- Visitors can explore all three tiers of Buckinghamshire’s Wedding Cake pavilion
- The 12m immersive art installation is decorated with thousands of icing-like tiles
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‘Many artists have the “impossible project” and this is mine.’
So says Portuguese artist Joana Vasconcelos of her mouthwatering ‘Wedding Cake’ pavilion, the sweetest of architectural treasures awaiting visitors to Waddeson Manor in Buckinghamshire.
Almost five years in the making, the 12-metre-high (39ft) cake is covered in thousands of icing-like tiles glazed in pale pinks, greens and blues, with Vasconcelos declaring it the ‘biggest challenge’ of her 30-year career.
The ‘Wedding Cake’ pavilion is the sweetest of architectural treasures awaiting visitors to Waddeson Manor in Buckinghamshire
The floors are connected by spiral staircases the colour of butter
Wander past ceramic mermaids to the sound of water trickling from the mouths of dolphin statues that decorate its walls
Visitors can explore all three tiers of what Vasconcelos describes as ‘a temple to love’ and what the venue says is ‘part sculpture, part architectural garden folly [and] a celebration of… festivity and joy’.
Guests can wander past ceramic mermaids and dolphin statues with water trickling from their mouths, gaze upon golden walls and pastel blue columns, and admire pink spears that dangle from the ceiling like chocolate drops.
In keeping with its festive theme, there are also electric candles and mini statues of marriage saint St Anthony to bless newlyweds.
The floors are connected by spiral staircases the colour of butter, with guests able to become human cake toppers at the top, where they can soak up views over the beautiful Waddesdon grounds.
The pavilion was inspired by ‘the exuberant Baroque buildings and decorative ceramic traditions of Lisbon, where Vasconcelos lives and works’, according to the venue.
Guests are able to become human cake toppers at the top, where they can soak up views over the beautiful Waddesdon grounds
The inside harbours golden walls, pastel blue columns and pink spears that dangle from the ceiling like chocolate drops
In keeping with its festive theme, there are electric candles and mini statues of marriage saint St Anthony to bless newlyweds
The pavilion was inspired by ‘the exuberant Baroque buildings and decorative ceramic traditions of Lisbon where Vasconcelos lives and works’, according to the venue
It was also ‘built to entertain’, a sentiment that echoes the traditions of hospitality at the 18th-century garden pavilions, it added.
Vasconcelos said: ‘I wanted people to have three different approaches to it.
‘Looking from the outside, enjoying the surroundings from the different levels or balconies and rising to the top, finally completing the artwork with their presence.’
Guided tours are running on Thursdays and selected Sundays until October 26. For more information visit waddesdon.org.uk/whats-on/wedding-cake-tours.
The venue says the structure is ‘part sculpture, part architectural garden folly [and] a celebration of… festivity and joy’
Vasconcelos considers the Wedding Cake pavilion to be ‘a temple to love’ and said it is so far the ‘biggest challenge’ of her 30-year career
Guided tours are running on Thursdays and selected Sundays until October 26
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