Country Life

Seeking salvation

THE notes I jotted down when viewing this exhibition—enigmatic, joyless, stillness, soulless—seem a very negative response to a fascinating and absorbing show and, from what one learns about Tristram Hillier, stem from the circumstances of his boyhood rather than the individual works.

He was born in Peking, the fourth child of a banker who, on going blind at the age of 30, converted to Catholicism as an alternative to shooting himself. Tristram’s mother, with whom he

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Country Life

Country Life3 min read
A King’s Ramsons
HISTORICALLY consumed only in times of famine, local names reflect the British disdain for wild garlic—Devil’s posey, onion stinkers, stinking Jenny, snake’s food and more. Garlic (the cultivated form, at least) gained a little traction in Victorian
Country Life3 min read
Don’t Get Caught With Your Apple-catchers Down
Big knickers. The opposite of a G-string. Somewhere you could also stash a few pieces of fruit, if the occasion called for it. A certain lingering dampness in the air. The type of weather that tricks you into leaving your coat at home, then soaks you
Country Life9 min read
Town & Country
TURNS out the staff of COUNTRY LIFE can be quite interesting when we want to be. Editor Mark Hedges can currently be heard extolling the virtues of the countryside in Winkworth’s latest Property Exchange podcast, presented by Anne Ashworth. ‘It smell

Related