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London - it’s a Walk of Art

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Yesterday we left you cowering beneath the two huge slabs of metal that combine to make Richard Serra’s Trip Hammer, having earlier discussed where else you can see examples of his work on our London walks.

Today we’ll have a closer look at this precariously balanced piece and ponder exactly what is the meaning behind it.

Of course the main point that we like to make time and again on our Walks of London is that, no matter where you are standing in this great city look around you.

London is a city of surprises and on our London walking tours we make a point of creating wonder out of the ordinary.

But for now, let’s return to Trip Hammer.

Richard Serra was born in San Francisco  in 1939. Whilst at university he helped support himself by working in steel mills, and this would later have an enormous impact on his art and an influence on the materials he chose to use in his art.

Although he has worked in lead and other materials, examples of which can be seen in the main hub of the Energy and Process wing, steel has become his preferred material for his art.

With Trip Hammer you can actually see how he likes to use the very steeliness of the steel to create an abstract that doesn’t represent anything, but which most certainly makes you ponder it, perhaps even fear it.

It is, in effect, taking the concept of Marcel Duchamp’s “ready mades” and using an ordinary, everyday object, that is not really meant to be seen, and displaying it in such away as to make the spectator not just look at it but to also wonder about it.  Both to stand in awe before it and be apprehensive about the potential for disaster that emanates from the work - it is, if you like, the ultimate in chance in art.

But there is also  the natural art in the steel itself.

Steel, of course, degrades and rusts - you can see this on the two pieces of steel he uses for Trip Hammer, both of which show signs of rust.

So this element adds another dimension to the work, ensuring that it will keep changing and developing as a piece.

Amazingly in Spain  in 2005, the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid announced that they had somehow managed to “mislay” a 38-tonne sculpture that Serra had created!

Our next posting will look at another intriguing work in Tate Modern where chance really does play a part in the very creation of the painting itself.

Be sure to check out the various London walks we offer and don’t forget that we also do a nightly Jack the Ripper Tour that you might like to join us on.

London walking tours - the height of adventure

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

The London spirit has a way of drawing people into it. That is why people are always finding themselves in the midst of the London hustle and bustle. Most people think that London is only about doing all the tourist attractions and having a good time.

However, in order to appreciate the city for more than its museums and sometimes gruesome history, you have to be willing to explore. That means walking around this wonderful city to find the treasures that lie deep within.

London walking tours make this possible for you. Travelling with a group, you are able to experience the heart and soul of London that makes it such a fascinating city.

Fair is fair

While you will be able to enjoy the diverse London culture, you still need to feel that you have had an adventure. After all, isn’t that what holidays are all about? We would not bother leaving our homes if this wasn’t the case! Our London walking tours offer you the best of the city, while, at the same time, learning something valuable.

This can be through simply doing the pub tour or even our infamous Jack the Ripper tour. This way you can feel part of the fabric of the city, soaking up some of its illustrious quirks as well as its culture.

So, maybe a change in the way that you see London is in order. Depending on the level of excitement that you seek, we are able to offer you a chance to expand your mind in one of the UK’s greatest cities.

Satisfy your curiosity with a London sightseeing tour

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

More and more people are finding it rather liberating to pack their bags and go on a sabbatical. With more time to kill and a small budget to hand, it is clear why people are opting to do this.

Furthermore, travelling in a group does not hinder your curiosity. In fact, travelling as a group is a great way to maximise the most out of your travel time.

When you are on your own, group activities with like-minded people are always a good way to go. A London sightseeing tour is not anything like you might be used to. We want you to feel the fabric of London as well as explore the holes that lie within it.

Getting your London fix

London is not only about being the financial capital or the architectural boudoir; it is about bringing the past to life. There is more to it than the Crown Jewels or the gruesome stories of the Tower of London.

In order for you to explore all these and the other wonders that you might not have considered, then our London sightseeing tour could be just the remedy.

A cheeky perk to enjoy is having a nice drink in one of the many pubs that London has to offer. Naturally, you could also get more intimate with the knowledge of London by doing a pub tour with us!

However curious you are about London, we are here to cater for your needs with a diverse package of our London sightseeing tours. Why not visit London, and then come back for more?

City Walks Of London - The Greyfriars

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

City of London walks and tours frequently pass the ruins of a church that is located at the junction of Newgate Street and King Edward Street.

Participants on our London Walking Tours are often very curious about this building as, despite its ruined appearance, it is still very eye-catching.

