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With Julia Woodman
TESSELATIONTHE THREE-DIMENSIONAL FORM OCTOBER WORKSHOP METALSOCIETY OF SOUTHERN ARTS CALIFORNIA Sept Oct 2013 with Julia Woodman October 19th & 20th, 2013 Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo $195 for MASSC members / $220 for non members Learn a new skill using metalsmithing tools, bolts and an industrial punch. That’s all that’s needed to form small silver discs, squares, jump rings, etc., into 3-D shapes suitable for bracelets, earrings or spoon handles. Students are shown how to experiment with these and more to create beautifully textured miniature sculpture to adorn or for décor. Some soldering, sawing and filing skills are needed to learn this fun, new technique – TESSELLATION. So bring your imagination and an Optivisor and let’s PLAY!! www.juliawoodman.com NEWSLETTER OCTOBER WORKSHOP TESSELATIONTHE THREE-DIMENSIONAL FORM “My work using 3D tessellation for serving utensils shows clean simple lines Julia Woodman has lived in Lahti, Finland where she studied with third and with ornate texture, almost a by-product of the technique itself.” fourth generation Fabergé masters while on a Fulbright Grant and was certified Master Silversmith in Finland, the first American. She has a MFA degree from Woodman uses tessellation to construct handles for serving pieces, arms and Georgia State University and has studied with Heikki Seppä and other masters upright portions of crosses for churches, and stems and bases for cups, trophies at the Penland School of Craft during many summer sessions. Also, she teaches and other vessels. Utility and function are major components of her work: the at the Spruill Center for the Arts in Atlanta, Chastain Arts Center and substitute teapots must work and fish slices must serve fish. -
Death, Time and Commerce: Innovation and Conservatism in Styles of Funerary Material Culture in 18Th-19Th Century London
Death, Time and Commerce: innovation and conservatism in styles of funerary material culture in 18th-19th century London Sarah Ann Essex Hoile UCL Thesis submitted for the degree of PhD Declaration I, Sarah Ann Essex Hoile confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where information has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis. Signature: Date: 2 Abstract This thesis explores the development of coffin furniture, the inscribed plates and other metal objects used to decorate coffins, in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century London. It analyses this material within funerary and non-funerary contexts, and contrasts and compares its styles, production, use and contemporary significance with those of monuments and mourning jewellery. Over 1200 coffin plates were recorded for this study, dated 1740 to 1853, consisting of assemblages from the vaults of St Marylebone Church and St Bride’s Church and the lead coffin plates from Islington Green burial ground, all sites in central London. The production, trade and consumption of coffin furniture are discussed in Chapter 3. Chapter 4 investigates coffin furniture as a central component of the furnished coffin and examines its role within the performance of the funeral. Multiple aspects of the inscriptions and designs of coffin plates are analysed in Chapter 5 to establish aspects of change and continuity with this material. In Chapter 6 contemporary trends in monuments are assessed, drawing on a sample recorded in churches and a burial ground, and the production and use of this above-ground funerary material culture are considered. -
PRESS RELEASE the Goldsmiths' Company Becomes a Founding
