If Rainbows Were ArchitectureWhat happens when an eccentric architect has the soul of a painter? He drafts a technicolor blueprint and creates elaborate canvasses out of brick and
mortar.
Portmeirion, the celebrated
Italianate village on the west coast of Wales, and famous location of the 60’s cult television series "
The Prisoner,” was built by
Sir Clough Williams-Ellis as a retirement project.
The
fairy-tale hamlet he created (30 years before Disneyland) is like a three-dimensional picture postcard exhibiting an unparalleled array of colors.
Portmeirion is often cited as an example of "picturesque architecture.” Picturesque simply means that something is proper to be pictured. In the picture that is
Portmeirion, foreground and background are the real ground of a rainbow we can walk through.
[Read the entire article in my
guest blog at Colourlovers.com.]