The scarred walls are, in fact, the bombed out remains of Christchurch, Newgate Street, which was destroyed by bombing during the London Blitz.

Its tall sturdy tower always draws the eye of those on our London walks as it is something of a local landmark, a throw back to bygone London cowering amongst the gleaming offices of  the modern City.

The first church to be built on this site was built by the Franciscans who wore grey habits and were thus known as the Grey Friars. They had established their monastery here in the 1220’s and the church was added in the 1300’s. Such was the reputation of the Franciscans that many well to do citizens sought to be buried here, many of them wearing the garb of a Greyfriar monk in the belief that such attire would speed their passage in to heaven.

The church itself enjoyed a great deal of Royal patronage and several medieval Queen’s were buried there including Marguerite of France, second wife of King Edward I, Isabella, widow of Edward II. The heart of Eleanor of Provence, wife of Henry III, was also interred there.

Isabella is one of the characters who features on our London walks as she, in conjunction with her lover, Roger Mortimer, was, allegedly, behind the horrific murder of Edward 11 at Berkeley Castle.

The original church was rebuilt in the 1300’s and was the second largest church in the City of London, only St. Paul’s Cathedral was larger than it.

But following the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the reign og King henry the V111, the church’s glory days were over and it sufferred the inglorious fate of being used as storage for spoils captured in the wars with France. The King’s printer also set up his printing presses in the nave of the church.

We will continue our history of Christchurch in our next blog but for now why not check out the other London walks that we have to offer.

A Jack the Ripper’s London Anniversary Walk.

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

In the early hours of the 31st August 1888 a lady by the name of Mary Nichols was found murdered in a dismal East End thoroughfare called Bucks Row.

Our Jack the Ripper London walks take you through the London that he terrorised in the autumn of 1888 and tell the story of the murders in chronological order.

We don’t actually visit Buck’s Row for several reasons. First and foremost amongst those reasons is that it doesn’t exist anymore! Indeed the residents who lived there were a little ashamed of the sudden notoriety the murder of Mary Nichols in their street had given them that they petitioned the council and got the name changed to Durward Street, which is what Buck’s Row is called today.

The actual murder site no longer exists and so it really isn’t worth out London walks making the long trek down to it.

But what we do do on our Jack the Ripper London walking tour, is take you to Thrawl Street, which is where Mary Nichols was ldging at the time of her murder.

On the corner of Thrawl Street is a building that has actually survived from 1888. It is a building that Mary Nichols visited shortly before she was murdered on August 31st 1888.

So why not book up for our special anniversary walk on August 31st 2009 and see for yourself the streets and places associated with the greatest murder mystery of all time.

Get the true East End story with a London walk

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Are you from another part of the United Kingdom or another country and are fascinated by the East End of London history and their way of life. If so, then this walking tour is perfect for you. This London walk will take you through all the streets and buildings of the East End, to make you be able to really imagine what life was like years and years ago.

Walk through the medieval streets to discover what made this area of the city so different from the rest and what made the people in it tick. Breathe in the classic East End atmosphere to give you a real sense of adventure.

How about gangster lovers? Maybe you are a big fan of old East End gang culture or have seen the film The Krays so many times that you cannot wait to see where this evil duo grew up and committed most of their crimes and torture.

Or you may have grown up in the East End of London and want to know where you came from and if you have any traits that relate to the East End. Think back to stories your parents or grandparents told you and relive their moments through the narrow and cold streets.

See with your own eyes how little this area has changed and what makes it so unique. Of all the walks of London, this is a true insight into the history and culture that made the East End of London the charismatic place it is today.

Discover Shakespeare’s London with this London Walk

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

One thing England is famous for is its vast array of poets and literary writers. If culture and verse are what you are looking for, then you will be inspired and impressed with the London Discovery Walk showing Shakespeare’s London.

Renowned as one of the greatest poets ever, maybe you have already visited or planned a visit to Shakespeare’s home town in the Midlands, but want to see where it his career really took off. Walk the banks of the River Thames to see where this exceptional poet took the plunge and moved to the city to make a success of himself.

This London walk will show you the dark alleyways and streets which William Shakespeare will have walked through, and the drinking holes and churches that will have been a playground for the famous poet and contributed to his inspiration.

If you are fascinated by how this great dramatists mind worked and want a little London sightseeing, scour the depths of the city to hear stories of the accusations Shakespeare received from playwright Robert Greene. Pass by venues where some of the first Sonnets and Poetry were played, going back as long as the late fifteen hundreds.

