The Museum of London Docklands records the rich history of the wider area. We started with the earlier eras, in my case with the Saxon port, its artefacts gathered in a vitrine -
Behind me was the model of London Bridge as it looked in 1600 -
On the opposite page is a cast of a head of a Yoruba man, 1100-1400.
Among Jo's drawings were these very individual locks -
The one at the bottom has the insignia of the East India Company.
She had brought along just a pen and a pencil, an economy of means that I admire and aspire to, even as the search for the "perfect" drawing implement continues via the weekly show'n'tell -
London Bridge
I'm excited to discover that another model of Old London Bridge is in the church of St Magnus the Martyr, which still stands at the site of the bridge (the old bridge was torn down in 1831). The model depicts the bridge as it would have appeared around 1400, and is populated with over 900 little people, including one in policeman's uniform, among the buildings.
Here's a summary of the bridge's evolution, from 1209 to 1831 -
On the way to find that image, these mills at Meaux cried out to be displayed too - they show the jutting additions that caught my eye on the bridge model -
The site from which both these images come is "A BERLIN BASED BLOG COLLECTING LOST + FOUND PIECES OF ARCHITECTURE, ART, DESIGN,AND URBANISM" ... fascinating ... do have a look at the archive of images garnered during the author's architectural studies.
We visited the Docklands museum last year and it is wonderful!! I envy you getting to spend the day.
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