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April at a glance
We’re all guilty of ignoring what’s on our doorstep, so we’ve made it easier for you. Here’s what’s happening this month
Come out, wherever you are
THE Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (ALVA) is calling for an extra Bank Holiday this year, in September, after last week’s release of dismal 2020 figures. Over the past 14 months, most visitor sites have been closed for every Bank Holiday and there were 45.4 million total visits to ALVA’s top 294 sites in 2020, down 70% compared with 2019’s 151.3 million.
A green space
GREENWICH PARK, SE10
My Favourite Painting Skye McAlpine
The San Zaccaria Altarpiece (Madonna Enthroned with Child and Saints) by Giovanni Bellini
Around The World In British Plates
It’s often the butt of jokes, but British food’s reach is more global than you might think, reveals Emma Hughes
Their Green And Pleasant Land
From bluebell woods to crystalline lakes and winding river valleys, the countryside in Europe is a joy to behold, reveals Carla Passino
Where Fairy Tales Come True
Buyers on the hunt for history and drama need look no further than Holly Kirkwood’s selection of the finest castles on the market across the world
Very much on song
The reimagined gardens at Nevill Holt, Leicestershire, have stepped into the limelight to offer a powerful overture to the summer opera festival, explains Kendra Wilson
Window on the world
Ceramic artist Saskia Spender reflects on a life of rich experiences across borders
Flame throwers
The trial currently being held at RHS Wisley is testing 100 different crocosmia to see how they perform. Val Bourne reports on its findings to date
In the round
This week, the Royal Albert Hall celebrates its 150th anniversary. With photographs taken during the unnatural quiet of lockdown, John Goodall looks at the remarkable story behind the creation of this world-famous venue
Between sea and sky
James Fisher revels in the history, culture and sheer beauty of Italy’s Amalfi Coast
A celebration of life
Charles Quest-Ritson watches the leaves unfurl in one of spring’s most glorious sights–the reawakening of Japanese maples in all their infinite variety
Let Them Make Furniture
Once the height of fashion among collectors, including George IV, pieces by Marie-Antoinette’s favourite cabinetmaker Jean-Henri Riesener are back in the spotlight, reports Rufus Bird
Gardens Are Like People– Most Don't Age Well
When I was 18 and waiting to go up to the Varsity (as my grandmother called it), I hitchhiked out to Italy in search of all those new excitements that young men hope to experience. Culture, mainly, in my case—the girls were unassailable in those days. It was my first solo trip abroad and I fell deeply in love with Baroque churches, olive landscapes and classical gardens.
Why is a raven like a writing desk?
IF you stand on Horse Guards Parade and look up, you might see a figure surveying St James’s Park from his window, one of the British Army’s heirlooms next to him—the Duke of Wellington’s desk.
Day and night, night and day
The Radio 3 anchors on the values of silence and patience
The female of the species
They may be championed by Sir David Attenborough now, but the first women entomologists had to overcome great prejudice to study insects, reports Ian Morton
Pretty in pink
Only available for a fleeting moment, rose-hued forced rhubarb–grown in the dark and harvested by candlelight in Yorkshire’s ‘tusky triangle’–is an ephemeral vegetable with a muted, yet distinct, lip-smacking tartness.
Sussex secrets
A manor and a villa on the site of a lost mill are two examples of the fine country houses in this home county
The plants are the thing
The garden of the eminent plantsman John d’Arcy, The Old Vicarage, Edington, Wiltshire, is home to an astonishing collection of plants, finds Charles Quest-Ritson
Improving on history
A beautifully preserved Georgian house reveals the influence of pattern books in the practice of English architecture. John Goodall admires its revival and the addition to it of two well-judged new wings
It's simply pure racing
The Cheltenham Festival will be a strangely silent affair, with no Guinness, no Irish punters and no amateurs, but that won’t detract from the quality of racing, which is set to be as illustrious as ever, says Marcus Armytage
Thelwell: more than a one-trick pony
Sixty years after Penelope and Kipper rode into our lives, Alice Wright explores Norman Thelwell’s expert touch in capturing all aspects of country life
The Painting's On The Wall
Once practised by Michelangelo, Raphael and da Vinci, the art of fresco creation has changed little in 1,000 years. Marsha O'Mahony meets the artists following in their footsteps
Taking it on the chin
From how to wear red trousers with aplomb to always ‘going to the loo’, The Chin Dictionary is a self-deprecating and witty guide to being ‘posh’, observes Joe Gibbs
Circles of life
Shrouded in mystery and once believed to replenish themselves magically at night from condensation in the air, spherical dew ponds are often manmade and fed by rainfall, explains Simon Lester
Georgian grace
The late 18th century saw a wealth of fine country houses spring up in the county of Somerset
A minister for all seasons
The Defra Secretary on badgers, Brexit and other burning topics
Affairs of the heart
Romance–as well as scientific and artistic endeavour–was synonymous with Mayfair long before Bridgerton appeared on our screens, discovers Carla Passino