Get Book # Benton End Remembered: Cedric Morris, Arthur Lett
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Glyn Morgan Press Release 2014 Exhibition: Glyn Morgan “Behind the Landscape” Oils and Collages
GLYN MORGAN PRESS RELEASE 2014 EXHIBITION: GLYN MORGAN “BEHIND THE LANDSCAPE” OILS AND COLLAGES 21ST JUNE TO 13TH JULY, 2014 AT CHAPPEL GALLERIES, COLCHESTER ROAD, CHAPPEL, ESSEX CO6 2DE EXTENDED HOURS FOR THE DURATION OF THE EXHIBITION: OPEN EVERY DAY 10AM TO 5PM 01206 240326 [email protected] www.chappelgalleries.co.uk THIS BEING OUR FIRST EXHIBITION IN FOUR YEARS OUTSIDE OF OUR RESIDENT ARTIST, WLADYSLAW MIRECKI, WE ARE VERY PLEASED TO BE SHOWING 30 WORKS BY THE ARTIST GLYN MORGAN. IN 2010 WE HAD TO HALT OUR ROLLING PROGRAMME OF TWELVE CHANGING EXHIBITIONS A YEAR WHICH WE HAD RUN FOR TWENTY FOUR YEARS. WE REGRETTED THAT GLYN MORGAN WAS THE NEXT EXHIBITION ON THAT YEAR’S CALENDAR AND IT WAS CANCELLED AT VERY SHORT NOTICE. GLYN WAS VERY UNDERSTANDING AND IT IS WITH GREAT PLEASURE THAT WE ARE NOW IN A POSITION TO HOLD AN EXHIBITION WHICH WILL INCLUDE SOME WORKS FROM THAT PERIOD (AND BEFORE) AND NEW WORK COMPLETED SINCE. In conversation with Glyn Morgan, artist, very soon one is aware that the guiding passion for his artistic life in the past and for always was his time at the East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing run by Cedric Morris and Lett Haines. It was 1943 in Pontypridd that they met, Glyn a young student at the Art School, Cardiff and Cedric was selecting work at an exhibition; Glyn was immediately invited to spend time with him in East Anglia. Fostered by the heady bohemian atmosphere of this school (and home), arriving from Wales, Glyn shared a special place there from 1944 for 38 years. -
Island Gardens
Issue No. 71 July 2021 Newsletter Island Gardens Inside: Future events • Island Gardens, talk by Jackie Bennett • 21st – 25th July, RHS Tatton Flower Show • Sheer Folly, talk by Caroline Holmes • 14th August, Sandymere Social • Jake Croft, Head Gardener, Adlington Hall • Forthcoming Events - NGS gardens • The Arno, Oxton, Wirrall Planthunters Fairs, page 16 • Why is this here, Beaconsfield House • 7th October, CGT visit to RHS Bridgewater • Beth Chatto Biography, Catherine Horwood • A Passion for Hostas Registered Charity No: 1119592 | Company No: 05673816 www.cheshire-gardens-trust.org 2 Island Gardens: Journeys around the British Isles Talk by Jackie Bennett May 2021 In this inspiring talk based on her book Island Gardens: The salty winds can do a lot of damage, which is why Journeys around the British Isles (2018, White Lion the second garden, Kierfiold House, has very little lawn. Publishing), the author took us to islands from the far Keeping a lawn green is a particular challenge because north to the west and the south. There are more than the salt and rain leach nutrients out of the soil. There is 6,000 islands off the coast of the British Isles; over 100 also a double row of hedging to protect from the wind. of them are inhabited and where there are people there Despite the challenging growing conditions there is an are gardens. Orkney Garden Festival with some twenty-eight gardens opening biannually. It was amazing to see such lovely gardens in a wild setting. Hardy geraniums are an Orkney specialty (see below); Alan Bremner is an Orkney geranium breeder; he will probably have bred any geranium with Orkney in the name. -
Simon Carter 2013 Complete.Pdf
Simon Carter Front cover (detail) Winter Sea, 2011 (catalogue no. 46) Photograph: Noah Carter Noah Photograph: Simon Carter The Shapes of Light 2013 www.messums.com 8 Cork Street, London W1S 3LJ Telephone: +44 (0)20 7437 5545 … how days pass in the studio Today is the 22nd November. It is Thursday and, like most I trace over some of the drawings on the light box, taking a days, I have been down to the beach to make drawings. The degree of expression out of the lines to see how they work as sun was beginning to dissolve amongst a vast Turneresque glow. design. With some paintings I repeatedly copy drawings on the The wind was blowing pale rivers of sand across the beach and light box; I like the way that unexpected outcomes sometimes corrugating the sea, waves coming in small and packed together. arise from the imperfections of this process. I might square up There were a few gulls and a few sanderling at the water’s edge. one of these copies and use it to rework the canvas. This as a On the horizon freight ships were lining up to enter Felixstowe way of forcing change onto the painting and of not allowing a and wind farms flickered in distant sunlight. There was a single sense of satisfaction with it. As the painting develops over the yacht passing. next few weeks and months, I will return to the beach many times. I will also make drawings from the painting and from I made 7 drawings quickly and without much attempt at revision the location drawings; edging forward looking for something or second thought. -
Trafalgar Square Publishing Spring 2016 Don’T Miss Contents
