You’re in Bath, your aim is to give your Mum a fantastic day out to
thank her for everything she does, and really, thank her for just for being
her.
A highlight of a
visit to Bath for many is taking afternoon tea at the famous Pump Rooms. The
splendid Georgian décor is a sight to behold, and the live music provided by
the Pump Room Trio does wonders for the overall atmosphere. Relax and have a
good catch up with your mum over scones, cakes and several cups of tea, or
maybe even wine or champagne!
On Mother’s Day,
bookings can be made at the Pump Rooms for various packages including
Champagne
Teas, a traditional Pump Room tea (expect a cake stand packed to the brim with
goodies), a ‘Beau Nash Brunch’ with bubbly, a celebration tea, and a set
champagne lunch. Then again, you might prefer to try one of Bath’s other gems
such as Bea’s Vintage Tea Rooms (6-8 Saville Row next to the Fashion Museum and
Assembly Rooms).
You could of
course, spend the day shopping and wandering and seeing some of the sights of
Bath. But as our Mothering Sunday – a day on which people would visit their “mother”
church, and while doing so also see their family, is often now synonymous, at
least in terms of emphasis with Mother’s Day - which was a holiday first
celebrated in 1908 in Grafton, West Virginia in America, when Anna Jarvis held
a memorial for her mother, a visit to Bath’s American Museum seems rather
appropriate!
Currently the
museum has two special exhibitions taking place which are each quite different
and well worth seeing while you can.
In ‘1920s Jazz Age: Fashion and Photographs’,
over 100 fashion objects including flapper dresses,
evening capes, lame coats, couture and ready-to-wear garments from 1919-1929 document the shifting moral, social and cultural attitudes (and hemlines). The work of photographer James Abbe will also present a commentary on the twentieth-century celebrity and the glamour of Hollywood. Added to this, illustrations by Gordon Conway will show how graphic art and photography promoted the ‘Jazz Age’ look.
evening capes, lame coats, couture and ready-to-wear garments from 1919-1929 document the shifting moral, social and cultural attitudes (and hemlines). The work of photographer James Abbe will also present a commentary on the twentieth-century celebrity and the glamour of Hollywood. Added to this, illustrations by Gordon Conway will show how graphic art and photography promoted the ‘Jazz Age’ look.
The other
exhibition to explore is ‘Joyce Petschek:
Breaking the Pattern’. Joyce’s work is a culmination of her life-long
passion for needlework and colour. If you’re a Kaffe Fasset fan you’ll love
Joyce’s work. She uses mainly silk threads and juxtaposes intense colours in
her kaleidoscopic work. As well as creating arresting wall hangings, Joyce specialises
in reworking antique furniture. Work from different points throughout Joyce’s
career will be on display so you can really see how her work has developed and
changed over time.
(The American
Museum, we hasten to add, also has the fantastic Orangery café and Terrace to
relax in after you’ve taken a tour of the exhibitions (their snickerdoodles are
particularly nice!))
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