Welcome to London Discovery Tours

Posts Tagged ‘London Ghost Walks’

Don’t Shoot Me I’m Only the Artist

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

London is a a City of Art and our Walks include numerous wonderful places where works of art can be seen. Indeed, we have been known to refer to our London walks as Walks of Art!

Last night, before we were called away to do a little bit of scary art of our own on the London Ghost Walks, we started telling you a little bit about a painting by Nikki de Saint Phalle, which can be seen in the Energy and Process wing of Tate Modern.

We explained how, at first, the picture, one of her Shooting Paintings, seems like a series of coloured streaks running down a plaster.

But we ended by telling you how Nikki de Saint Phalle actually made chance itself the main creator of the painting. Here’s how.

She would begin with a wooden base board which she would lay down flat on a surface.  This done she would fill plastic bags with different colours of liquid paint.

Having done this she would then cover everything with plaster so that she had a pristine white, rough mound of plaster piled against the background of the board.

She would wait for it to dry and then would be ready to “create” the painting.

The board would be raised upright and Nikki would then take a .22 rifle and shoot at the plaster.

The bullets would penetrate the plaster and would then rupture the plastic bags beneath causing the paint to run down the surface of the plaster in streaks of colour that mixed, mingled and pooled together.

Thus the element of chance effectively became the means by which the painting was created.

It was a revolutionary way to create a painting since it brought a new realism into art and, as a result, Nikki de Saint Phalle became famous and travelled all over the world to stage her Shooting Paintings.

The one you’re looking at in Energy and Process was created on the stage of the American Embassy in Paris on the evening of June 20th 1961.

Two American artists, Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, fired the bullets at the plaster and created what you see before you. So this could be said to be a collaboration between de Saint Phalle and these two other artists.

Shortly after this was created Nikki de Saint Phalle was introduced by Marcel Duchamp to Salvador Dali, both of whose works we will cover in a later post.

However, Nikki de Saint Phalle stopped creating her Shooting Pictures in 1963 saying that she had become addicted to shooting “like one becomes addicted to a drug.”

We will continue our tour of the art inside Tate Modern later today with a look at the central hub of Energy and Process as we look at Arte Povera itself.

You can, if you wish,take a look at our various London walks or tonight you can join us on one of our Old City of London Ghost Walks.

Haunted Halloween London walk.

Monday, September 21st, 2009

It’s amazing. Another year has gone by. The nights are drawing in and our London Ghost Walks Have started again.

With October rapidly approaching people begin to turn their thoughts towards Halloween and what to do in London on this, the most sinister night of the year.

This year it falls on a Saturday and in a few weeks time our London walks blog will offer you a few suggestions of places that you can visit on Halloween.

Richard Jones will be conducting his annual Halloween London walk, although this year’s has been sold out since August.

However,  another Halloween tour will be operating led by the mysterious Woman in Black, so keep an eye out for  more detail of this spookily fascinating London Ghost Walk.

The new edition of Richard Jones’s definitive guide to the ghosts of London Walking Haunted London was published in September and signed copies are available from our online shop.

Richard has also just been commissioned to write a new book on Haunted Britain which is due for publication on Halloween 2010.

Over the next few months Richard will be travelling all over the country visiting and writing about haunted houses, castles, inns and other places of paranormal interest.

He will be back in London on Fridays and Saturdays to conduct his weekly Haunted London walks. He will also be adding a daily blog giving details of the places he has visited and providing a sneak preview of the haunted places that will be in the new book.

We’ll be adding details of the blog in a later post.

Meanwhile, why not join Richard on one of his acclaimed London Ghost Walks?

Richard’s New Book - Haunted Britain

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Richard Jones has written many books of London walks. They include Walking Dickensian London, Memorable Walks in London (now into its 6th edition), Walking Haunted London (the 4th edition of which comes out in September), History and Mystery Walks of London, not to mention his free Harry Potter PDF which has now been requested over 2,000 times.

In addition to his books of London walks Richard is also a prolific writer on Britain’s more mystical and paranormal heritage. His books range from Mystical Britain and Ireland to the international best seller Haunted Britain and Ireland.

Richard has travelled all over Britain and Ireland collecting ghost stories for his seventeen published books on Britain’s more ethereal history. He is also widely acknowledged as the best ghost walk guide in London.

Walks that take in everything from haunted plaque pits to haunted pubs are Richard’s stock in trade and with 28 years of doing ghost tours in London he is, as the Evening Standard  memorably put it “pretty much ahead of the pack.”

In May this year Richard was appraoched by a major international publisher asking if he would write a new book on Haunted Britain for them.

Since it has been over a year since he wrote his last book History and Mystery Walks of Edinburgh, and almost six years since he wrote his last major work on Britain’s spectral landscape, Richard was happy to accept.

Thus the new book is now in the planning stages and, in September, Richard wset off for the higlands of Scotland to begin another of his jaunts around Britain.

The book will feature mostly new locations and, as with all Richard’s books on the subject, each one of them will be open to or accessible by the public.

Needless to say Richard will be cutting back on his regualr London walks whilst he is off jaunting around the haunted landscapes of Britain, but he still plans to do his Friday and Saturday night London ghost walk.

One of the new aspect of the up and coming book is that Richard will post a reguular blog here on his travels from whichever location he happens to be in on that particular day. You will be able to follow his progress around the country and, as it were, eavesdrop on his  conversations and discoveries. Indeed, it is hoped that you might feel moved to help out with the research for the book by letting Richard know of any haunted locations near you that you think should be included in the new book. As long as they are open to the public Richard will be delighted to visit and consider them.

In the meantime why not join Richard on one of his haunted London walks and see gor yourself why his is widely considered to be the most in depth and best presented ghost walk in London?

Haunted London walks

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Haunted London walks are a great way to get to see the City by night. They offer a combination of history, mystery and distinct spookiness.

For example, on our Alleyways and Shadows Haunted London walk we explore a warren of old alleyways at the heart of the old city that have hardly changed since the days when Charles Dickens knew them. It was in these old sections of bygone London that he set the opening for his most ghostly of ghostly tales A Christmas Carol, and on our walk we take you past the location of Scrooge’s counting house.

It’s one of those locations that those who join us on our ghostly London walks really do gasp in amazement when they are confronted by these wonderful survivors from times gone by.

Elsewhere, on our Ghosts, Ghouls and Graveyards London walk we take people into the Churchyard of the oldest parish church in London St Bartholomew the Great which dates back to the year 1123.

Many people who see this church, even if coming to it for the first time, get the impression that they have been there before. I’d love to say that this is some past life paranormal experience, but the truth is people have seen it before, even if they haven’t visited it before. The church is something og a movie star and has been featured in, amongst other films Robin Hood Prince of Thieves, Shakespeare in Love and Four Weddings and a Funeral.

London has a great deal to offer those who choose to explore its streets, alleyways and courtyards once night has fallen. Indeed, when you walk through the historic sites at night, you virtually have them to yourself. The offices have closed up, the daytime populace have gone home and the memories of bygone ages begin to stir.

Our Haunted London walks have been paced out to ensure that you get the right blend of history and mystery, and your guide will introduce you to another side of London.