For the true literary lover, what could be more spectacular than a visit to the world famous Shakespearean theatre, The Globe Theatre? Share the phenomenon of the building which has been home to some of the country’s world famous shows.

This London walk will have you hooked and fascinated, and is perfect for those wanting to celebrate and embrace true English talent.

Guess Who that is on our Walks in London?

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Our Harry Potter London walks have been causing quite a stir and it’s easy to see why. They offer parents with children a full day out in London that costs next to nothing and yet keeps the kids occupied throughout.

The reason? Not only do they get to see the Harry Potter London film locations but they also get to enjoy a treasure hunt that takes them all over London.

They might have to find funny faces on the walls of buildings. They will find themselves looking for the Rats Tails inside one of London’s most historic churches.

In addition parents and children will enjoy a whole series of short London walks that will introduce them to places they would never dream existed.

This is a constant comment by those who have emailed us to say how much they have enjoyed the Harry Potter London walk.

However, on Sunday 28th June 2009 one family were following our Harry Potter Tour route to the site of the Ministry of Magic when they walked straight into a film shoot for the next Harry Potter film,  The Deathly Hallows.

Not only did they get to see a scene that they recognised from the book being filmed but they actually got to see Harry Potter and Ron Weasley, as Daniel Radcliff and Rupert Grint were on set.

Needless to say they were thrilled by this unexpected turn of events and they emailed us to let us know how this was ” an unexpected, happy surprise and a great story thanks to your walking tour!”

Now we know that we can’t claim the credit for the fact they were filming in the streets covered by our London walks on the day and at the time that this family chose to do our Harry Potter Tour (how great would it be if we could lay this on every time?!) but it just goes to show why Walking in London is one of the best ways to get to see the city.

Had this family been on a bus tour they might have caught a brief  glimpse of the filming as the bus sped along Whitehall, but it would have remained just that - a brief glimpse.

Yet here was a family that took to their feet, and walked around London and this great city did what it so often does for those who take the time to explore it on walks - it surprised them and gave them something to remember for years to come. Something that, no doubt they will look back fondly on when they see Harry Potter and the Deathly Halllows.

If you would like a copy of our free London walks Harry Potter Tour please send us an email to

harry-potter-pdf@discovery-walks.com

and, as if by magic, our automated process will send you a 30 page PDF booklet that you can just print off and follow.

Now we have to tackle the problem of topping Harry Potter turning up on our Harry Potter London Tour route!

Walks of London

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Walking is truly one of the best ways to see more of London. Setting off into the historic backstreets on foot ensures that you get to both see and feel the atmosphere of different London streets.

Our London walks have well and truly got London covered. We have Walking tours in places as diverse as the lovely village of Hampstead, the secret streets of Clerkenwell, the vibrant streets of Soho, and even the squares and passageways in the Royal village of St. James.

All these neighbourhoods of London have some true treats for those who take the trouble to venture into their backstreets and by joining one of our London walks you get to hear anecdotes and lots of history about each of the places passed as you make your way through streets and thoroughfares that are untouched by time.

But, in addition to our guided walks of London we also offer a series of free print off and do yourself walking tours. These can be viewed on our sister site www.walksoflondon.co.uk. On this site you will be able to explore Dickens London, Docklands. You can also enjoy a self guided walk through the village of Clerkenwell that was recently featured in The Los Angeles Times.

Of late the most popular of our free London walks has been the Harry Potter Tour which we offer as a free print off and do 28 page booklet. This has been extremely well received and to date we have sent out in access of 2,000 PDF downloads for this tour.

Many people have emailed back to say how much fun they had on our Harry Potter Tour and one lady even wrote in to tell how, as she and her family were walking the route they got a surprise that was way beyond their expectations.

Where as we can’t take credit for the actual surprise, we can most certainly take responsibility for guiding her and her family to the spot where she had the ultimate luck for anyone enjoying a tour around the Harry Potter film locations in London.

Walks are what make this sort of thing possible. On a bus tour you are behind glass or up on a top deck far away from the actual streets of London. Your sightseeing takes place in a vacuum as it were.

But with a London Walking Tour you are there on the streets, walking through the streets and every fascinating aspect of this magnificent city, every surprise that is there to surprise you become real and immediate.

In tomorrow’s blog we will reveal just how special the surprise was for the family who were doing our Harry Potter London walk. But, for now, if you would like a copy of the free PDF of the tour ( a 28 page booklet no less) then please send an email to

harry-potter-pdf@discovery-walks.com

and we’ll email it to you within 24 hours.