Trafalgar Square Publishing Spring 2016 Don’t Miss Contents Animals/Pets .....................................................................120, 122–124, 134–135 28 Planting Design Architecture .................................................................................... 4–7, 173–174 for Dry Gardens Art .......................................................8–9, 10, 12, 18, 25–26 132, 153, 278, 288 Autobiography/Biography ..............37–38, 41, 105–106, 108–113, 124, 162–169, 179–181, 183, 186, 191, 198, 214, 216, 218, 253, 258–259, 261, 263–264, 267, 289, 304 Body, Mind, Spirit ....................................................................................... 33–34 Business ................................................................................................... 254–256 Classics ....................................................................................43–45, 47–48, 292 Cooking ......................................................1, 11, 14–15, 222–227, 229–230–248 Crafts & Hobbies .............................................................................21–24, 26–27 85 The Looking Design ......................................................................................................... 19–20 Glass House Erotica .................................................................................................... 102–103 Essays .............................................................................................................. 292 Fiction ...............................................42, -
We Are Essex
WE ARE ESSEX Postgraduate Prospectus 2021 YOUR ESSEX, YOUR WAY Choose Essex Use this prospectus to learn about what for an education we can offer you at that will offer postgraduate level. you far more n As a postgraduate student you’ll receive access to all of our than just a facilities, support and advice. great degree. n You will be immersed in our ground-breaking research You will learn community right from the start. in a stimulating n University life extends beyond lectures and exams, there’s and challenging so much to explore across the county you will never run out of environment “The first thing that brought me to “There’s a stereotype that computer “I stayed at Essex for my Masters new experiences. Essex was wanting to try something scientists have to be nerdy. But I because I loved my course and different to my country, Lithuania. think it can be more fun and can department. At Essex I’ve really and be informed n With over 160 clubs and societies I feel like the University of Essex give the opportunity to create developed as a person, and my to join, your Essex experience will was a very big part in shaping something new. Especially in these confidence has grown so much. by new and be one you’ll remember for the who I am; shaping my confidence, internet days, where everything is I was a Residents’ Assistant in rest of your life. shaping my interests. Not just in moving fast and going online, things my second year, I’ve been elected innovative politics in general, but in life too. -
The Generous Ghosts at Benton End, Spiritual Home of Garden
ald Blythe, who described how, as a shy young man, he was bewitched by the place. Once, 10 years ago, I stopped by the roadside to famous peer over the wall but the haven friend I was with called: Benton End in “There’s nothing there. Just Suffolk; Cedric the walls”. It was not until re- Morris’s Flowers cently that I realised how in Feering, right wrong he was. For this spring, the ghost of Morris’s garden stirred back to life, thanks to a gardener hired by the Pinchbecks to cut back the undergrowth: on the last day before lockdown, Corydalis bul- bosa ‘Alba’ was revealed under the medlar tree, also the widow iris that Morris loved to paint, and double- headed Fritillaria pyrenaica. Morris and Lett-Haines acquired the house in 1940 and ran it as the East An- glian School of Painting and Drawing – an art school famous for its links with the young Lucian Freud and Maggi Hambling. It was also a social hub: in the kitchen, Lett-Haines’ cousin, the food writer Elizabeth David, could be found at the stove, childrens’ author Kathleen Hale handed around platters – and, yes, the marmalade cat of her sto- ries looked on – while Lett-Haines mixed martinis and told stories of tiffs with Hemingway in 1920s Paris. To Blythe, then a shy young librar- ian, the atmosphere was “out of this world so far as I had previously tasted it. The generous ghosts at Rough and ready and fine mannered. Also faintly dangerous.” The sloping garden combined Mor- ris’s artist-bred irises with perhaps the most interesting collection of plants in post-war Britain. -
Talking About John Clare
