Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Replaces a group of the same name installed here in 1991. The seated statue of Dr Salter was stolen in 2011, after which the figures of his daughter Joyce and her cat were taken into safekeeping by Southwark Council. [15] The new work includes an additional sculpture portraying Salter's wife, Ada. [16] Memorial to Albert Edward McKenzie
Southwark Fair is a 1733 genre painting and engraving by the British artist William Hogarth. The scene, which was first called simply "A Fair" and only later became associated with Southwark Fair, shows theatrical performances, musicians, a rope-dancer and other entertainers.
Art UK IWM 1 The Tanner Street Park Drinking Fountain: turret from St Olave church converted into drinking fountain in 1928, located in Southwark, London, England, UK 1738 1928 Henry Flitcroft: drinking fountain: Drinking Fountain, Tanner Street Park: 1385959: 2
A statue of poet John Keats is situated in an alcove in the grounds of Guy's Hospital in the Southwark district of London. It was sculpted by Stuart Williamson and unveiled in 2007. Keats was a trainee doctor at the hospital. [1]
Musical instruments, art, natural history, anthropology, African arts and culture, aquarium, gardens House of Dreams Museum: East Dulwich: Southwark: South East: Art: House turned into outsider art sculpture by former textile designer and art director Steven Wright House of Illustration: Kings Cross: Camden: North: Art
The statue of Alfred the Great in Southwark is thought to be London's oldest outdoor statue. The lower portion comes from a Roman statue dating to the late 1st or early 2nd century AD, while the top portion is a late 18th- or early 19th-century Coade stone addition in medieval style.
This is a list of public art in London, including statues, memorials, architectural sculptures and others, divided by London borough and the City of London. The City of London and the 32 London boroughs
An entrance to the Jerwood Space. Jerwood Space is an arts venue at Bankside on Union Street, Southwark, London. [1] The facilities include rehearsal studios, gallery/exhibition space, meeting rooms, a café, etc. Exhibits include contemporary art and photography throughout the building.