Travel

FIVE SHADES OF ENGLISH CREATIVITY – From Sheffield to Canterbury, together with two painters and two writers, listening to music by Bring Me the Horizon

Trasforming your life into a true masterpiece.

Everyone can express their creative part, even giving life to travel experiences. It is possible to create something unique even following your special art itinerary, including original and precious masterpieces, reading novels and poems of those born in that latitude. Experiencing the travel experience with an artistic spirit means adding meaning to your life, transforming your life into a true masterpiece.

England https://www.roughguides.com/destinations/europe/england/ is not just its capital. The art itinerary that we present also includes other cities to visit, such as Canterbury and Ashford, Bexley and Sheffield. Only in the second part of our journey in English creativity will you know the city of the Queen and of the ancient tradition, the place where innovation and modernity are contrasted. Together with us you will also sniff beer in a Sheffield pub, reading a novel by Rana Dasgupta.

Sheffield was famed for its industry, and remains a city of innovation to this day. Beer is you thing? You’re inside the birthplace of the UK craft beer revolution. Here you can find round 400 different beers, to try in the city’s rustic pubs. A perfect and snug beer getaway? The Bath Hotel, for its remarkable tiled interior, houses six hand pulled ales (and three rotating Thornbridge Brewery kegs). Among those who drink beer here, you can find those of “Bring Me the Horizon”, a musical band.

This is a musical group formed in 2004 in Sheffield (Yorkshire). At the beginning of their career the BRING ME THE HORIZON music contained death metal and emo influences. After rehearsals and concerts, they signed a record deal and released their debut EP. Having a Myspace account with their songs helped the band grow their crowds of fans, but their popularity is also due to their particular outfit, created by Oliver Sykes.

In the early thirties, while occupying a studio on the first floor of her Chelsea home, COLIN UNWIN GILL had an affair with a Great War heroine and writer. Looking for “King Alfred’s Longships Defeat the Danes, 877”? Entering at the Parliamentary Art Collection (Palace of Westminster, in London), you can admire his 1925-1927 oil on canvas.

His work is held in the Tate Gallery and the Imperial War Museum. Decorative and genre painter, COLIN UNWIN GILL was a cousin of the sculptor and printmaker Eric Gill. He died in South Africa in 1940, while working on a series of murals for the Magistrates Court in Johannesburg. In May 1918, he offered his services as a war artist but initially was turned down and continued to work as a camouflage instructor. If you wish admire his 1921 painting “Cliffs at Beer, Devon”, you can enter at the UCL Art Museum, in London. COLIN UNWIN GILL was born at Bexleyheath (Kent), and studied at the Slade School of Art. At the start of World War I he served on the Western Front, until he was back to England with gas poisoning in 1918. His first exhibited in 1914, and he showed works at the Royal Academy. He also taught painting at the Royal College of Art.

The composition of his paintings, immersed in silence, often offers you a human figure always taken in his own thoughts. NIGEL VAN WIECK was born in the Unitied Kingdom in Bexley (Kent), in 1949. He received his training at the Hornsey College of Art in London. After initial artistic works, he turned to the Kinetic Art. Eventually, he began to experiment with light (particularly neon light). After studying in Europe, he understood how to develop his own world. In the United States, when he was struck by the American realist style of Eakins and Homer’s paintings.

Ashford, a town in the county of Kent, it lies on the River Great Stour, about 61 miles (98 km) southeast of central London. Its St Mary’s Church, has been a landmark since the 13th century, and now it functions as a centre for worship and entertainment. In St Georges Square, near the town centre, a Mk. IV tank (used in World War I), was presented to the town on 1919 to thank the townsfolk for their war efforts. The list of people from Ashford include the poet John Fuller.

JOHN FULLER is a poettic significant presence in British letters. His Collection Poems were published in 1996. He also wrote the love lyrics for Nicola LeFanu’s “The Tongue and the Heart” (for soprano and cello). To date, he has written tender love lyrics and elegant songs, but also philosophical meditations. He has really led a prolific writing career, publishing collections of poetry.

It lies on the River Stour. Its Archbishop is the primate of the Church of England. You are inside the fabulous district of Canterbury, where you can book your accommodation (also online). Here you can find events, or choose somewhere to eat, discovering fantastic tourist attractions. Fine art, clothing, crafts and antiques are some of the offerings. Canterbury’s Whitefriars, brings you the best in fashion, with popular high street names. Westgate and St Dunstan are a stone’s throw away, offering a range of outlets. People born in Canterbury include writer Rana Dasgupta.

He was born in Canterbury, inside a 1971 November’sday. RANA DASGUPTA is a British Indian novelist. He is currently working on a book about a proposed crisis of the nation-state system. As he say, now is the time of monsters. What comes after nations? One his book (Tokyo Cancelled, an examination of the experiences of globalisation), was shortlisted for the 2005 John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. Among the prizes won, you can find the Commonwealth Prize. The Daily Telegraph, in 2010, called him one of Britain’s best novelists.

The intellectual property of the images that appear in this blog correspond to their authors. The sole purpose of this site, is to spread the knowledge of these artists and that other people enjoy their works. To pursue this issue, you can digit: http://meetingbenches.com/2018/02/traveling-pictures-england-artistic-creativity/

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