PRESS RELEASE The Goldsmiths’ Company becomes a Founding Partner of the new Museum of London and pledges £10m donation Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Cup, designed by Goldsmith R.Y. Goodden in 1953 is pictured in the Corporation of London’s current salt store, which by 2022 will have been transformed into galleries at the new Museum of London in West Smithfield with the Thameslink track running through them. Image © Museum of London. Collection: The Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths. The Museum of London and the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths (one of the major City Livery Companies) today announced that the Goldsmiths' Company is to become a Founding Partner of the new Museum of London, due to open in West Smithfield in 2022. The Goldsmiths' Company and its affiliated Charity have pledged £10 million to the Museum project. This landmark donation goes towards the Museum’s plans to create a spectacular new home for the history of London and its people in the beautiful but disused market buildings at West Smithfield. This follows the news earlier this year that the City of London Corporation and Mayor of London have together pledged £180 million. Counting the donation from the Goldsmiths’ Company and its affiliated Charity, the Museum has £60 million left to raise. A gallery bearing the Goldsmiths’ name will be at the heart of the new Museum, showcasing the Cheapside Hoard together with highlights from the Company’s world-renowned Collection of historic and contemporary silver. Judith Cobham-Lowe, Prime Warden of the Goldsmiths' Company, said: "We are thrilled to be playing our part in the new Museum of London as a Founding Partner. -
2245 Trades' Directory, 1895
2245 TRADES' DIRECTORY, 1895. WIN WINE RETAILERS, Dagonet et Fils (of Chalons-sur-Marne Howell Edward James, 16 Yark lane E C ·--B-'- B D .,_ rr - L Champagne) (W. H."Marks & Co. agents), 62 Huyssen Charles, 19 & 20 Water lane, Great ~a..., .... trl; ~r ~·'tat..,rl; c.onfecttoner~ m & 63 Mark lane E c Tower street E C PrutT'!/OooU; DfningRooml; GrocerI; Italla1l Darthez S. (of Reus, Tarragona) (H. H. Rooo;e lmbert & Co. 32 Crntehcdfriars E C Wardlowu; Oilmen; alloRifreshmentR.oo'lru. & Co. agents), 11 & 12 Great Tower st E C Ingham, Whitaker & Co. 11 Trinity square E C Ablitt Charles Erlward 691 Old Kent rd sE de Beuverand & de Poligny, 30 Mark lane E C Irroy Ernest & Co. 66 Mark lane E C Baker Williarn, 746 H~lloway road N De Bossaxe (Reims) (Leakey & Haig), 12 Ivis?n Richard C. 11 Hart street, Crntcbei- Blower Williarn 221 King's road Chelsea SW Mark lane E C fnars E C Burnell Marmaduke, 1 Old Chan'ge E c De Fre;vc~et & Fils (champagne), 27 St. Dun- Jalics Frn.nz A. & Co. (of Budapest, Hungary) C&pe.taz Wine Stores (Thomas Edward Kent, stan s hill E C (PattenharuenBros.agts.),40Gt.Towen;tE C manager) st New Broad street E C De Goni (Damian) (Jerez), 47 Mark lane E C Jobard (Jeune) & Bernard (Burgundy) Cawthome Thos Alex 490 Old Kent rd SE Deinhard & Co. (of Coblenz), 6 Idol lane E C (Grainger & Son, agents), 21 Mincing la E C Denb&m John 7S Au~rt park N Delaforee Geo. -
The Cheapside Hoard: Known As George Fabian Lawrence (1862- and the Victoria & Albert Museum
Emerald Watch Courtesy of the Museum of London major commercial thoroughfare in the City of Stony Jack and spilt the cache of Cheapside London. Today it is one of the City’s modern Hoard jewels on the floor he recognised how financial centres, but from the late 15th up to precious this stash was. He “set about washing Arts & Antiques Arts the 17th century it was known as Goldsmith’s off the soil and, gradually, tangled chains of Row, the hub of the goldsmiths’ trade when enamelled gold, cameos, intaglios, carbuncles, tenements and shops were occupied by retail assorted gems and hardstones, rings and and manufacturing goldsmiths. pendants were revealed in all their brilliant Why has it taken one hundred years for this splendour”. (*1) In due course he turned the extraordinary cache of jewels to go on display jewels over to the new London Museum, now to the public? The most reliable account the Museum of London. Subsequently other highlights the role of ‘Stony Jack’, better items were bought by the British Museum The Cheapside Hoard: known as George Fabian Lawrence (1862- and the Victoria & Albert Museum. After 1939). It seems Stony Jack had a career as a some sixty years, however, the thorny matter pawnbroker, dealer and collector of antiquities of ownership caused much debate. Finally, in London’s Lost Jewels and was sometimes an employee of both the 1976 the Hoard was given to the new Museum Guildhall and London museums. But he of London, a combination of the Guildhall by Abby Cronin was also well known for his dealings with Museum and London Museum. -
