Several weeks ago, Piccadilly's Japan Centre moved its entire food section over to a shiny new site over on Regent Street - take a look...
Join our Art Editor Ossian Ward on a tour of the show - and find out why you should see this bold, brave exhibition.
With New Moon in the cinemas, we count down our top 20 Vampire films.
Plus why Alexei Sayle favours frugal dining
Built in 1525 by Thomas Wolsey, who presented it to King Henry VIII, the Palace is a mixture of Tudor and English Baroque architecture, set in extensive grounds which include informal, pretty gardens as well as spectacular vistas and the famous maze. Free audio guides are available for the King's Apartments and for the Tudor Kitchens, which are particularly atmospheric, with their great bowls of fresh herbs, dishes laid out ready for the royal household and a vast kitchen fire. A permanent exhibition (located next to the Clock Court) shows how the palace has changed over the past five centuries and another, beside to the East Front Gardens, explores the history of the Hampton Court gardens. A permanent sound installation, 'Trace' at the maze, draws on the idea of mazes as locations for conversation and flirtation. The audio artwork, created by sound artists Greyworld, is made up of 1,000 subtle sounds - a fragment of music, a snatch of laughter, the rustle of a skirt - that are triggered as visitors navigate their way to the centre. Planted in 1690 for William of Orange, the maze is the oldest surviving hedge maze in the world. It usually takes around 20 minutes to solve.
Built in 1525 by Thomas Wolsey, who presented it to King Henry VIII, Hampton Court Palace is a mixture of Tudor and English baroque architecture....
Read full venue reviewTransport Hampton Court
0844 482 7777, bookings 08445 791940
Times Nov-Mar: 10am-4.30pm daily; Mar-Oct: 10am-6pm daily; last adm one hour before closing; closed Dec 24-26
Free tickets, exclusive offers and the best of London - from the Time Out team
© 2009 Time Out Group Ltd. All rights reserved. All material on this site is © Time Out
1 comment Add a comment
Hampton Court, Henry VIII's gem is not just a visit to his last surviving palace, it is a wonderful, interactive, living experience. I went as part of the 500 year celebration of the coronation of Henry VIII in 1509, earlier this year in July and was so impressed that I returned twice in three days. And still I did not see everything. It is the largest royal building that I have seen and it is totally amazing. You are entertained by costumed guides and a re-enactment of the marriage of Henry and Katherine Parr in 1543. Meet Henry and Katherine before and during the preparations for their wedding and greet them afterwards, and be prepared to get into the swing of things. You feel part of the Tudor court and it was amazing to see the Great hall as it would have been and the paintings and tapestries and the gardens back as they were. The palace is a gem and I hope it is for another 500 years. I am going back next week for another visit. I can't wait!
Add your comment