Reverend Richard Coles on renovating a narrowboat and collecting ceramics

The 80s pop star and Church of England priest tells us about his love for Queen Anne furniture and why he hides a wind-up duck in his wardrobe

Published: September 15, 2018 at 2:15 pm

My home in one word is temporary. It comes with the job.

My next renovation project is doing up our narrowboat. I’d live like a student if it were up to me, but my partner [Reverend David Coles] has a genius fordesigning and building things.

The first piece of furniture I bought was a large wood-framed mirror, which sounds rather narcissistic. I bought it in a junk shop behind Euston station in 1980, and there was a Dymo-printed label on it saying ‘Property of JT Pooley’. It’s currently hanging on my bedroom wall.

The oldest thing in my home is a littleclay oil lamp that we sometimes use for Evening Prayer. It’s nothing special, but it was made for a church in Egypt in the 3rd century.

I have been a collector of contemporary ceramics for a while now. My interest began when Icame across the work ofWelsh potter Phil Rogers at the Goldmark Gallery in Uppingham. I bought a pot by Phil and fell in love with it. I have since bought a few pieces by other potters such as Shōji Hamada, who worked with Bernard Leach in St Ives in the 1920s, and Sandy Brown, whomakes marvellous sculptural pieces in North Devon today.

The newest thing in my home is an Amazon Alexa and I hate it.

At the top of my wishlist is a Windsor chair made by carpenter David Saltmarsh of Fivepenny Chairs in Dorset.

If my house was burning down, excluding family and pets [Richard andDavid live with four dachshunds], I’dsave an 18th-century Karelian icon of the Virgin of Smolensk. She has survived quite a few adventures already and I would hate to lose her.

My favourite museum or gallery is hard to choose, but it would probably be the Hamburger Kunsthalle for the Friedrichlandscapes, or the Fondation Bembergin Toulouse for Bonnard.

If I could add an artistic skill to myrepertoire, for some reason I havealways wanted to yodel.

My favourite period of design is Queen Anne. I like it for its eleganceand restraint, and especially for the cabriole leg. A part of me would have loved to have been a parson siting in a Queen Anne rectory, in a Queen Anne wing chair, possibly taking a glass ofport to toast Queen Anne for her Bounty– funds that greatly improved thecircumstances of the poorer clergy of the Church of England.

The object in myhome that onlyI can love was given to me by afriend of mine, the son of a bishop, asa confirmationpresent. It’s awind-up toy duckdriving a car and Ihave to keep it inthe wardrobe.

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