In a comment on the previous post, a reader expressed appreciation for the way I describe things, saying that where she would have seen a stained-glass window showing the Holy Family and the Magi, I picked out a host of details, enhancing her enjoyment of the image. This is not the first comment I've had along these lines, and it pleased me greatly because it gets to the heart of what this blog is about - I point out some of the things I see in buildings, including details that others might miss, in the hope that my readers will be interested too.
One of the reasons I do this is because I'm all too aware that buildings - the biggest objects, on the whole, that humankind creates - are oddly easy to ignore. We might be awestruck by a great cathedral or annoyed by an ugly office block, but most people, most of the time, pay scant attention to the buildings around them.
Rushing around from place to place, few of us take the time to look at the buildings we pass. And when we do, how much do we actually take in? Most of us are like the gallery-goers who spend on average just a few seconds in front of each painting, identifying artist and subject but missing all but the most obvious details.
I'm remdinded of my experience of working for the publishers Dorliong Kindersley in the 1980s. Peter Kindersley was very aware of how little time people spend looking at images, and this was an issue of huge importance for a publisher of illustrated books. 'We need to slow down the pictures,' he would say. And so we adopted a variety of methods to make people look more closely at the pictures in our books - placing text right next to the part of the picture it was describing, using leader lines to point to specific parts of an image, commissioning cutaway illustrations, photographing an object from several different angles, and adding all this together to create complex pages in which words and pictures were integrated.
In this blog I try to slow down the buildings around us and showcase unregarded structures or unfamiliar aspects of well known ones. In so doing I hope to sharpen my eyes, to make myself more aware of telling details and neglected bits of the built environment. I hope to help others see more clearly too - though they may well see different things in the buildings I write about. The main thing that you need when looking at buildings, said John Betjeman, is not a guide book, or a theory, or a degree in art history, but 'an eye'. Everyone's eye is different. The important thing is to use it.
I loved this. You're so right, we all need to slow down a bit (advice I'm also giving to other road users in the snow). Your blog does indeed do this magnificently.
ReplyDeleteYou succeed beautifully. (I love Dorling Kindersley books as well...)
ReplyDeleteAgreed,but my dear sister does need a little help...thats me dead!
ReplyDeleteThank you all.
ReplyDeleteCaroline: If you're interested in the story behind Dorling Kinderlsey, it's well worth reading Eyewitness: The Rise and Fall of Dorling Kindersley, by my old boss, Christopher Davis. It's a rich and anecdotal insider's account of how the company developed and is also, in places, very very funny.
That's a definite addition to my reading list!
ReplyDeleteI just want to add my voice to the rest. I don't get much chance to go out and stare at things for any length of time, so I am delighted to observe buildings and structures vicariously through you. You describe them so diligently and the piece you did on the stained glass window was beautiful. Keep it up Wilco.
ReplyDeleteThank you WTHW. Your comment means a lot to me. More buildings soon, I hope, although I'll not be travelling very far in this beautiful but slippery weather.
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