Friday, July 11, 2025
Highgate in the Heat
We are supposedly in the middle of a heat wave, but to me it doesn't feel that uncomfortable. It's warm -- about 30º C or 86º F yesterday -- but we've had much worse. I took a walk over to Highgate yesterday and I debated whether or not I should go, given the heat, but it turned out not to be a problem.
I wanted to see a show of paintings by an artist named David Evans at a Highgate art gallery. I read about it in the paper a couple of months ago and made a mental note of it, and I didn't have a chance to follow up on it until now. (The gallery is only open on Thursdays and weekends.)
In the decades before he died in 1988, Evans owned a classical music record store in Kensington and made fanciful and highly detailed watercolors of city life -- nightclubs, concert halls, traffic jams -- as well as landscapes, portraits, drawings and collages. The show is small but I'm glad I went as I loved his large colorful paintings, which seemed both very '60s and timeless. I bought the catalog for £15.
To get to Highgate I took the overground to Hampstead Heath and walked from there, after fortifying myself with a coffee from Starbucks.
I crossed the Heath and walked up Parliament Hill to check out the view. That's looking southeast toward Canary Wharf (L) and the city (R). That view has changed a lot in the 14 years we've lived in London. If you look at the last picture in this post you'll see what it looked like back then -- there was a lot more open space, rather than the wall of buildings we see now.
I also passed that yellow house in the top photo. I was taken by the painter's orange overalls. That road had so much traffic I only had a chance to take two shots and I'm glad that one worked out.
I found this six-spot burnet on knapweed on the Heath -- the first one I've seen this summer.
After checking out the show and wandering up and down the Highgate high street, I walked back across the Heath to home -- about two and a half miles. It felt good to get some exercise and cross something off my list of things to do.
I've been posting so many pictures of Olga sleeping that I thought I'd show you a more lively video. This was yesterday morning, as she sniffed around where the foxes tend to wander in the back of the garden. The old beast still has some bark in her, though as you can see, she is a bit wobbly!
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You had a good walk, and 30C is still bearable for a walk (in my experience) as long as it's not too humid and you can walk in the shade every now and then.
ReplyDeleteThe house in the first picture is very pretty, but I suppose when it was built there was much less traffic - a very busy road would certainly put me off wanting to live there.
What a beautiful butterfly! (Or is it a moth? I know the difference is easy, but I always forget.) I don't think I have ever seen one like this around here.
It was evidently a fulfilling and well-rounded day, one marked by art, time in nature, a touch of reflection, and the faithful presence of Olga in the garden. Indeed, it is often the quieter accomplishments that bring the greatest satisfaction
ReplyDeleteOlga even as an old lady has to protect her kingdom..
ReplyDeleteWobbly but willing! Dear old Olga.
ReplyDeleteNot just the buildings have grown, so have the trees, thankfully
Anything over 25 degrees is too much for me, so well done walking in 30. The burnet moth is beautiful, but it is sad to see buildings encroaching on all the green spaces - slow, but insidious.
ReplyDeleteDavid Evans's style was certainly distinctive. For a moment I thought that "Profile portrait of man smoking, circa 1975" was you until I realised it was actually Mick Jagger.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the old link. What a change in the vista! I love the orange and blue painter on the yellow wall. And oh how I love that house! The moth is beautiful, too. Great shot. Olga has still got it, wobbles and all.
ReplyDeleteThat first picture is great. I'd also like it close cropped around the painter. That would be a great watercolor. Good to see Olga still active in her territory.
ReplyDeleteThat view has sure changed over the last 14 years. I love Olga's bark and it is good to see her in action.
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