The V&E Storehouse – a little bit of everything

It is unusual for me to celebrate a decision by the previous Conservative government, but in 2015, it was announced that Blythe House, where the Victoria & Albert Museum stored their non-display collection would be sold. The government then gave the V&A £50m to decant their 250,000 items and 350,000 books to a new space in Stratford. What has emerged from this decision to sell a building visited by a few thousand people a year is nothing short of a visionary reimagining of what a museum can be, for many people. 

V&A Storehouse is based in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park and the route I took was a revelation in itself. I had been here during the Olympics, and at the time had loved the wildflowers laid out alongside the canal. Over a decade later, the park is still beautifully maintained but also old enough for you to feel like you aren’t in the middle of London. When you arrive at the Storehouse, you are greeted to a nondescript shed with the least imposing entrance known to museum-kind.

The glass floor of the Collections Hall

Having only been open a short time when I visited, there was an enormous queue to get inside but the staff on hand were friendly and helpful, showing you to a fairly narrow staircase plonked in the middle of the ground floor. The stairs lead you to the Collections Hall and here is the first piece of genius in the museum. You ascend the narrow stairs and immediately come face to face with a series of busts and statues, some on pallets, all tantalisingly close to you. You go up more stairs and suddenly you are in an enormous hall with a glass floor showing you the level below and the storehouse collections above you. The contrast from the narrow staircase to a world of art is spectacular. Not knowing where to look felt like part of the point, so we went where we felt like.

The higgledy-piggledy nature of the museum meant that while you might have been drawn to a frieze, the item next to it might well be a display of hats. Or a bunch of bricks. No idea what the bricks were from, but I was enchanted enough to photograph them. Set out across two levels of the museum is a recreation of a section of the Robin Hood Gardens estate, which makes up one of the five major exhibits that help to make sense of the place. 

Facade of the Robin Hood estate

The other larger exhibits include the Torrijos Ceiling, a glorious ceiling which came from a palace in Spain. The palace was falling apart, so the owners started flogging parts of it in 1900. In 1917 the entire palace was demolished. The ceiling was installed in the V&A until it was placed in storage in 1993. Now it is on display once again, with cushions placed on wooden pallets allowing visitors to look up and marvel at the artefact. 

The second piece of genius design is in how items are displayed. From underneath the Torrijos Ceiling, you get to see the spectacular design and from the staircase on the floor above, you get to see the back of the ceiling and how it all slots together. The museum succeeds brilliantly in doing this. The absolutely gorgeous Kaufmann office is an interior designed by Frank Lloyd Wright which is lit beautifully, with great attention to creating warmth. Immediately outside the office are wooden crates that hold the office together. This level of artifice is emphasised again in the recreation of the Frankfurt Kitchen. The window of the kitchen looks out on an overcast day in a city, only it’s just a hazy lighting display. In the storehouse itself, the lighting is austere, the floors are made of metal grilles, storage boxes never get unpacked. It is an intensely theatrical experience and feels as if the curator had to pop out before the museum opened fully. 

The Kaufmann office

The V&A storehouse feels like a pivotal point of museum history. Instead of having items hidden away from public view, the V&A can do something remarkable and show their stored items. What they have is a world class endowment of a little bit of everything. I’ve never seen anywhere like it and am so pleased that the V&A, which could be easily seen as stuffy, now feels entirely at ease with projecting a modern image and a new way of displaying their belongings.

These are bricks. No idea what the relevance of them is, but what lovely bricks

Oaxaca – my favourite part of Mexico

After the glories of Puebla, we were on our way to Oaxaca. Once settled on the coach, I got my book out, looked at it and fell asleep for a couple of hours. When I woke up, the coach was on a mountain road with far-reaching views of the countryside and scary views down the mountainside. Far more interesting was Lyle, Lyle Crocodile on the coach telly. It was entirely in Spanish but a good story is a good story. I think it might be the best film of all time. 

One of my first views of Oaxaca

When we arrive in Oaxaca, things feel different. For one, the heat is much more noticeable and the city looks more Mexican, somehow. Perhaps it is the architecture, with buildings of a smaller height. It’s certainly less polished but it’s also enormously charming. We stayed at Un Sueño Valle de Huajes which initially didn’t seem like a good choice. Our driver couldn’t find it, and all around us were unremarkable homes and a few workshops. We all looked a bit worried until finally, a sign for the place appeared. Inside the hotel is a lovely room and a great terrace to see the city from. Soon after, we walked down to the zocalo and were accosted by a thousand people trying to sell a load of old tat. This is hardly surprising, we were having a drink at the main square so we had it coming. As we were tourists that looked like tourists, to my horror, a New Zealander who had clearly had a few started talking to us. If you’ve ever seen Peep Show, there was a character called Saz. We had met Saz. She took great joy in telling us she used to live in London but now that everyone had been stabbed to death, she was glad to live in New Zealand. No judgement, but she was eating her dinner in the main square and had the audacity to say it was bad food. Honestly. She proceeded to tell us how she smashed her hand up while drunk in a bar. Her daughter looked non-plussed by the nightmare unfolding. 

