Palm Court at Alexandra Palace exhibition halls contains two fountains around which sit Egyptian sphinxes and obelisks. I stopped to admire them when I visited the excellent Fresh Art Fair a few weekends ago. As I was making my way out of the building I sat in this space to respond to some messages on my phone and happened to notice that an access plate near my feet had been mis-filled with tiles such that it looks like someone is rubbish at jigsaw puzzles.
Hmmm... it's almost correct. Considering there are many tile colours available out there, surely a better colour match could have been found? At odds with this, they had bothered to cut a V shape into a pink tile outside of the plate in a space that surely should be the lighter cream colour. Also, why are there random broken tiles? I looked sideways and noticed another cover place with horrible dark dirty tiles on it. Ugh!
I wondered if perhaps these plates belonged somewhere else within the forecourt, so I went to find some more...
Nope. They are clearly all 'created' by idiots in a hurry on a budget. Shoddy eh? There's actually a range of five or six cream through to beige colours used.
It must admit that I do like the random patterns created here. But as art. as design, as abstract patterns inspired by Mondrian.
I am reminded of the incorrectly-placed tiles that run around the top of the House of Barnabas on Soho Square and those hand-held games where you slide the squares to complete the picture.
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Thanks, Jane