Our semi-detached house was built on a hill. Consequently, as you step down the street the houses also step down. The neighbours above look down on our garden and we look down on the other side's garden.
Above us there's Tony and Jill - a lovely couple who are now well into their eighties. They have lived on this street for fifty years. Between our two houses, near the back doors, there's a brick wall with a concrete panel on top of it.
Recently, I repainted our side of this rough-textured panel with white masonry paint. In idle moments I have often thought about adorning it with a mural - perhaps sunflowers or a giant robin but a month ago, a much simpler idea came into my simple mind.
The garden is west facing so I thought of painting the word "WEST" upon it followed by an arrow. I know the idea is slightly bizarre but as I said to Tony and Jill when explaining it, "I am a bit mad". The design I had in mind would be reminiscent of the painted directional graphics that may still be spotted in old football stadiums.
Oh, please, please, Mr. P. My brother. Please! What a wonderful place for a mural of your liking. I know it will take a great deal of thought. But in the end, what a wonderful statement it could and might be. Oh, please do a mural!!
ReplyDeleteMaybe next year.
Deleteyou could add compass points and a map or dsitances to cities near and far. It could become a bigger statement than it already is. Anyways, I like it
ReplyDeleteThe rough texture is quite hard to paint accurately and I would need suitable masonry paints.
DeleteThe west was the great unknown by Europeans for so long, of course the indigenous people didn't share that sentiment, they knew who they were and where they were.
ReplyDeleteThere is always someplace further west, even if it's the ocean, and of course there is west beyond that, all the way back home.
Head west and carry on and you will end up where you began.
DeleteI wonder where going west stops?
ReplyDeleteIt stops in Red Deer, Alberta - where the wild things are.
DeleteYou've done a very neat job of it, and I understand your reasons for chosing "WEST".
ReplyDeleteWhat I do wonder is why the concrete panel exists at all. Did Tony and Jill have it put up to prevent you from clambering over their garden wall for short cuts, or because they didn't want to have to avert their eyes everytime you were having a nudist session in your garden? Or did you originally have it put there for additional privacy?
I guess the panel was put up for safety reasons when the houses were built one hundred years ago. Tony and Jill like to join us for our garden nudist sessions. We frolic around and play catch with an inflatable beach ball. Come down and join us next time you are in Ripon.
DeleteAt least now you can be sure no one will get lost within your garden walls. I like kylie's idea.
ReplyDeleteI am sure that the sign would assist any visiting Australians.
DeleteIt reminds me of Berlin. You could add goosestepping Russians on one side and JF Kennedy giving his "ich bin ein Berliner" speech on the other. Incidentally, Kennedy was badly advised when he said that. To put the word "ein" in front of the word "Berliner" makes it a food item, namely a doughnut. (Like you would say a Hamburger or a Frankfurter.) To say you were from Berlin, you would say "Ich bin Berliner". So he actually said "I am a doughnut". German lesson over.
ReplyDeleteMaybe Kennedy meant to say that he was a doughnut... or as they say in America - a "donut"!
DeleteIt's wonky!
ReplyDeleteHa, no, I like it. Simple and stylish.
I used a spirit level to ensure that my "WEST>>>" was perfectly horizontal but the concrete panel is slightly out.
Deletei like it, very.... deconstructed.... post-modern you might say.... the typeface is good..... west IS best!
ReplyDeleteMakes me think of Fred West. I hope he is not lurking about at the bottom of our garden... in spirit form of course.
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