After we escaped Saz, we walked around the town and found that music was everywhere you turned. So too were multiple Pikachu’s. I am surprised a fight between them didn’t break out. One set of people were dancing to a DJ, a group were transfixed by some sort of reality show and another group were enjoying a Beatles cover band, ably assisted by two very drunk backing dancers. When a couple got up to dance to the pretty good band, fully sincerely, I felt very touched by it all. 

For dinner, we ate at El Tendajon which was mighty fine. The mezcal cocktails were superb and we enjoyed the experience of the waitress chatting to us in Spanish as we replied with very witty comebacks such as “si” and “si, si” and even though we were stuffed with food, we made immediate plans to return. The night was rounded off with a walk through the city which is beautiful at night as well as in the day. My love was strong for Puebla, but Oaxaca surpassed it and I realised that when I come back Mexico, I will want to explore Oaxaca state more. 

The next morning, the need to get Churros was intense, so we walked for 35 minutes to get some from Churros mecca; Casa de churros. There are so many options on display including ice cream with two filled churros and standard options. Both are outstanding. I loved the sticker for the store and when I ask the guy that runs it about the stickers, he gives me some. One is currently on the laptop I am typing this on. 

Market wares

We eventually leave the kingdom of churros, into a day that is sweltering but not so sweltering that I can’t be photographed near a mural of dogs. As a veteran of sun sickness, I apply sunscreen more or less on a loop and drink water by the bucket. I can’t go back to being beaten by the heat again. As we walked into town, we realised the partial eclipse was coming and we both wanted to witness the magical darkness and I had read that animals knows something is up so all go quiet. In the end, for about three minutes, there was a little bit of darkness, similar to the sun going behind a small cloud. That being said, I pointed my camera at the sun and snapped away and caught a definite bit of eclipse and I was part of history. The news was filled with people in every other bit of Mexico we’d just been to celebrating the darkness.

As we continue our day, we go to the Oaxaca graphic design centre, which is mildy diverting, striking off an activity rather too soon. We head to the main church, which is being rebuilt, striking off another activity. We strike tourist gold when we find the remarkable Museum of prehistoric art which is tucked away outside the centre of town. This was a highlight of the trip to Oaxaca. It was free and it was put together with great care and attention. I found myself genuinely engaged with the displays and the really old art was the most fascinating to me. Instead of getting museum fatigue, which usually kicks in after one hour, I had museum joy. As I notice these things, I loved that every room had a coloured display case with  the chair in the room the corresponding colour. 

After this, we walked through the markets and were grossed out by the sheer number of grasshoppers in every other stall; endless barrels of them. We walked on, past more grasshoppers and then tripe. Holding our breath, we kept going on through this market of nightmares, passing cakes covered in flies and then we were frightened by a giant dog that was running about the place. It was an experience, I can say that. After all of this excitement, we had a snooze, much needed in the heat. 

Later that evening, we had mezcal cocktails on the roof of La Mezcalerita which is a superb spot to people watch and enjoy the cooler temperatures. Out of nowhere, a religious procession came down the street with people dressed in elaborate costumes, flower headdresses, multiple Mary’s and giant puppet people. This seemed as good a time as any to head back as we were unlikely to top multi-Mary’s. 

Museum of prehistoric art

The next day, we are treated to a van driving down the street laden with gas canisters. From its speakers came a jaunty jingle that ended with the sound of a cow. Both perplexing and great. This was the day where I spotted lots of stickers that made me smile. One was of Moss from The IT Crowd, showing that culture travels. Another was of Jesus saying “I saw that”. Oaxaca was filled with street art, surfaces covered with stickers and posters taking up any possible space, which I loved. We had breakfast in Quelite Cafe Bar Urbano which was predictably food fit for kings. I would struggle to find a poor meal in Oaxaca and it was wonderful to go into any restaurant feeling like we would be well looked after. The plan for the day was to go to Monte Alban, an outdoors archeological site, but the heat felt too oppressive for this so we stayed in town and visited the Museum of Oaxaca Culture which was an enormous building, housed inside a former convent, filled with the usual artefacts. It was a wonderful place to pass a few hours, especially when we found the part of the museum that looked out over the botanical gardens, which was sadly fully booked for the day. 