Walking London’s Execution Sites.

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

On our London walks that take in Smithfield we pass the gatehouse to the oldest Parish Church in London, St Bartholomew the Great, which was founded in 1123.

Nearby is a plaque that remembers the fact that the Smooth Field (of which Smithfield is a corruption) was once a place of execution.

On our haunted London walks we pause alongside the plaque that commemorates the execution here in 1305 of William Wallace, Braveheart himself.

But this was also a place of execution in the reign of Henry V111 and on our London Executions Walk we tell the stories behind some of those who died here for their faith.

Of all the executions that took place during the reign of Henry VIII, the burning of Anne Askew, - or Kyme, the young wife of a Lincolnshire landowner, was the worst, of the whole series.

It was on the morning of July I6th, 1546, that a large crowd assembled at Smithfield, beneath the shadow of the church of St Bartholomew to witness the burning of Anne Askew and three other martyrs.

The distinguished nature of, the company, who were accommodated with a good view of the proceeding from a specially erected  gallery, indicated the importance attached to the death of this poor woman, whose offence was declared to be heresy.

But there was much more behind the affair than a refusal to conform to the dogma of the Church. The interminable domestic strife of Henry was working up again into another crisis this time, with Catherine Parr.

The crackling of the faggots at Smithfield as they consumed the body of the woman who had held the Reformed faith were in the nature of a warning to the Queen.

For the supposed connection of Anne Askew with Catherine had caused her to be singled out for the purpose of forcing her into a confession that the Queen, too, held heretical views.

The torture on the rack of Anne Askew has been disputed,but it is substantiated by her own story and, contemporary chroniclers. She endured these inflictions without implicating the Queen, and she went to her death subsequently condemning no one.

Anne, who was born at Stallingborough, about 1521, was the second daughter of Sir William Askew of South Kelsey; Lincoln. Her elder sister was betrothed by her parents to Thomas Kyme, a Lincolnshire Justice of the Peace.

When she died before the marriage could take place, the younger Anne was forced to take her place.

Anne is said to have had two children by Kyme, but she and her husband quarelled on the question of religion.

She was beautiful, intellectual, and high-spirited, and no doubt adopted an independent attitude on the subject. Eventually her husband turned her out of doors and she came to London to sue for a separation.

She appears to have known many influential women in London, and she became a friend of Catherine Parr who was almost (if not quite) a convert to the views held by Anne.

Anne distributed books and tracts issued by the Reformers, and Catherine was caught reading some of these by her lord and, master.

Henry had actually ordered Chancellor Wriothesley to come with forty men of the guard and arrest his wife, but she, being craftier than his previous wives,  got round him.

Thus when Wriothesley appeared with his guard, he was called knave, fool, and beast for his pains.

Wriothesley did not forget this indignity, and determined to be avenged on the Queen in some way or other.

His opportunity came when Anne Askew was arrested, for it was he who applied the rack in the Tower to extort a Confession from Anne in the hope that she would name the Queen.

Anne was tried at Guildhall at the instance of Bishop Bonner.

Bonner, the Bishop of London, drew, up a form of recantation for Anne which he entered in his register. This fact has led Catholic historians to declare that Anne did recant, but it seems clear that she refused to sign the form.

During her examination, Anne was asked how she had obtained food in prison. The question was designed to implicate others.

She replied : “My maid bemoaned my wretched condition to the apprentices in the streets, and some of them sent me money, but I never knew their names.”

Pressed as to whether any of the ladies of the Court had sent her money, she said : ‘My maid once told me that a man in a blue coat had given her ten shillings for me, saying that they came from Lady Hertford and at another time that a man in a violet coat had given her eight shillings for me,saying that they came from Lady Denny.

“Whether these accounts are true I have no knowledge.” She also denied that any member of the Council had secretly supported her.

With Anne there went to the stake two gentlemen of the Royal Household, William Morice, the King’s Gentleman Usher, and Sir George Blagge, of the Privy Chamber.

The male victims were not tortured. Their offence was solely a matter of religious faith. Anne Askew’s death was as much political as religious. It was brought about by the parties who had hoped to make her an instrument in their attacks upon the Queen.

Among those present to see the end of Anne were Wriothesley and Bishop Bonner, who had State seats near St. Bartholomew’s Gate.

These men were most uncomfortable during the tragic scene; not because of remorse, but because they were afraid that the gunpowder hanging on the necks of the victim would injure them when it exploded!