Not wanting to turn this into a pub thread but does waxys still exist on Leicester square
Waxy O'Connor's Irish bar still exists. It's on Rupert Street just off Leicester Square.
Not wanting to turn this into a pub thread but does waxys still exist on Leicester square
Going back a long way 9s but for some reason Henry j bean popped into my head
About the same time I used to do a good crawl of the Sam Smith’s pubs in central London. I’ll try and work out how many are left, but I know we ended up in the barn like Cittie of Yorke on Holborn.When I lived in Fulham, we used to do a pub crawl from Sloane Square back to Fulham along the Kings Road. There was seventeen pubs en-route, half a pint in each pub back to The Durrell Arms ( our home address ) happy days. Circa mid '80's.
Looks like there are currently 8 which would make a decent crawl, and I can remember drinking in 7 of them. Just. The one I don’t think I’ve been to is the Angel in the Fields on Thayer Street. Anyone been there?About the same time I used to do a good crawl of the Sam Smith’s pubs in central London. I’ll try and work out how many are left, but I know we ended up in the barn like Cittie of Yorke on Holborn.
Waxy O'Connor's Irish bar still exists. It's on Rupert Street just off Leicester Square.
Yeah, I only heard the last couple of minutes of the interview and was going on what they said and the vocabulary they used. I’m sure, like all of their stuff, it’s very impressive (as we have established it’s passes me by, but that’s just personal taste), but any one referring to their own work as ‘fine art’ and all asserting that it will change the viewers life has self awareness issues in my view……
Are they defunct as a music making unit now?
I read something about this and saw some pictures - didn’t his Dad make great big concrete animals? Think I recall some hippos in Dundee….Stumbled across a great program on BBC Scotland a couple of nights ago - Meet You At The Hippos.
Meet You at the Hippos: www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m00124rq via @bbciplayer
Scottish actor Mark Bonnar (you'd recognise him even if the name isn't familiar) goes back to some of the new towns that he grew up in to look at how they employed artists to create street sulptures during the build phase, including his dad.
Interspersed with some old footage and interviews with art historians, it's a quite funny documentary. Some of the sculptures were pretty far out, and it's a pity that some have either been removed by the local authorities or vandalised, but those that remain are quite striking.
If no-one else, reckon @SW Ranger will enjoy it (though the sculptures may be a bit big for your studio!)
I read something about this and saw some pictures - didn’t his Dad make great big concrete animals? Think I recall some hippos in Dundee….
Managed to watch half of it so far. Good watch. So interesting to see the square buildings that were used almost everywhere in the new towns of that era, and then these interspersed irregular sculptures. I have liked the totems that I’ve seen so far. I am just at the design/make stages for my own garden sculpture commissions which are 1-2mtrs in size, which is a new direction for us since last year (working with a metal sculptor), so looking forward to these being completed and hoping to get some new pieces designed and into a couple of sculpture parks next year if we can get them accepted.Stumbled across a great program on BBC Scotland a couple of nights ago - Meet You At The Hippos.
Meet You at the Hippos: www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m00124rq via @bbciplayer
Scottish actor Mark Bonnar (you'd recognise him even if the name isn't familiar) goes back to some of the new towns that he grew up in to look at how they employed artists to create street sulptures during the build phase, including his dad.
Interspersed with some old footage and interviews with art historians, it's a quite funny documentary. Some of the sculptures were pretty far out, and it's a pity that some have either been removed by the local authorities or vandalised, but those that remain are quite striking.
If no-one else, reckon @SW Ranger will enjoy it (though the sculptures may be a bit big for your studio!)
Managed to watch half of it so far. Good watch. So interesting to see the square buildings that were used almost everywhere in the new towns of that era, and then these interspersed irregular sculptures. I have liked the totems that I’ve seen so far. I am just at the design/make stages for my own garden sculpture commissions which are 1-2mtrs in size, which is a new direction for us since last year (working with a metal sculptor), so looking forward to these being completed and hoping to get some new pieces designed and into a couple of sculpture parks next year if we can get them accepted.
Promise to put them up when I have them completed and installed (so the clients get first viewingPhotos please!!
I’ve tonight seen them again and they were superb, far better than the Manics who they supported. They could do with some sort of enigmatic front man or woman though as I think they are a bit wooden to watch, even though their live sound is brilliant.How was it pal? Hope you enjoyed it as much as I did