The rest of the day was a relaxing mix of eating grasshopper (eww, it was not for me), having more mezcal cocktails because they are irresistible and back to El Tendajon for dinner. And that was it; the Oaxaca adventure was drawing to a close. Unusually for me, I didn’t try to fit too much into this leg of the trip. I just gave in to the delights of relaxation, which I usually don’t bother doing. I might try it more often.

Puebla – Latin American adventure part 2

In my previous post, I wrote about how Niddo was a life-changing food experience. Before leaving Mexico City for Puebla, we were forced by our stomaches to go to Niddo once more. It was essential before we headed to the coach station. I was particularly excited about going to Puebla as the brilliantly named volcano, Popocatépetl, had been kicking off a lot and our distance from the volcano would be enough to see the show, but not so close as to fear I’d have rocks rain down on my head. 

As we got closer to the volcano, the size of it became apparent. It’s enormous at over 5000m (Mount Fuji, by comparison is 3700m) and like an excited puppy, I kept looking out the window, probably with my tongue hanging out, hoping to see a spectacular explosion. Unfortunately, it was a hazy day and the best I saw was a sad little puff of smoke every now and then. Truly disappointing. The approach to Puebla showed a place considerably poorer than Mexico City but as we got closer to the centre, a completely glorious city emerged with very little in the way of modern developments. Clearly, the UNESCO world heritage people got it right. That being said, it was only when I was back in the UK that it seems that Puebla is a large city and it turns out, we stayed mostly in the cutesy bit, totally ignoring the array of tall buildings.

Lovely Puebla

We stayed at Hotel Diana and were given the warmest welcome before being shown to our room, which was the size of a football pitch. During our stay, I was able to peek into other rooms and noticed that ours seemed considerably bigger, but we didn’t splash out on a deluxe room. At £50 a night, it seemed like a really great deal. We explored the Zocalo (main square) and had a delicious sangria at Attico 303, where I tried to get views of the volcano. I asked a member of staff if I could see it from the terrace and she looked at me confused, walked me to a door, then when I asked about the volcano again, she just stared at me and walked off. Mi español es pobre. 

View from the Museo Amparo terrace

For some culture, we visited the Museo Amparo and it is a world class venue. I loved the work of Ana Bidart, Cecilia Barreto and the photography by Mat Jacob of the Zapatista insurrection in Mexico gave me a glimpse into a part of the country’s history I knew nothing about. I was entranced by the work of Melanie Smith from Poole who created a piece where ancient Mexican artefacts were on display but were covered by a perspex screen. In a country where ancient artefacts are on display in great quantities, not being able to see the work through the perspex made it so tantalising. On the terrace of the museum, you were treated to great views of the city and the volcano, which remained calm and collected. 

In the late afternoon, we walked to the alley of the frogs – an artist quarter with a market of people selling bits and bobs and a lot of trays. A more tray-centric market than any before suggests mothers across the land are cursing their kids for nicking all the trays in the house and selling them for £20. The area was lit up with many fairy lights making the scene overly picturesque and clearly, a tourist hub. As the afternoon turned to evening, Puebla lit up and became even more beautiful. We ate at Augurio for dinner where I had mole with mole, and a side of mole. I had read that Puebla was famed for its mole, so I had to try it, but I overdid it. The service at Augurio was top-notch, with wonderfully friendly staff. Unfortunately, this was the part of the trip where our stomachs twigged we had moved countries, so we needed to retreat for an early night. 

One-stop God shop

The next morning we nonchalantly pop into a church which is grand, over the top and reminded me that while I remain resolutely not religious, I love that people really get into God. After a quick God-stop, we took an Uber to Cholula to see the world’s largest pyramid. The day was baking, so we sought shelter everywhere we could; in parks, in bars, by trees, near a toilet. Cholula is a so-called magic town. A magic town means it’s a beautiful place or it has natural wonders. The bloody volcano is reasonably nearby to the town and my plan was to walk up to a church and take a spectacular shot of it belching smoke, but yet again, thwarted. We first go to the pyramids. They were built in 300BC, making it hard to figure out what the structures would have originally looked like but the site is huge and, as ever with these things, lots of death was involved.