Download Walking People at Your Service London
WALKING PEOPLE AT YOUR SERVICE IN THE CITY OF LONDON In association with WALKING ACCORDING TO A 2004 STUDY, WALKING IS GOOD COMMUTERS CAN EXPERIENCE FOR BUSINESS HAPPIER, MORE GREATER STRESS THAN FIGHTER PRODUCTIVE PILOTS GOING INTO BATTLE WORKFORCE We are Living Streets, the UK charity for everyday walking. For more than 85 years we’ve been a beacon for this simple act. In our early days our campaigning led to the UK’s first zebra crossings and speed limits. 94% SAID THAT Now our campaigns, projects and services deliver real ‘GREEN EXERCISE’ 109 change to overcome barriers to walking and LIKE WALKING JOURNEYS BETWEEN CENTRAL our groundbreaking initiatives encourage IMPROVED THEIR LONDON UNDERGROUND STATIONS MENTAL HEALTH ARE ACTUALLY QUICKER ON FOOT millions of people to walk. Walking is an integral part of all our lives and it can provide a simple, low cost solution to the PHYSICAL ACTIVITY PROGRAMMES increasing levels of long-term health conditions AT WORK HAVE BEEN FOUND TO caused by physical inactivity. HALF REDUCE ABSENTEEISM BY UP TO Proven to have positive effects on both mental and OF LONDON CAR JOURNEYS ARE JUST physical health, walking can help reduce absenteeism OVER 1 MILE, A 25 MINUTE WALK 20% and staff turnover and increase productivity levels. With more than 20 years’ experience of getting people walking, we know what works. We have a range of 10,000 services to help you deliver your workplace wellbeing 1 MILE RECOMMENDED WALKING activities which can be tailored to fit your needs. NUMBER OF DAILY 1 MILE BURNS Think of us as the friendly experts in your area who are STEPS UP TO 100 looking forward to helping your workplace become CALORIES happier, healthier and more productive. -
Jewellery in Autumn
October 2013 / Volume 22 / No. 7 The Hong Kong Show Alphabet Jewels Undercover on 47th St. on FacebookVisit us Meet the international Gemworld in Munich ! Photo: Atelier Tom Munsteiner October 25 — 27, 2013 Europe’s top show for gems & jewellery in autumn www.gemworldmunich.com Gems&Jewellery / October 2013 t Editorial Gems&Jewellery Keep it simple Look through the articles in this issue and you can see the dichotomy in our field. There is Oct 13 stuff about gemmology — detecting heat-treated tanzanite for example (page 7) — and stuff about lack of disclosure in the trade, like the need for clarification about diamonds (page 17). Contents There are expert gemmologists in the world and many people who earn their living buying and selling gems. It should be simple to link the expertise of the former with the business 4 needs of the latter. So why isn’t it? The CIBJO Blue Books on gems, all three of them, present guidelines to gem nomenclature and how to describe and disclose. They are worthy and comprehensive. Compiling and re-compiling them has taken untold hours at meetings around the world over the passing decades, even eroding serious drinking time at CIBJO congresses, but just how effective and Gem News useful are they? I have come to the conclusion that they are confusing for gemmologists, perplexing for the trade and incomprehensible to the public? They are just too complex. They don’t need to be complicated. You really only need three categories of gem 6 (in addition to synthetics and imitations): untreated natural gems, those that have undergone permanent treatment without addition of other substances (just heat and/or irradiation for example), and those which have been modified and are not durable or have had some extraneous substance added (e.g. -
London Cannon Street Station – Zone 1 I Onward Travel Information Local Area Map Bus Map
