Catch 22

These days it's a fish and chip shop, but it started as the Cabot Cafe.

According to this description of an etching by Alexander Heaney:

Built in 1904 for an estate agent, Walter Hughes, to the design of Latrobe & Weston, architects well known for their cinemas. Above the word ‘Café’ can just be seen the Pomegranate mosaic with enamel insets by the client's daughter, Catherine Hughes, taken from Charles Rickett's bookbinding for Oscar Wilde's A House of Pomegranates, 1891.

Caroline's Miscellany tells us:

Less bright, but equally beautiful, are the copper panels to either side. These continue the pomegranate theme and are pure Art Nouveau. Other details, by contrast, are more baroque (a mixture of styles characteristic of LaTrobe and Weston's work).

Cabot Cafe suffered damage in the Second World War. We are fortunate, then, that this intriguing facade nevertheless survived to delight us today.

From wander: A Long Wander Of Miscellany and Magick
Taken: Sun 8 August 2021 15:36
Rating: ★★

GPS Coordinates: 51.45237, -2.59892
Location: City Centre

Catch 22
These days it's a fish and chip shop, but it started as the Cabot Cafe.

According to this description of an etching by Alexander Heaney:


  Built...