Climbed this, didn’t like the height

At the end of the site, there is one very well preserved pyramid, which I climbed to the top, realising as I got high up that I didn’t like heights. From this vantage point, you can see over the town and the hateful volcano. After this, there is a church on top of a hill and the hill is actually the pyramid that was the largest in the world. It was covered in dirt by the Aztecs when they heard the Spanish were advancing. Nobody suspected the big pyramid-shaped mound was a pyramid for hundreds of years. I didn’t realise I was climbing the pyramid when I was huffing and puffing up the hill to the church, which is 177m high. Cholula is already 2150m above the sea, so height feels all a bit relative. The church is reliably gorgeous and dramatically Godly. The views towards the volcano are superb. If only it could have bothered to announce my arrival by doing something. Even one mild eruption, timed for my camera, would have been greatly appreciated.

Reluctant volcano
Church of dreams

The next day was another glorious morning, and my favourite sort. We had a lot to do in a minimal amount of time. I am up by 6am walking about the town and taking in the sites one last time before breakfast of kings, churros. You can’t get much better than fried strings of dough and chocolate sauce. After this healthy option, we visited a church that has been gold-plated to within an inch of its life and was recommended to us by our hotel. It is a must-see in Puebla. La Capilla del Rosario is a genuinely jaw dropping experience. There is no entrance charge to see the interior, but you do need to buy a postcard, approximately the cost of an entrance fee. A tour guide shows us around and tells us many facts, which are mostly gold related. I have been in many cathedrals and churches and have often been left mightily impressed with the contents but this was on another level, and it is fitting that the church has been described as the eighth wonder of the world, which seems a fair argument to make. The grandeur is everywhere, making it hard to know where to look. The ceiling is magnificent, but so is the altar, where the virgin Mary lives inside a very fancy house. As I looked at the beauty around me, I kept wondering how this earthquake-prone region maintained all this beauty, but I had to go to Oaxaca, where the earthquakes are far more common.

Mexico City – Adventures in Latin America

When I was a kid, I thought I would be a famous pop star and long flights would be part of this job, but after eleven hours in the air to Mexico, I feel my childhood dreams have been shattered. It is a dreary experience. The BA staff certainly did all they could to make us feel delightful. It was our honeymoon so they gave us a card from all the flight crew and looked after us. It was really rather lovely. They also served a multitude of vegetable curries on the way. One staff member bemoaned this saying “They don’t appreciate curries in Latin America!” but I was entirely happy with this, along with the billion little wines I drank. 

The flight was deeply confusing. It was blazing, glorious daylight outside as we flew back in endless daylight. But the windows had all been tinted into darkness, presumably so we would all sleep and not press the bell (I could never press the bell, never ever). But at the back, it was light eternal. I know from past experience that I cannot sleep if it’s light but we have to pretend it’s dark. My brain knew it was daytime, a topsy-turvy world I couldn’t accept. We landed at 745pm Mexico time, at dusk, showing that order had been restored. 

After passport control, I unsteadily walked to baggage reclaim as word spread that some people have been text that bags hadn’t made it. Not being in possession of this text, I assumed all was well but no bag came. Eventually we gave up the ghost and got a taxi to our hotel. Instead of having a mad night in Mexico City, we had a mad night claiming for our lost baggage on a reluctant website and then looking forward to a long sleep. 

Mexico City wakes up

A very sleepless night later, we got up at 6am and decided to walk around Juarez, near Roma, where we were staying. This is a part of the city that includes the nightlife district of Zona Rosa and it is a fantastic place to stay. It is an urban jungle where vines, electricity cables and plants seem to compete with each other for space. People were sweeping the streets with brushes and some were doing it with twigs. Even before 7am, there are sounds of construction workers drilling at stuff and my mind told me this wasn’t right. But building regulations differ from country to country. I noticed that people everywhere were cooking food on street stalls and I kept being delighted by tiny limes I saw ready to be squeezed over food. The air smelled of citrus, coriander, corn and tomatoes. It is a glorious hit of scent, with an underlying whiff of petrol. In that moment, Mexico City became the best smelling city I had ever been to. Some cities have a defining smell; Amman in Jordan was petrol, spices and flowers. Barcelona was drains. For our first meal we went to Cuina for breakfast but arrived far too early, drooling at the menu and forced to continue walking about, trying to avoid getting caught up by all the vines. 

Ignoring our rumbling stomachs and returning to Cuina was the best idea, as the food was impeccable. There was a queue outside the door at 9am, and it being a nice morning, we thought we might eat outside. A silly idea as the inside is impressive with a full-grown tree in there. I had a chilaquiles negro and chocolate croissant, which were both excellent. When the bill came, we realised eating this decadently would not be compatible with our budgets. Worth it though. 

