In 1987, I hitchhiked to Oxford with my then boyfriend, a nineteen year old penniless, orphaned urchin, with no-one supporting me, determined - somehow - to become a *famous artist*. Does that sound dramatic? Well, that's how it was. Having left an unhappy foster home aged just 16, I had tried in vain to somehow earn my living through my artworks, with little training , absolutely no idea of how this was to be done, and having scant cultural background.
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I got my cherished place at the college and began the long, slow process of repairing my fractured life. I also began studying art history, and after so many years of neglect, my starved soul guzzled up knowledge and culture. I discovered the Ashmolean - like so many of our museums, it was and is, still free admittance to everyone. I nourished myself on paintings, largely ignoring the artifacts sections, which interest me now. With my battered Penguin copy of Vasari's Lives of the Artists in my pocket, I drew bronzes and copied artworks to my heart's content. I haunted the Renaissance room, which looks almost the same today as it did then.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiljfKIuVud_9oFjgSpVzzzHOD8Q7F-KxVdShDxKo68LwxA3lw7prXG5DMwezNKDBZWXug1gjwRjV8vKont1jmPlTSw9Kda_-owTmxlIAZp6hQv1Op8JRNMm7fcqLb2-nD82lEi/s400/ash3.jpg)
I haven't been there for years - it is a fair trek to town if you do not own a car, so outings are rare. But this week we made the effort, to see the new gallery extension, opened last November. I was a little fearful of how they had treated the old girl, and raced up to the Renaissance room to say hello to my old friends.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhvldK3Kd2EWjkSxUngaqXawTLg-vtFKTgA4mkQov1TFETdgbcPii7rO07Y5_0kcoSe4Rz1eQG8tzpKl6mXfYGqrgU6HPqfUob7HqSF2wz8jxHXIC91we-74h5Yrv8wwYEztpbQ/s400/A2.jpg)
After this comfort trip, we found our way almost by accident, to the new development, which cost £61 million...and worth every penny. It is stunning - it actually brought tears to my eyes. We wandered about gawping at the luxurious and clever use of space - a cross between a glass ants nest and the drawing 'Relativity' by Escher. The place was buzzing - a strange change from the previous fusty atmosphere, but a welcome one; it really felt like a 'people's museum'.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjSZe1VD66CvwObv0eG6piFNDmUd1WkZlZf9TzhvOFHct9gTuZDr3j3LNyzh1p9jKRW5_zH6Y5sb74dmQuUKZbwTOzhFCES5mgwFB4p3d1v_Ab3tinG6-Jcf9qFA4hD7jkiNhHW/s400/ash8.jpg)
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I fell in love all over again, and realised how much I had missed actually seeing real artworks of quality. There were dozens of enthusiastic, helpful staff buzzing about (a radical change from the grumpy jobsworths who used to sit foursquare in a corner, dozing off) and I enthused to one young lady about the new extension, explaining how I used to come and draw here, thinking I would be the next Michelangelo. She asked me if I did go on to become an artist, and I said yes, I'm a children's illustrator; not exactly what I had in mind then, but I did achieve some of my dreams.
There is a separate Ashmolean review, with many more pictures of the new gallery over on my Cotswold Peeps blog.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiljfKIuVud_9oFjgSpVzzzHOD8Q7F-KxVdShDxKo68LwxA3lw7prXG5DMwezNKDBZWXug1gjwRjV8vKont1jmPlTSw9Kda_-owTmxlIAZp6hQv1Op8JRNMm7fcqLb2-nD82lEi/s400/ash3.jpg)
I haven't been there for years - it is a fair trek to town if you do not own a car, so outings are rare. But this week we made the effort, to see the new gallery extension, opened last November. I was a little fearful of how they had treated the old girl, and raced up to the Renaissance room to say hello to my old friends.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhvldK3Kd2EWjkSxUngaqXawTLg-vtFKTgA4mkQov1TFETdgbcPii7rO07Y5_0kcoSe4Rz1eQG8tzpKl6mXfYGqrgU6HPqfUob7HqSF2wz8jxHXIC91we-74h5Yrv8wwYEztpbQ/s400/A2.jpg)
After this comfort trip, we found our way almost by accident, to the new development, which cost £61 million...and worth every penny. It is stunning - it actually brought tears to my eyes. We wandered about gawping at the luxurious and clever use of space - a cross between a glass ants nest and the drawing 'Relativity' by Escher. The place was buzzing - a strange change from the previous fusty atmosphere, but a welcome one; it really felt like a 'people's museum'.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjSZe1VD66CvwObv0eG6piFNDmUd1WkZlZf9TzhvOFHct9gTuZDr3j3LNyzh1p9jKRW5_zH6Y5sb74dmQuUKZbwTOzhFCES5mgwFB4p3d1v_Ab3tinG6-Jcf9qFA4hD7jkiNhHW/s400/ash8.jpg)
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