












One exhibit at the museum featured a funhouse mirror. I’m not sure why, but as so often in galleries and museums, I felt compelled to take a reflective self-portrait.

We went to the Hove Museum of Creativity largely to see Beside The Sea: Photographs by JJ Waller and Martin Parr. Scroll down almost halfway through this history of the museum building to learn about the inscriptions on the Jaipur Gateway, shown above (the post’s title is from the Sanskrit inscription).


Seeing him sitting on a bench so dramatically attired, I had to ask to take a portrait. He leapt up and took this thumbs-up stance, nodding his approval when I showed him the image on the back of my camera.

Although this Boundary Passage is near where Google Maps says the boundary between Brighton and Hove lies, it’s not actually along this alley.

A seagull with a fish in a carpark.






I wasn’t sure how to read this. Is it a defense (Jews must never be attacked again) or a rebuke of Israeli government policy (we must never allow another genocide of any people, like the one that happened to us)?
