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Sumner's earliest publications – The Itchen Valley from Tichbourne to Southampton (1881) and The Avon from Naseby to Tewkesbury (1882) – were illustrated with his own etchings, and in 1883 he was commissioned to illustrate an edition of John R. Wise's The New Forest. In the process of illustrating various children's books he developed a ...
The New Forest is drained to the south by three rivers, Lymington River, Beaulieu River and Avon Water, and to the west by the Latchmore Brook, Dockens Water, Linford Brook and other streams. The highest point in the New Forest is Pipers Wait, near Nomansland. Its summit is 129 metres (423 feet) above sea level. [39] [40]
The outbuildings behind Forest Heath House, as it was renamed, were occupied by ArtSway and later by SPUDworks. SPUD is a registered charity working in the field of art education. They have engaged in a number of art projects throughout the New Forest, such as the Exbury Egg and an anti-litter sculpture.
The London exhibition featured Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists whose work used ink, pigment and pastels created from ash and charcoal left by Amazon wildfires.
The Forest Arts Centre is at the end of Old Milton Road. It comprises several exhibition and activity rooms, a bar area and the main 150-seat studio theatre. It hosts a wide range of performances, including multi-genre music, theatre, comedy, dance, films, literature - as well as putting on an array of activities and workshops for people in the ...
Harry "Brusher" Mills (born Henry Mills, 19 March 1840 – 1 July 1905), was a hermit and snake catcher, resident in the New Forest in Hampshire, England. His way of life made him a local celebrity and an attraction for visitors to the New Forest.
While their long-term goal is to create their glass forest arts and events destination, in the meantime they're settling for an event featuring just one glass tree — a Christmas tree that is the ...
Alan Sonfist (born March 26, 1946 [1]) is a New York City based American artist best known as a "pioneer" [2] and a "trailblazer" [2] of the Land or Earth Art movement. [3]He first gained prominence for his "Time Landscape" found on the corner of West Houston Street and LaGuardia Place in New York City's Greenwich Village.