TALKING ABOUT JOHN CLARE RONALD BLYTHE TRENT BOOKS 1 TALKING ABOUT JOHN CLARE 2 3 Ronald Blythe Talking About John Clare Trent Editions 1999 4 By the same author A Treasonable Growth Immediate Possession The Age of Illusion Akenfield The View in Winter From the Headlands Divine Landscapes The Stories of Ronald Blythe Private Words: Letters and Diaries from the Second World War Word from Wormingford Published by Trent Editions 1999 Trent Editions Department of English and Media Studies The Nottingham Trent University Clifton Lane Nottingham NG11 8NS Copyright (c) Ronald Blythe The cover illustration is a hand-tinted pen and ink drawing of Selborne, by John Nash, by kind permission of the John Nash Estate. The back cover portrait of Ronald Blythe is by Richard Tilbrook. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except by a newspaper or magazine reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review. Printed in Great Britain by Goaters Limited, Nottingham ISBN 0 905 488 44 X 5 CONTENTS PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ABBREVIATIONS AND PRINCIPAL SOURCES I. AN INHERITED PERSPECTIVE II. ‘SOLVITUR AMBULANDO’: CLARE AND FOOTPATH WALKING III.CLARE IN HIDING IV. CLARE IN POET’S CORNER, WESTMINSTER ABBEY V.CLARE’S TWO HUNDREDTH BIRTHDAY VI. THE DANGEROUS IDYLL VII.THE HELPSTON BOYS VIII. THOMAS HARDY AND JOHN CLARE IX.‘NOT VERSE NOW, ONLY PROSE!’ X.RIDER HAGGARD AND THE DISINTEGRATION OF CLARE’S WORLD XI. EDMUND BLUNDEN AND JOHN CLARE XII.PRESIDENTIAL FRAGMENTS XIII. KINDRED SPIRITS XIV. COMMON PLEASURES INDEX OF NAMES 6 For R.S. -
For More Information Visit Ngs.Org.Uk
Essex gardens open for charity, 2020 Supported by For more information APPROVED INSTALLER visit ngs.org.uk 2 ESSEX ESSEX 3 Your visits to our gardens help change lives M Nurseries rley (Wakering) Ltd. In 2019 the National Garden Scheme donated £3 million to nursing and For all your gardening health charities including: Needs……. Garden centre Macmillan tea room · breakfast Cancer Marie Curie Hospice UK Support lunch & afternoon tea roses · trees · shrubs £500,000 £500,000 £500,000 seasonal bedding sheds · greenhouses arbours · fencing · trellis The Queen’s Parkinson’s Carers Trust Nursing bbq’s · water features Institute UK swimming pool & £400,000 £250,000 £500,000 spa chemicals pet & aquatic accessories plus lots more Horatio’s Perennial Mind Garden £130,000 £100,000 £75,000 We open 9am to 5pm daily Morley Nurseries (Wakering) Ltd Southend Road, Great Wakering, Essex SS3 0PU Thank you Tel 01702 585668 To find out about all our Please visit our website donations visit ngs.org.uk/beneficiaries www.morleynurseries.com 4 ESSEX ESSEX 5 Open your garden with the National Garden Scheme You’ll join a community of individuals, all passionate about their gardens, and help raise money for nursing and health charities. Big or small, if your garden has quality, character and interest we’d love to hear from you to arrange a visit. Please call [name]us on Proudly supporting 01799on [number] 550553 or or send send an an email to [email protected] to [email address] Chartered Financial Planners specialising in private client advice on: Little helpers at Brookfield • Investments • Pensions • Inheritance Tax Planning • Long Term Care Tel: 0345 319 0005 www.faireyassociates.co.uk 1st Floor, Alexandra House, 36A Church Street Great Baddow, Chelmsford, Essex CM2 7HY Fairey Associates Limited is authorised and regulated by 6 ESSEX ESSEX 7 Symbols at the end of each garden CGarden accessible to coaches. -
20 English Gardens to See Before You Die May 20-30, 2020 Optional Pre-Extension: Chelsea Flower Show May 16-21, 2020
20 English Gardens To See Before You Die May 20-30, 2020 Optional Pre-Extension: Chelsea Flower Show May 16-21, 2020 Escorted by C. Colston Burrell England lays claim to some of the world’s most celebrated gardens and grand estates. Join C. Colston Burrell and Isabel Wrench to visit twenty of these iconic English gardens. Inspired by the book 1001 Gardens You Must See Before You Die, we will visit must-see gardens and stately country houses from London up to the Peak District of north central England. The tour includes grand gardens that have developed over centuries, scenic ruins, 20th century masterpieces, as well as contemporary gardens, both large and small. Destinations include storied properties made famous in books, television, and movies, such as Castle Howard, Blenheim Palace, Chatsworth, Tatton Park, Stowe, and Waterperry. Every gardener should see the Chelsea Flower Show at least once. The show has been a staple of the British social and cultural scene for nearly 150 years. The event, held on the grounds of London's Royal Hospital, is one of the largest and most celebrated flower shows in the world. This exclusive tour includes Royal Horticultural Society membership and admittance to the prestigious flower show on a members-only day. Before the show, travel through southeastern England with visits to private gardens and estates including Great Dixter, Sissinghurst, and Beth Chatto Gardens, before returning to London for the flower show! Main Tour Highlights • Walk in the footsteps of history through the iconic gardens of storied -
Catalogue 124: Natural History, Botany and Gardening
