forward to resuming normal life and regular posting.

Rosehip picture by garibaldi on Flickr
Hawthorn picture by sean dreillinger on flickr

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Homesick

September 23rd, 2009 by booglysticks
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I’ve been working away for the past few weeks and staying somewhere with no internet, which is why the unbroken quiet on the blog front – apologies. I have a couple of good posts lined up for when I can get some time with an internet connection, but last night I walked back through the streets of London listing all the things I miss about home:

Being there as autumn sets in – it’s time for the first fires of the year, long walks on brisk Sunday afternoons and the last tomatoes of the summer, intensely flavoured because they’ve taken a long time to ripen. There’s a whole list of things to do in the garden – perennials to divide, green manure to sow, make war on the weeds invading the vegetables.

The Cam Valley Orchards farm shop is open again for the season – locally grown heritage apple, plum and pear varieties at reasonable prices, and home made apple and plum muffins on a saturday.

I’m missing all of the Cambridge Film Festival.

I look at the sky through canyons of buildings, and you never get to watch the swooping flight of birds or weather coming from miles off.

I’m working next to an organic, farm sourced sandwich shop, but the bread in their £6 sandwiches isn’t nearly as good as the stuff my husband makes in our electric breadmaker.

It’s great to pick up the threads of London life and see friends, visit galleries, actually catch part of the London Design Festival, but in the back of my mind I can’t get rid of the thought that my neighbours will be stripping the hedgerows of all the best blackberries.

River Nene image by Gwydion Williams on Flickr

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