Wanderlust Travel Magazine (UK)

PENZANCE & ST IVES, CORNWALL

Take the newly revamped overnight sleeper from London and wake up on the Cornish coast, a destinatio­n finally embracing its wild setting and artistic past, writes Andrew Cattanach

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T he south Cornish coast was drifting lazily by my train window, looking austere in the low morning light. It certainly wasn’t the rugged, romantic seascape I had come to anticipate viewing – more like an elegant abstract painting in myriad shades of grey.

It was a fitting picture nonetheles­s. I had arrived in Cornwall on GWR’S newly revamped Night Riviera Sleeper train, avoiding the crowds and the congested traffic, to explore how the area had once been a European capital of modern art and home to some of Britain’s best-loved artists of the era.

Long before it was the staycation sensation we know today, Cornwall was a haven for jaded urbanites. During the Second World War, artists such as sculptor Barbara Hepworth escaped the Blitz and made homes for themselves in the fishing villages of the South-west

To locals, these émigrés must have seemed a queer bunch, with strange clothes and even stranger ideas. For a start, the newcomers made abstract art, which in 1939 would have been deemed radical by most Londoners. In Cornwall it must have seemed totally off the wall.

The area has long-since come to terms with its artistic heritage, however, and is now home to some exceptiona­l museums, not least Tate St Ives (tate.org.uk), which recently reopened its doors after an extensive refurbishm­ent and extension. The building is boldly elegant, inside and out, and full of works associated with the St Ives art scene, including pieces by influentia­l figures such as Picasso, who inspired the young set that congregate­d around Hepworth.

I arrived there fresh from the train, and while I drifted the quiet galleries, I saw, echoed in the artworks that surrounded me, the same muted landscape I’d spied earlier from my cabin. It fired my desire to explore the area further, visiting castle-topped islands and wandering the winding paths that wrap the coast, in search of not just the legacies of the artists who made this region their home but their inspiratio­n.

 ??  ?? Artful lodgings St Ives is both a hub for modern art lovers and home to one of Britain’s most beautiful beaches
Artful lodgings St Ives is both a hub for modern art lovers and home to one of Britain’s most beautiful beaches

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