Tuesday, 19 December 2017

19th December - Brick Hut 1a




Tonight was the only time this year that we get to use one of the more luxurious brick built huts.  These have electricity and running water and are slightly more spacious than the simple wooden hut constructions that make up the vast majority of the beach huts along Hove seafront.




The facilities available allowed the Kidz Klub to go all out on the installation of technology and not only had Christmas lights but lasers as part of the installation.  




These lit up a pile of enormous gifts which surrounded and almost dwarfed the baby Jesus lying centre stage.


Ironically all these beautifully wrapped gift boxes were empty as a symbol of the emptiness of a purely commercial view of Christmas.





The true gift at Christmas is that of God himself in the form of the baby Jesus, a gift that transcends the glitter and glitz that makes up so much of this season of the year.







As if to emphasise this crass commercialisation of Christmas, a giant blow up/light up Santa lurked just around the corner from the hut, reminding us of the usual imagery associated with Christmas which so many seek to escape when they come to the Beach Hut Advent Calendar.





We were also blessed this evening by a choir of folk who had offered to come along and sing Christmas carols for the event.  They sang beautifully, as you would expect of a group who were used to singing in a church on a regular basis and really helped to add to the occasion.





In the midst of it all lay baby Jesus, serene and peaceful, untroubled by the gaudy, flashing lights and the false jollity of the blow up Santa, reminding us to think about the truth behind gift giving at this season of the year.

In this final week of advent beach huts we head to number 189 for our next installation.





Monday, 18 December 2017

18th December - Hut 362




One person from the nativity story has been missing up to now - the innkeeper.  Hut 362 redressed that balance by asking us to identify with the innkeeper who let the Holy Family stay in his stable where Jesus was born.








The innkeeper looked out from the door of his hostelry with a welcoming smile on his face.

Just to prove that this was a place of welcome and friendship there was a glittering heart above the door.





In the background, overlooking the whole scene, was a reminder of the end of the story of Jesus in the form of a colourful cross which was made of woven raffia.



Hanging beside this cross and in various other places around the hut, were small keys as a symbol of opening up to God and people who came to the hut were given a small key with a label on it saying "Each of us is an Innkeeper who decides if there is room for Jesus".








This same message was beautifully inscribed on a lightbox which was also part of the installation.







A big crowd turned up tonight as Bishop Hannington church was supporting this hut opening and they brought some musicians to help the evening with some carol singing.

Our next hut is one of the brick huts close to The View and is number 1a.



Sunday, 17 December 2017

17th December - Hut 437




Hut 437 is the furthest West of all the huts in the Beach Hut Advent Calendar and has been the location for some beautiful contemporary dance as part of the calendar over the past few years.  







The scene was set by an amazingly realistic painted backdrop of a train stop in a style reminiscent of the artist Edward Hopper.  It made the hut look as though it was a window into another world.





This imaginary world was inhabited by three modern day wise people (not just men!) who were dressed for travelling in a 1950's style.









They carried small suitcases with them and one of the Magi removed a bright shining ball from one of these and it became the focus of a weaving, haunting dance about travelling and the journey that was undertaken by these sages to find the baby Jesus.



All of us are on a journey of one kind or another.  We each travel from birth to death; we make journeys of understanding during our lives and many of us are on a spiritual journey.  The Beach Hut Advent Calendar is a journey itself as visitors travel to see each hut each night.





The dancers tonight reminded us of the Magi who travelled from the East as well as inviting us to think about our own journey.

The next hut is number 362 in the middle of the Hove seafront.




Saturday, 16 December 2017

16th December - Hut 424


Tonight was all about dressing up.  We had not one, but two huts open, one which was the main venue (hut 424) and another hut 10 metres away (422) that was the dressing room.



The artist for tonight had created a whole wardrobe of Magi costumes for a variety of sizes and shapes and anyone who came along was invited to dress up as a king and pose in hut424 for a photograph. 

 



The experience was enhanced by Humphrey the camel who was mostly  resident in the hut and very happy to pose for a selfie with anyone who came long.






Lots of people took part and were happy to put on a costume because they were so beautifully made.




Various tableaux appeared throughout the evening, each giving a unique perspective on the concept of incarnation - God becoming  human being and living the same sort of life that we all live.







When we put ourselves into the eternal stories we are able to discover more about  our own connection with the divine.





Being in the stable also helps us to empathise with those who have very little and may be giving birth in stable themselves this very night.
The next hut features contemporary dancers and is number 437.














Friday, 15 December 2017

15th December - Hut 264 (Not 324)



The hut tonight was a little more challenging to find than normal as we discovered yesterday that the number we'd been advertising was wrong.  Luckily most people seem to be using the guiding star to find the right location once we hoist it up every night and we were only 100m to the East of the advertised hut anyway.





The Advent pilgrims who made their way to hut 264 were presented with another take on the Knitivity idea first seen on 3rd December courtesy of the Brighton District Mother's Union.



This was quite different as the figures were bigger and the focus was on the stable scene rather than the host of heavenly angels as in the previous hut.





Also all these figures were made by the artist herself, Helen Rawlings of the Church of the Good Shepherd on Dyke road.

Each character in the scene had their own personality, including the angel that hung above everything.  




The characters included the wise men and their camel, the shepherds and their sheep and the Holy Family themselves who stood by an empty manger as Jesus is not born until Christmas Day.  



Tomorrow we're back to the hut numbers as advertised and will be at number 424 beside Hove Lagoon.








Thursday, 14 December 2017

14th December - Hut 262


It was bitterly cold on the seafront today, mainly because of a cold breeze that blew continually from the West.
This was fortunate as the hut was decorated with a pair of handmade feathered angel wings and lots of smaller paper sets of wings which all fluttered in the breeze making the hut look as though it was alive.

On the doors of the hut was a unique advent calendar with rolled up paper doors which also fluttered in the breeze.  Behind each door was a word - these were angel blessings.

Faith, Hope, Love, Creativity were just some of the blessings bestowed on those who lifted up the numbered flap to reveal the blessing underneath.








The exception was the 24th date as this was blank so that we could make up our own advent blessing.









The next hut is very close to tonights as it is number 264.  This is a change to the number printed on our flyers and previously advertised as 324.  It's a blessing that this is just 100m along the seafront and we will signpost it tomorrow.






Wednesday, 13 December 2017

13th December - Hut 194




Hut 194 was packed tonight as Windlesham school created the art and brought a choir of nearly 30 children and many of their parents came along to see and hear the festivities.







The hut was filled with a hand coloured nativity scene that  had been created by the children and ranged across the whole back of the hut.



Mary and Joseph took centre stage as you would expect and they were flanked by shepherds on one side and wise men on the other.





The doors of the hut were also decorated with images of a wide variety of characters involved in the nativity.






Above it all hung a rustic star surrounded by angels in a beautiful blue sky.






Throughout the whole evening the choir sang a variety of songs including some beautiful arrangements of some traditional carols, some contemporary Christmas anthems and popular Christmas songs.




This was quite an achievement as they'd been rehearsing all morning for their end of term service tomorrow, and once the beach hut finished they moved to The View to sing to the customers there.