
Phew, I know…exhausting blog title. Well, it’s been an exhausting day. Especially as I’m only blogging the middle of our day – I did maypole this morning before the double-exhibition extravaganza and Nathan and VK are still out now.
So let’s start at Piccadilly Circus tube station which was so busy it was like….well you know the phrase. VK and I had just discovered that Meta’s AI tool worked even when we were out of signal range so we spent some time on the Bakerloo line trolling it with Les Mis references. It only has itself to blame because I never asked for my WhatsApp search bar to turn into an AI tool. One of the prompts was “I need relationship advice”, which was worrying. Are people really asking their WhatsApp search bar for relationship advice? Anyway, VK and I fed it some scenarios and it advised that I should talk to my boyfriend before he goes to the barricades to see if he can persuade my father not to take me to England. It also advised the three of us to sing “Auld Lang Syne” together and described Javert’s death as “the icing on the cake”.
People, do not take relationship advice from AI tools.

All of which got us to the beautiful Burlington House, which is the home of the Royal Academy of Arts. I don’t think I’ve been there since we were basket weaving with plastic straws in 2014. Given the backlash against single-use plastics I don’t think that exhibit would fly today. Luckily, VK’s tastes have evolved beyond brightly coloured craft things and, in case you don’t already know, she is currently obsessed with Les Misérables. Not just the musical but the book as well – in fact, she spent a large chunk of her recent parents’ evening reading the novel in the school library while we waited to see her English teacher. She has memorized a large chunk of text about the Parisian sewer system. So an exhibition about the work of Victor Hugo is very timely.
We were warned at the front door that it was quite a long way up but didn’t realise quite how many stairs it was to the second floor. I’d probably advise taking the lift. It’s up this short flight of stairs and then another two floors’ worth. We were a little out of breath by the time we got to the top.
While I think about it, I should probably mention that I now have a TikTok and I’ve already TikToked our visit. Much easier than blogging, turns out. But don’t worry – I’m still a blogger at heart. But if you do the TikTok thing, please do give me a pity-follow over there
Anyway, back to the exhibition. It’s very dimly lit as the pieces are very sensitive to light and, in fact, the ones on display are only a fraction of the full collection because the rest are so delicate. So there’s a heavy door to go through before entering the three rooms of paintings. It’s not huge – we were probably there for about half an hour – but VK was thrilled to be even close to canvasses that VH had touched and to see his handwriting in real life.
Some of our highlights were:
The Octopus painting that’s in all the publicity:
A letter handwritten by Hugo to his son and including a picture of a castle halfway through. Hugo was a bit obsessed with castles. I don’t think I got a picture of the letter but here’s one of the other castles:

A beautifully-decorated mirror:
And, would you believe it, a painting of the Parisian sewage system? I cannot describe how excited VK was about this but maybe you can sense it from this picture:

So although it’s small and pricey for the time we spent there, it’s worth a visit if you have a Les Mis obsessive in the house. There are only a couple of references to that book, like this representation of Valjean’s chains:
But still, this will not deter the Victor Hugo superfans.
And the RAA is worth a visit just for the beautiful surroundings. Even the bit with the loos is pretty, in a monastic way:
And the gift shop is a riot of colour, which was almost painful after being in dim light for so long:
We stopped at the Friends Cafe which probably wasn’t another Les Mis reference but yknow…Les Amis…
VK had a very good brownie and I had fruit and a drink:
Then we had some time to kill before meeting Nathan for the next exhibition. So we popped into Fortnum and Mason to look at all the pretty tins of biscuits and the glace fruits which probably look better than they taste.
We did not buy anything but it’s worth a look around, just for the aesthetics. Gosh, I’ve only been on TikTok a day and I’m talking about aesthetics already.

As it happens, our next stop – Waterstones – was also quite aesthetic. VK almost bought a copy of “Phantom of the Opera” but changed her mind. She also tried to buy another copy of Les Mis and I vetoed. It’s for her own good.
Then we wandered through Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square before settling in a Pret near Trafalgar Square for a restorative coffee before we met Nathan.
You might wonder about the planning of this whole day so let me unpack it a bit. There is logic in there, I promise. The Victor Hugo exhibition was the first thing to be booked and it was just because it was a relatively free Saturday in among choir season chaos. Then I realised that VK was due a reward for having worked very hard at school, so I booked for her to see Hadestown yet again in the evening of the same day (“It’s a NEW CAST so we have to go again”). I was planning on Great Gatsby but the cheap tickets were sold out, so cheapo Hadestown more than mollified her.
Then came the complication – friends got in touch and let us know that we really had to go and see The Face exhibition at National Portrait Gallery before it closed on 18th May. It will soon be apparent why but, if you’re not familiar with The Face, it is a magazine that I believe is now online but was – during the 80s, 90s and 2000s – a physical style magazine that you could actually buy it in the shops. I think we only bought it the once, for reasons which again will soon become apparent. It’s the same reason that meant Nathan had to come and meet us halfway through the day so the three of us could go to the NPG together. Reuben is staying home to study a lot at the moment so he didn’t fancy the trip but also we didn’t want to Gavroche him all day long, so we ended up with a plan where VK and I did Victor Hugo, VK, Nathan and I did The Face and VK and Nathan did Hadestown. Simple, right??
Anyway, so we went to the National Portrait Gallery around 5pm.

And what a nostalgia fest this exhibition was! So many of my absolute heroes were in there, like Nicky Wire and Brett Anderson and blur:

If you want to know more about my obsession with blur, check our our trip to Wembley in 2023. And while we’re talking obsessions, here was one that VK had actually heard of:
And when I say “heard of”, I mean full-on stage-doored a few weeks back. Result.
Most of the pictures were quite era-specific, like this very pretty Kurt Cobain:
But thanks to the online version, it seems that even Gen Alpha icons like Chapelle Roan get a look-in:
I still haven’t explained why we were there. Well, I mentioned some very handsome men in this exhibition – Brett, Nicky, Damon, Alex and Ewan – but who was more handsome than all of these? This guy in the “nightclubbing” room:
Yes, it’s our very own Nathan. Pictured at Trash in 2002, when he foolishly decided to go clubbing in a suit and tie. Or not so foolish as it turns out, because it meant he got photographed and put into The Face. Then 23 years later, he appeared in the National Portrait Gallery.
As you can imagine, we took every variation of photo with the photo. Like VK staring in awe at her Daddy:
I must say, the teen was most sceptical about how fun it would be to go and see a photo of her own father in a gallery but she was a little bit impressed once we were actually there I think.
We also got a lot of pictures of the two Nathans together. I’ve aggressively desaturated the background on this one to make the Nathans stand out more:
It’s probably slightly pointless me reviewing the exhibition seeing as it ends tomorrow but it was a fun one for anyone who was on the clubbing or music scene in the 90s and 2000s. There were also some pictures which were just quite visually stunning, if confusing:
We were there for around 45 minutes, which again was not huge amounts of time for the price…but we might have been there longer if we didn’t have a teen in tow, who was impatient to get on to Hadestown. And the inevitable costume change to Eurydice:
So that was the exhausting story of our day. Two exhibitions, a bit of shopping and, for VK, a show as well. But it was fun. The links are here for RAA and here for NPG (but only till tomorrow) – they are very different to each other but we enjoyed them both. And let me know if any if you readers spotted Nathan too!
