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	<title>The Bookroom Art Press News &#187; Newsletters</title>
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		<title>Bookroom Art Press Newsletter &#8211; Spring 2010 &#8211; Issue 2</title>
		<link>http://www.news.bookroomartpress.co.uk/2010/02/bookroom-art-press-newsletter-spring-2010-issue-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.news.bookroomartpress.co.uk/2010/02/bookroom-art-press-newsletter-spring-2010-issue-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Feb 2010 16:12:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Darion</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Newsletters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.news.bookroomartpress.co.uk/?p=21</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[New Limited Edition Art Prints
This year promises to be one full of changes and many new prints on offer. The first of these are prints by two artists, Winifred Nicholson and Alfred Wallis. As always there are connections between these and our existing artists (Ravilious/Bawden/Nash etc), both in biographical terms &#8211; they knew each other, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>New Limited Edition Art Prints</strong></p>
<p>This year promises to be one full of changes and many new prints on offer. The first of these are prints by two artists, Winifred Nicholson and Alfred Wallis. As always there are connections between these and our existing artists (Ravilious/Bawden/Nash etc), both in biographical terms &#8211; they knew each other, but also to a certain extent in their artistic influences – particularly Wallis on Winifred Nicholson.</p>
<p><strong>Winifred Nicholson</strong> – Penstemons. Limited Edition (1/500). (RRP) £190.00</p>
<p><img src="http://www.kemptownbookshop.netspacehosting.co.uk/userfiles/penstemons.jpg" alt="Penstemons" width="300" height="315" /></p>
<p><strong>Winifred Nicholson – Cineraria &amp; Cyclamen. Limited Edition (1/500). (RRP) £190.00</strong><br />
<img src="http://www.kemptownbookshop.netspacehosting.co.uk/userfiles/cineraria-and-cyclamen.jpg" alt="Cineraria and Cyclamen" width="300" height="315" /></p>
<p>Nicholson first exhibited these works (above) in April 1927, in a shared exhibition with Ben Nicholson, Christopher Wood and the potter     William Staite Murray at the Beaux Arts Gallery. An anonymous Times reviewer wrote of the exhibition: ‘Mrs. Nicholson is the only one of the three painters     who strikes one as being perfectly ingenuous…….there is an April spirit in her work….In her flower paintings the escape from realism into   a   new reality, as lovely as that of Nature and charged with human feeling, is complete.</p>
<p><strong>Alfred Wallis</strong> – Three Sailing Boats in a Line. Limited Edition (1/750). Price £130.00</p>
<p><img src="http://www.kemptownbookshop.netspacehosting.co.uk/userfiles/alfred-wallis-three-sailing-boats-in-a-line.jpg" alt="3 sailing boats" width="300" height="166" /></p>
<p>Oil on paper. There is a spare beauty to this print. These are small luggers of a kind Wallis knew well. After his journeys crossing the     Atlantic on larger brigantines and schooners Wallis found employment on these inshore fishermen’s boats. They sailed from Mounts Bay in Cornwall in search     of seasonal staples – mackerel in the summer, and pilchards and herring in the winter.</p>
<p><strong>Alfred Wallis</strong> &#8211; Lighthouse with Trawler and Fish. Limited Edition (1/750). Price £145.00</p>
<p><img src="http://www.kemptownbookshop.netspacehosting.co.uk/userfiles/alfred-wallis-lighthouse-with-trawler.jpg" alt="lighthouse" width="300" height="256" /></p>
<p>Oil on board. This print contains many of the aspects for which Wallis is now famous: a lighthouse, a fishing boat, the hint of a pier and     – central in importance – the fish. Wallis gave disproportionate sizes to the things in his paintings he found most interesting. Here the fish are     most important. Wallis once remarked to a critic writing about his paintings that when he worked as a fisherman on the luggers sailing from Mounts Bay,     ‘each boat of the fleet had a soul, a beautiful soul shaped like a fish’. (Albert Rowe, The Boy and the Painter, Studio International, 1968; p29)</p>
<p><strong>About Winifred Nicholson and Alfred Wallis</strong></p>
<p>Winifred Nicholson was the first wife of Ben Nicholson, the renowned British artist best known as a pioneer of abstract art and son of     William Nicholson, the creator of the Velveteen Rabbit images we already publish (see Prints – William Nicholson). The two prints we offer by Winifred     Nicholson are representative of her work: she painted flowers on a ledge or windowsill; but hers are more than simple flower depictions – she captured, in     terms of content, something quintessential, but colour, luminosity and the play of light also characterize her work and in this, too, these prints are     representative.</p>
<p>Winifred Nicholson knew Alfred Wallis – the second artist whose work we now publish. The two met in St. Ives, Cornwall, where she,     Ben Nicholson and Christopher Wood went on holiday and to work in the 1930’s. Winifred was fascinated by Wallis’s direct or ‘primitive’     approach, and indeed he influenced her, not only by this approach, but also in terms of content – she collected his boat paintings and depicted a Wallis     drawing in one of hers (Autumn Flowers on Mantelpiece, c 1932).</p>
