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Books > Travel > Travel & holiday guides > Museum, historic sites, gallery & art guides
Follow in the footsteps of Anne Boleyn from Hever Castle, to
Richmond Palace and ultimately to the Tower of London. On the
morning of 19 May 1536, a French blade stilled the heart of an
English queen. Her name was Anne Boleyn and her story has made an
indelible mark on history. This book will take you through stately
homes, castles, chapels and artefacts with a connection to Anne.
Explore Hever Castle, Anne's childhood home where two breathtaking
Books of Hours both signed and inscribed by Anne Boleyn herself are
housed; visit Thornbury Castle where Henry VIII and Anne stayed
during their 1535 royal progress and see the octagonal bedchamber
where they slept; stand in the very room in Windsor Castle where
Anne was made Marquis of Pembroke. Each location is covered by an
accessible and informative narrative, which unearths the untold
stories and documents the artefacts. Accompanied by an extensive
range of images, including photographs, floor plans and sketches,
this book brings the sixteenth century vividly to life - and takes
you on your own personal and compelling journey in the footsteps of
Anne Boleyn.
Including handy maps and photographs, this illustrated guide tells
the story behind the many and varied plaques to be found adorning
buildings, monuments, and statues around the university city of
Oxford. This is a unique publication, featuring the lives of the
amazing Oxford men and women whose contributions to the arts and
the sciences, as well as to the greater good of mankind, are
commemorated around the city. Impeccably researched, this
comprehensive book by an Oxford Blue Badge Guide provides a fresh
and enlightening insight into the lives of such luminaries as
J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Isaiah Berlin, and Jane Morris, to name
but a few. With fascinating biographical anecdotes on the eminent
personalities to whom the plaques are dedicated, it will delight
visitors and residents alike.
One of the most visited sites in Italy, the Roman Forum is also
one of the best-known wonders of the Roman world. Though a
highpoint on the tourist route around Rome, for many visitors the
site can be a baffling disappointment. Several of the monuments
turn out to be nineteenth- or twentieth-century reconstructions,
while the rubble and the holes made by archaeologists have an
unclear relationship to the standing remains, and, to all but the
most skilled Romanists, the Forum is an unfortunate mess.
David Watkin sheds completely new light on the Forum, examining
the roles of the ancient remains while revealing what exactly the
standing structures embody--including the rarely studied medieval,
Renaissance, and Baroque churches, as well as the nearby monuments
that have important histories of their own. Watkin asks the reader
to look through the veneer of archaeology to rediscover the site as
it was famous for centuries. This involves offering a remarkable
and engaging new vision of a well-visited, if often misunderstood,
wonder. It will be enjoyed by readers at home and serve as a guide
in the Forum.
"I don't compose pictures, I find them in the colors, patterns, and
shadows of the trees in front of me. While I walk, I let my
feelings well up in my consciousness. My feelings guide me to find
what I'm seeing and feeling and distill it into a picture." A
beloved and popular Illinois institution, The Morton Arboretum
welcomes one million annual visitors to walk its trails and view
the 4,200 tree species on the grounds. Peter Vagt has photographed
the Arboretum for over twenty years. This collection showcases
eighty-five of his favorite works, each one in full color. Vagt's
close attention to place and time reflects both his profound
connection to the Arboretum and its preeminence as a sanctuary for
anyone in search of transcendence in nature. A celebration of The
Morton Arboretum in its centenary year, Light Through the Trees is
the perfect keepsake or gift for anyone who admires trees and
believes in their restorative power.
Focusing on the architecture of Whitechapel Gallery - as an
outstanding example of the Arts and Crafts Movement and as the site
of an innovative expansion - this publication includes an analysis
and photographic record of the building design, with essays by
William Mann, Stephen Escritt, and a roundtable discussion between
architects and artists involved in the project.
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Gallipoli Diary 1915
(Paperback)
Alec Riley; Edited by Michael Crane, Bernard de Broglio
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R721
R648
Discovery Miles 6 480
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During a career that spanned more than fifty years, two continents,
and work in many media, Man Ray (1890-1976) produced a large body
of photographic images that continue to command our attention. This
volume presents his early work in New York in the 1910s, selections
from his sizeable Paris oeuvre in the 20s, 30s, and 50s, and
photographs taken during his time in Hollywood in the 40s. Though
in later years he expressed a desire to be remembered as a painter,
Man Ray continued to work with photography throughout his life,
pushing the boundaries of the medium with cameraless images,
solarized portraits, and other innovations.
The Getty Museum's collection of three hundred works by Man Ray
includes vintage prints from the 1910s through the 1960s. This
volume presents more than fifty photographs, with commentary on
each image by Katherine Ware, assistant curator of photographs at
the J. Paul Getty Museum. The volume also includes an overview of
his life and the edited transcript of a symposium on his career.
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