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Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

Most of you will probably recognise this wonderful panel from Manor House underground station.

We have a turkey, a dovecote, a couple of doves,  a weeping willow, a balustrade and some gates. I imagine they're all supposed to reflect the local context. Some elements are easy to match up. Others less so. Can anybody cast any light on the less self-evident elements?

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Best photo I've seen of the panel, which is a ventilation screen I think. Turnpike Lane and Wood Green stations have the like too, but in different also locality-specific designs.

In casting-light mode; all the motifs are to indicate the station's location by Finsbury Park. I guess the left-most bird is likely to be a fantail dove rather than a turkey, and the elements at the bottom of the screen are plants, park railings and gates.

Turkey, doh! I'd'a bin puzzlin' fer ever!

Heh, could it be a humble pigeon? They're a sort of dove and we certainly see enough of those ;)

Can't help with the elements, but the artist is Harold Stabler apparently?

http://150greatthingsabouttheunderground.com/tag/harold-stabler/

Thanks for the link, Gordon. 

Sorry, I know you can use google too. But this might save you a couple of seconds if interested, though still no clues as to the elements. He was quite a talent - he made tiles and posters for the underground as well:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/24772733@N05/sets/72157623188053661/de...

http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/artist/artist.html?IXartist=Ha...

Anyone with a domestic turn of mind like myself would recognise the panel as a sort of Art Deco take on the Willow Pattern.  A rich mandarin, infuriated that his beautiful daughter had attracted the attention of his secretary, built a fence around his house, from which the lovers tried to escape.  In one story, they could get over the fence only by becoming birds, and in another they got away as humans but, cornered by the angry parent, killed themselves and were turned into doves by the sympathetic gods.  Next question is this--what does Manor House have to do with a willow pattern plate?  Was the manor in some way connected to pottery, or did one of the owners design the original (or make up the story)? 

What an intriguing thought! 

I couldn't fit it to the old poem though 

Two birds flying high,
A Chinese vessel, sailing by.
A bridge with three men, sometimes four,
A willow tree, hanging o'er.
A Chinese temple, there it stands,
Built upon the river sands.
An apple tree, with apples on,
A crooked fence to end my song.

I enjoy these details of art and craft in public spaces.

And it's nice to think it may have been what Harold Stabler had in mind when in 1915 - according to Oxford Art Online - he and others founded the Design and Industries Association.

As a Haringey Libraries user you can access Oxford Art Online's article on Stabler  by signing-in with your library card number. (Use HAR???????? when the question marks are the eight digits of your card - no spaces.)

The grill designs are in Wood Green, Manor House and Turnpike lane tube. The Wood Green one depicts a deer and a couple of birds - which to me suggest that the artist thought of Wood Green in times gone by as more like Richmond Park! Turnpike Lane is perhaps the most realistic in that  what it shows is a gentleman on a horse approaching from the left, the gate house and the toll gate, and the first pair of houses of a stage coach approaching from the right: depicting the days when Turnpike Lane was literally a turnpike. Any one know of a dove cote that existed in Fin Pk at any time? The rectangular part immediately below the dove cote I think is more suggestive of a park seat seen straight on in front elevation rather than a balustrade.

But I think the really interesting thing is that the artist must have done the design just based on his brief without looking at the actual site, as he has put a couple of spherical roundels on top of the gate posts and although this kind-of architecturally fits, there are no such balls in actuality on any of the Finsbury park gates - and by looking at old photographs I do not think there ever has been! (Any one know of any balls on the gate posts in times gone by?) 

Dovecote references I know of are, one near the bottom of Allison Road, near the Gate Houses for Harringay House and Near to Turnpike Lane there used to be Dovecote Farm ( I think Ducketts is supposed to be a local shortening of Dovecote.).

Oh, OK Simmons, you probably know I couldn't resist it.

Maybe no balls on the gateposts but Haringey is full of balls.

(I am, of course, referring to the football connection -- surely there is no other possibility?)

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