Hampstead Heath - a Luxurious Refuge Near London for Poets, Artists and Dreamers
ロケーション: Hampstead Heath
住所: Hampstead Heath
Welcome to Hampstead Heath, a little corner of paradise where, one Sunday over a century ago, you could even see Karl Marx taking a stroll, along with poets, intellectuals and simple dreamers, all looking for a tiny refuge in which to enjoy a few minutes of silence. Around the park is the village of the same name which was a favourite destination for personalities like Sigmund Freud, T. S. Eliot, Robert Louis Stevenson and H. G. Wells. Hampstead Village was also home to writer P. L. Travers, author of Mary Poppins, who envisioned the roof of the Admiral’s House as home to the eccentric Admiral Boom. Hampstead Heath is also a perfect place for sports with a running track, an education centre, plenty of spaces created expressly for children, three wading pools and even a beach club.
Paintings, sculptures, textiles and poetry by over 50 artists including Uzo Egonu, El Anatsui, Ladi Kwali and Ben Enwonwu chronicle the achievements of Nigerian artists working before and after the decade of the nation’s independence from British colonial rule in 1960.
With The Erotics of Passage, Jimmy Robert proposes an experience that involves body, object, image and text, in an exhibition path where memory becomes a performative and visual moment that invites the spectator to confront his own perception of time, body and identity.
Grateful Dead co-founder Bobby Weir performs his first London concert in more than two decades, showcasing the best of his Rock repertoire in symphonic arrangements by composer Giancarlo Aquilanti.
An exhibition celebrates Edwin Austin Abbey, a 19th-century American artist, showcasing his study for the monumental work The Hours created for the Pennsylvania State Capitol.