London Cannon Street Station – Zone 1 i Onward Travel Information Local Area Map Bus Map Palmers Green North Circular Road Friern Barnet Halliwick Park 149 S GRESHAM STREET 17 EDMONTON R 141 1111 Guildhall 32 Edmonton Green 65 Moorgate 12 A Liverpool Street St. Ethelburga’s Centre Wood Green I 43 Colney Hatch Lane Art Gallery R Dutch WALTHAMSTOW F for Reconcilation HACKNEY 10 Church E Upper Edmonton Angel Corner 16 N C A R E Y L A N E St. Lawrence 17 D I and Peace Muswell Hill Broadway Wood Green 33 R Mayor’s 3 T 55 ST. HELEN’S PLACE for Silver Street 4 A T K ING S ’S ARMS YARD Y Tower 42 Shopping City ANGEL COURT 15 T Jewry next WOOD Hackney Downs U Walthamstow E E & City 3 A S 6 A Highgate Bruce Grove RE 29 Guildhall U Amhurst Road Lea Bridge Central T of London O 1 E GUTTER LANE S H Turnpike Lane N St. Margaret G N D A Court Archway T 30 G E Tottenham Town Hall Hackney Central 6 R O L E S H GREEN TOTTENHAM E A M COLEMAN STREET K O S T 95 Lothbury 35 Clapton Leyton 48 R E R E E T O 26 123 S 36 for Whittington Hospital W E LOTHBURY R 42 T T 3 T T GREAT Seven Sisters Lea Bridge Baker’s Arms S T R E E St. Helen S S P ST. HELEN’S Mare Street Well Street O N G O T O T Harringay Green Lanes F L R D S M 28 60 5 O E 10 Roundabout I T H S T K 33 G M Bishopsgate 30 R E E T L R O E South Tottenham for London Fields I 17 H R O 17 Upper Holloway 44 T T T M 25 St. -
D E S C R IP TIO N Plantation Place South Consists of a Modern Office and Retail Building Designed by Global Architects, Arup Associates
PLANTATION PLACE SOUTH 1 LONDON - A highly specified office and retail A rare, 0.54 acre building, developed by British Land freehold corner site in 2004. in the heart of - 163,788 sq ft (1,5216 sq m) of Grade A office and retail accommodation the City of London’s arranged over basement, ground and nine insurance district. upper floors. - Multi-let to eight global tenants including Beazley Management Ltd, Sucden (UK) Ltd and Arch Insurance Company (Europe) Ltd. - The building produces a total income of £8,486,833 per annum (inclusive of vendor rent guarantees), reflecting a low overall rent of only £51.82 per sq ft. - The property benefits from a range of lease lengths with over a half of the income on long lease terms expiring beyond January 2025. - Strong asset management potential given the low overall passing rent and near term vacant possession of some of the best floors in the building. - Offers are invited in excess of £170,000,000 for the shares in the BVI company that owns the freehold interest in Plantation Place South, subject to contract and exclusive of VAT. - This represents an attractive net initial yield of 4.90%, assuming acquisition costs of 1.80%. INVESTMENT SUMMARY PLANTATION PLACE SOUTH 3 LONDON LOCATION PLANTATION PLACE SOUTH 7 LONDON London is officially the tech unicorn (companies LONDON valued at over $1 billion) A truly global gateway city. capital of Europe, being home to 37% of all tech unicorns with a combined value of $23 billion. London is the centre of London is ranked within the 22% Europe’s tech industry, 38m top two Global Financial of the UK’s with £2.45 billion invested London provides London attracted 38 million Centres Index, and is the Gross Domestic Product in London based tech employment to 5.9 million tourists in 2018. -
The Art of Glassmaking and the Nature of Stones the Role of Imitation in Anselm De Boodt’S Classification of Stones
Sven Dupré The Art of Glassmaking and the Nature of Stones The Role of Imitation in Anselm De Boodt’s Classification of Stones I n Gemmarum et lapidum historia, published in 1609, and arguably the most important work on stones of the seventeenth century, the Flemish physician Anselm De Boodt included precious stones, such as diamonds, lapis lazuli, emeralds (fig. 1), jade, nephrite and agate imported to Europe from Asia and the New World.1 The book was illustrated with specimens from the collection of Rudolf II in Prague where De Boodt was court physician, and the successor of Carolus Clusius as overseer of Rudolf’s gardens.2 De Boodt also included stones mined and sculpted in Europe, such as various marbles, porphyry, alabaster and rock crystal, as well as stones of organic origin, such as amber and coral (fig. 2), some fossils and a diversity of animal body stones, the bezoar stone being the most famous.3 Beyond simply listing stones across the lines between the organic and the inor- ganic, the vegetative and the mineral, the natural and the artificial, as was standard prac- tice in the lapidary tradition stretching back to Theophrastus and Antiquity, De Boodt also offered a classification of stones.D espite his importance, little work has been done on De Boodt. One exception is work by Annibale Mottana, who argues that “De Boot (sic) wanted to show his contempt for the merchant approach to gemstones in an attempt to 1 This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 648718), and has been supported by a Robert H. -
