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The Buildings of Green Park

A tour of certain buildings, monuments and other structures in Mayfair and St. J

Erschienen am 01.01.2021
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781788841160
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 168
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Einband: Gebunden

Beschreibung

This book is as beguiling as a book can be From the first glimpse of its most agreeable small format - so satisfying to hold and with a cover that positively sings of the delights to be found within - you are charmed out of your wits. Lucinda Lambton in The Oldie This is at one level a book about a part of London and its buildings. At another, its a book about learning to savour our lives Alain de Botton Take a walk around a park trodden by many but known by few. From Lancaster House, venue of famous speeches and summits, to 100 Piccadilly, the stage of an ongoing Soviet-themed reality experience, T he Buildings of Green Park captures the unseen history of these well-travelled streets. Green Park boasts a plethora of London landmarks, including Bridgewater House and the Canada Gates. The Buildings of Green Park gives each of these sites the attention they deserve, while also celebrating a multitude of overlooked buildings: those that are passed every day without comment from the guides. Local history, old photographs, paintings and floorplans offer a tantalising peek into the backstory behind these backdrops. Moving through the winter and into the spring, Andrew Joness crisp photography captures a London shaped by past, present and hopes for the future.

Autorenportrait

Andrew Joness Instagram takes us across sub-Saharan Africa, from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the Ivory Coast. For this project, he explores far closer to home. During the 2020 lockdown, Jones combined his outdoor exercise time with photographing buildings and monuments in his native Green Park. To preserve the character of this mid-Pandemic project, the pictures featured here have undergone minimal editing and the research is limited to the resources Jones had access to at the time. The result is an intriguing meld of highly localised travelogue and lockdown memento.