Mexico City skyscraper of dreams

When we saw the historic core of Mexico City, I became instantly obsessed by a pastel pink building with a satellite tower on top, the Edificio Miguel E. Abed. It’s a gorgeous art deco skyscraper and was once the tallest building in Mexico. Other buildings I lusted after were an office building that had a screen in front of it of fractured metallic shapes and the Latin American tower, which has withstood some major earthquakes, the most notable being the 8.1 magnitude earthquake in 1985. After this we took the metro, which I was told was pickpocket central but our experience was non-dramatic. We even got on the metro for free when a man beeped us in on his travel card, after he witnessed me try and fail to buy a ticket. I’m not sure why he beeped us in but what a gent. The metro was entirely fine, but a little confusing. Mexico City has a host of public transport options and they are identifiable by various symbols and I didn’t really have a clue what any of it meant. I wanted three columns and a curve, but we ended up on three columns with a B. So, the metro somehow became a bus in a dedicated fast lane. The symbols soon become obvious but for a first timer, it’s like a magical new language and it’s what travel should be all about. 

Museum of Anthropology

We crossed the city to the Museum of Anthropology which is in a building that brings me much joy. It’s a brutalist building set in a courtyard. The courtyard has a concrete “umbrella” with a fountain and it’s a stunning entrance for the important artefacts inside. In the museum are displays that give you an overview of how the pre-Columbian era became the Mexico we know today. Most of the text is in Spanish so I made some of my own history up but you get the picture. There were many figures of humans covered in blood and one woman is shown to be somehow shitting out a baby, which really was the least of her troubles. Everyone else was fighting, gathering sticks, hitting each other with sticks and eating animals or each other. At some point they started to think about gods, so lots of people had to be sacrificed. Some of the rooms show you what the sacrificial chambers would have looked like. Snakes then follow in the artwork and the gods become more hungry and demanding. Life seemed astonishingly hard and I came away with the impression that despite everything, humans have an unshakeable desire to simply exist. In the most morbid way, there was something uplifting about it. 

In the evening we ate at La Casa de Tono, which wins the award for the speediest service ever and absolutely OK food. It was remarkably good value. Afterwards, the plan was to go to a bookshop that includes Bukowski’s bar for a drink but a tone deaf singer was hitting all the bum notes possible, so we went to a bar underneath Bukowski’s that overlooks an entrance to a car park. We listened to the singing. He gave a go at some John Lennon. It was terrible. He gave a go at Elton John’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, which was beyond parody. It was clearly time to go to a gay bar that was empty. And just as I felt that I needed a boost of joy, two men hit it off over drinks and all was well with the world. 

On the second day, there were a few things I saw in Mexico City that I just thought made me feel like I was far away from London. One was market stalls where you could buy individual cigarettes; somewhere hanging up in the stall on a string was a lighter. And second was groups of people unfurling banners at road crossings. I initially thought people were protesting about something, but I soon realised that these were just adverts being thrust in the faces of drivers. There were some protests, but they did their thing and the police kept an eye on it, without any hint of rancour. 

We had breakfast at a place called Niddo, which has three branches in a 2-minute walk from one each. Usually, I would say this is over-saturation, but Niddo was instantly my favourite place in the world. A woman came over with a heaving tray of pastries and cakes and offered them in such a way that I thought this was a freebie. This was not the case but they were tasty and that’s all that matters. The variety of food at Niddo was the thing that worked for me – I wanted it all but I would recommend the bacon and eggs as well as the shakshuka. We went back another two times over the course of the trip. 

Frida Kahlo

Our first culture stop of the day was the Frida Kahlo museum, and unlike many museums, I didn’t get museum fatigue as Kahlo led a dizzyingly full life, despite dying at just 47, and the museum ended prematurely as well. I could have stayed much longer. Her home and collection was beautiful and so much of her work asks questions of the viewer, with much relating back to ideas of illness and equality. It’s fascinating and very popular and I had to book tickets weeks in advance. The fact that Kahlo has become such a commercialised icon tells us that capitalism has had the last laugh. Lovely gift shop, though. Skulls everywhere.

Kahlo lived in the Coyoacán area of Mexico City and I couldn’t help but marvel at the colours of the place. Things just looked naturally photoshopped – the bright blue sky set against the earth tones of the buildings and the flags flapping in the wind. We followed flags to an inviting looking alley that turned into a cafe where a 175ml glass of wine arrived that seemed to be much more, so much more. I ate a cheese and chorizo wrap that oozed oil and didn’t regret it, because sometimes unhealthy tastes so good. When we visited Coyoacán market we loved to see all the items on display, ranging from the tiny mini limes to skulls to skeletons to skeleton skulls and Frida Kahlo toys. We swerved the meat aisle as that would have tipped me over the edge. This was the point when I became a big fan of Mexico City; it’s such a huge place but there’s a human side to it where you don’t feel overwhelmed by the size. It is a walkable city in many places.