C257 XSM10 Broadgate Ticket Hall Combined Reporting Pits 4 and 11 Tr 14 and 15 Pile
C257 ARCHAEOLOGY CENTRAL Fieldwork Report Archaeological Excavated Evaluations and Watching Briefs Pit 4, Pit 11, Trench 14 and 15, Pile Line Pits and SSET/UKPN Utility Diversions, Broadgate Ticket Hall (XSM10) Document Number: C257-MLA-X-RGN-CRG02-50113 Document History: Revision: Date: Prepared by: Checked by: Approved by: Reason for Issue: 1.0 15.05.12 For CRL Review 2.0 20.06.12 For CRL Review Document uncontrolled once printed. All controlled documents are saved on the CRL Document System © Crossrail Limited RESTRICTED C257 Broadgate Combined Reporting Pits 4 & 11 Tr 14 & 15 Pile Line and SSET Fieldwork Report v2 20-06-12.doc Crossrail Broadgate Ticket Hall Excavated Evaluation and GWBs, Fieldwork Report (XSM10), Doc No. C257-MLA-X-RGN-CRG02-50113 v2 Non-technical summary This report covers two evaluation trenches and four archaeological watching briefs carried out by the Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) on the site of the future Crossrail Broadgate Ticket Hall, Liverpool Street, London EC2M, within the City of London. The site consists of the proposed utilities corridor and the Broadgate Ticket Hall construction worksite. It incorporates the western end of the roadway of Liverpool Street, and it’s north and south pavements. The report was commissioned from MOLA by Crossrail Ltd. This work follows a previous phase of archaeological evaluation (ending July 2011). While the results of these latest evaluations and watching briefs broadly confirm anticipated findings, they have led to some re-interpretation of previous evaluation results. Natural terrace gravels were overlaid by weathered natural deposits of alluvial clay, interspersed with occasional bands of gravel. -
C257 LIS XSM10 Broadgate Utilities WB and Excavation Combined Report.Pdf
Crossrail Broadgate Ticket Hall Excavated Evaluation and GWBs, Fieldwork Report (XSM10) C257-MLA-T1-RGN-CRG03-50014 v2 Non-technical summary This report covers a summary of the results from archaeological fieldwork carried out by Museum of London Archaeology (MOLA) on the site of the future Crossrail Broadgate Ticket Hall, Liverpool Street, London EC2M, within the City of London. The site consists of the new utilities corridor and other utilities diversions within the Broadgate Ticket Hall construction worksite. The report was commissioned from MOLA by Crossrail Ltd. The phases of fieldwork covered in this report include the utilities corridor, sewer shafts MHS1 and MHS2-100 and the open cut sewer diversion. A sewer heading leading from MHS2-100 was undertaken as a general watching brief. This fieldwork follows the initial phase of archaeological evaluation in 2010–2011 (MOLA for Crossrail 2012, C257-MLA-X-RGN-CRG02-50064 [v2]) and 2011–2012 (MOLA for Crossrail 2012, C257-MLA-X-XCS-CRG02-50012 [v2]); the current report amalgamates these results in order to further inform the forthcoming excavation of the future ticket hall. Natural terrace gravels were reached in every trench, overlain by waterlain deposits of alluvial clay interspersed with occasional bands of gravel. These are thought to represent episodes of flooding from the Walbrook stream. The eastern edge of the stream itself was present at the western side of the site, running north–south. While a small group of redeposited struck flints was recovered during the fieldwork, there was no tangible evidence for prehistoric activity on the site itself. Evidence was found for several phases of Roman activity, dating to the early 2nd century AD, demonstrating water management in this area of the Walbrook valley.