C. Arden, Bookseller Darren Bloodworth The Nursery, Forest Road, Hay-on-Wye, HR3 5DT, U.K. Tel: +44 (0) 1497-820471 Email: [email protected] Web: www.ardenbooks.co.uk Catalogue No. 124 – Sale, Special Offers and Recent Acquisitions Sale items : Botany 1 - 49 Entomology 50 - 77 Gardening 78 - 108 General 109 - 136 Natural History & Zoology 137 - 176 Ornithology 177 - 201 Special offers : Botany 202 - 284 and recent Entomology 285 - 321 acquisitions Fine, Illustrated & Antiquarian 322 - 343 Gardening 344 - 426 Natural History & Zoology 427 - 482 New Naturalists : Main Series 483 - 503 New Naturalists : Monographs 504 - 516 Ornithology 517 - 638 Marine 639 - 689 The stock in the Sale part of this catalogue (items 1 to 201) is an attempt to clear the remains of stock from the year’s previous catalogues. Book prices have already been reduced in many cases and further reductions are available to those who wish to take a risk that their chosen books will be available 10 or even 20 days after receiving this catalogue. Books will be dispatched once orders are complete – this may take up to three weeks if you order books at 50% off. How the Sale works First 10 days of sale…….All books available at prices shown in the catalogue After 10 days……………..If books are still available, we reduce their prices by 25% After 20 days……………..If books are still available, we reduce their prices by 50% We have also included almost five hundred Special offers and recent acquisitions at the end of the catalogue (items 202 to 689). These Special offers and recent acquisitions are available at the prices indicated and are not part of the Sale terms. -
Download Akenfield, Ronald Blythe, Penguin Books Limited, 2005
Akenfield, Ronald Blythe, Penguin Books Limited, 2005, 0141904704, 9780141904702, 288 pages. This colourful, perceptive portrayal of English country life reverberates with the voices of the village inhabitants, from the reminiscences of survivors of the Great War evoking days gone by, to the concerns of a younger generation of farm-workers and the fascinating and personal recollections of, among others, the local schoolteacher, doctor, blacksmith, saddler, district nurse and magistrate. Providing insights into farming, education, welfare, class, religion and death, Akenfield forms a unique document of a way of life that has, in many ways, disappeared.. DOWNLOAD HERE Suffolk , W. A. Dutt, Nov 22, 2012, Science, 146 pages. This guide to Suffolk by W. A. Dutt was first published in 1909 as part of the Cambridge County Geographies.. Word from Wormingford A Parish Year, Ronald Blythe, 2007, Language Arts & Disciplines, 244 pages. Canterbury Press is proud to have acquired these backlist Ronald Blythe titles, consisting of illustrated collections of the authors regular weekly column on the back page of .... Geography Of Nowhere The Rise And Declineof America'S Man-Made Landscape, James Howard Kunstler, Jul 26, 1994, Architecture, 303 pages. Argues that much of what surrounds Americans is depressing, ugly, and unhealthy; and traces America's evolution from a land of village commons to a man-made landscape that .... Life & tradition in Suffolk and north-east Essex , Norman Smedley, 1976, History, 159 pages. Voices of Akenfield , Ronald Blythe, Apr 2, 2009, Literary Collections, 144 pages. Born and brought up in rural Suffolk, Ronald Blythe was fascinated by the rhythms of country life and the stories of the people he had known since childhood. -
Graduation 2007 Acceptance Speech by Honorary Graduate Richard Mabey
Graduation 2007 Acceptance Speech by Honorary Graduate Richard Mabey Chancellor and Jules, thank you so much for those words. I am so proud to have got this honour from the University, not so much for myself but as a kind of recognition for the world I work in. As Jules so flatteringly outlined, I am not a biologist, I’m a nature writer, which I suppose crudely means I try to explore the relationships between the natural world and the human imagination rather than trying to examine it as a scientist. This had a long tradition in Britain in the 18th and 19th centuries with people like Gilbert White and Richard Jefferies but fell virtually into oblivion during the scientifically, and particularly technologically, tinted world of the inter-war years and the post-war years. It’s now thank goodness enjoying a timely renaissance because we need to learn how to engage with the natural world, not just to measure it and hope we can manage it in some way. But I am especially glad that this honour has come from this University in Essex, part of East Anglia, an area which those of us who live in it, regard with great regional pride. The four counties of Cambridge, Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex are a very odd and very fluent area, always slightly quirky, sticking as we do geographically like a heel out into the North Sea. East Anglia has always been at the nub of our changing relationships with the natural world. Most often it’s been crushed underfoot in the process.