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Tag Archives: Enys gardens

Penryn Arts Festival and Enys Gardens

What a beautiful day full of art! Nature’s art was in fact the highlight of my day when we watched a beautiful butterfly getting nectar for well over five minutes.

Small Tortoiseshell butterfly

Small Tortoiseshell butterfly

Our morning was spent in and around Penryn enjoying both the delightful opes and alleys and the art on offer. My favourite was Porous Penryn, a project where the artists, Etheridge and Persighetti, were putting temporary tattoos of special bits of the town onto people and photographing them in the place where the photo had been taken. What follows are photos of our participation in this delightful event.Do click on any one for more detail and for the explanatory captions.

After lunch at Miss Peapod’s and some very enjoyable interactive art nearby we went off to Enys gardens for the Embedded exhibition. I wrote about Enys in this post too.  The house is in need of much restoration but was used to great advantage for the exhibition. I love the trail of cake and beads on pretty china which led up the stairs and along corridors to a wedding dress and broken pearls in one room and the Groom’s clothes hanging in another . The story is mine! The lovely Mr S didn’t see the installation in the same romantic and rather tragic way!

My final photo today was taken from the peaceful and enchanting arbour where we listened to a magical recording called “Lazy tremblings of the summer air” and watched the beautiful butterfly featured at the beginning of this post which, if you look very closely, you will see in the middle left of the photo.

View from 'Lazy Tremblings of the Summer Air' audio installation by Jane Bailey

View from ‘Lazy tremblings of the summer air’ audio installation by Jane Bailey

 

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Bluebells, Gate and Servants’ Bell Box

1   I visited Enys gardens with friends for the Bluebell Festival  this afternoon and the bluebells were just beautiful. Enys is considered to be the oldest garden in Cornwall and is noted in the 1709 edition of Camden’s Magna Britannia for its fine gardens.  The bluebell meadow is believed to have been there undisturbed since ancient times.

Enys bluebells

Enys bluebells

2   The gardens are extensive and lovely with not just bluebells but rhododendrons and tulips in flower too. This gate led out of the walled garden and we were intrigued by the ghostly looking face to the right of the gate.

Beautiful gateway

Beautiful gateway

Rhododendrons and bluebells

Rhododendrons and bluebells

Tulip

Tulip

 

 

3   The house was open and we could see all the restoration needs – a fabulous old building with the servant bells in each room and the indicator bell box in the butler’s pantry.

Servants' Bell Box

Servants’ Bell Box

 

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