<p>Regular customers will know that we now sell all of our prints bespoke framed. (See <a href="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/about">About Us</a> on the site). This has been very successful and, of course, you can also purchase the new Winifred     Nicholson and Alfred Wallis prints framed.</p>
<p>As always Trade Enquiries are welcome – see also <a href="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/about">About Us</a> on the site for more     on these.</p>
<p>We’ll be adding many more images as the year progresses, so please do keep visiting.</p>
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		<title>Bookroom Art Press Newsletter &#8211; Autumn 2009 &#8211; Issue 1</title>
		<link>http://www.news.bookroomartpress.co.uk/2009/09/bookroom-art-press-newsletter-autumn-2009-issue-1/</link>
		<comments>http://www.news.bookroomartpress.co.uk/2009/09/bookroom-art-press-newsletter-autumn-2009-issue-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Sep 2009 15:30:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Darion</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Newsletters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.news.bookroomartpress.co.uk/?p=14</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Newly designed Website:
Before mentioning our newly published Limited Edition Prints we should mention the launch of our newly designed website. We’ve made navigation much easier and added a lot more information on the processes used; we’ve included illustrations, too, on the hand-numbering and embossing that we use on our prints, and on the framing options [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Newly designed Website:</strong></p>
<p>Before mentioning our newly published Limited Edition Prints we should mention the launch of our newly designed website. We’ve made navigation much easier and added a lot more information on the processes used; we’ve included illustrations, too, on the hand-numbering and embossing that we use on our prints, and on the framing options now available.</p>
<p><strong>New Prints:</strong></p>
<p>We are very pleased to have secured the exclusive rights to print the Eric Ravilious High Street images – all 24 of them. These lithographs were initially created by Ravilious for a book on shops, and published by Country Life Books just before the war in 1938. Very few of the books were actually printed, the war intervened, and the lithographic plates were completely destroyed in the Blitz. The images themselves are exquisite. John Piper (previewing the work in ‘Signature’, 1937) wrote of them:</p>
<p>‘Ravilious is a particularly English artist….there is probably no-one else who could have made these records at once so faithfully and imaginatively. There is about them the suggestion that you are looking in at a series of gay, old-fashioned parties from the matter-of-fact street in the present. They are records of a passing beauty, but they are full of present-day experience. And they are faithful enough to look like tuck-shops full of sherbert, liquorice and lollipops – which, after all, is one of the chief appeals of the attractive shop’.</p>
<p>The High Street prints are sold with or without a frame: if you purchase without a frame, the print comes to you wrapped with an archival ph neutral mount, cost £65.00. If you purchase with a frame – either the elegant matt-black or English oak frame – the cost is £113.00. And there are no additional postal charges for either framed or unframed prints sent to you.</p>
<p><strong>Eric Ravilious High Street images:</strong></p>
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<td width="170"><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-knife-grinder.jpg" alt="" /></td>
<td width="170"><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-public-house.jpg" alt="" /></td>
<td width="170"><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-naturalist.jpg" alt="" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Knife Grinder</td>
<td>Public House</td>
<td>Naturalist</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-clerical-outfitter.jpg" alt="" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-undertaker.jpg" alt="" width="131" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-cheesemonger_1.jpg" alt="" width="91" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Letter Makers</td>
<td>Undertaker</td>
<td>Cheesemonger</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-coach-builder.jpg" alt="" width="92" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-baker-and-confectioner.jpg" alt="" width="91" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-fire-engineer.jpg" alt="" width="105" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Coach Builder</td>
<td>Baker And Confectioner</td>
<td>Fire Engineer</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-model-ships.jpg" alt="" width="106" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-saddlers-and-harness-makers.jpg" alt="" width="82" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-submarine-engineer.jpg" alt="" width="140" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Model Ships</td>
<td>Saddlers And Harness Makers</td>
<td>Submarine Engineer</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-fireworks.jpg" alt="" width="141" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-oyster-bar.jpg" alt="" width="81" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-theatrical-properties.jpg" alt="" width="119" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Fireworks</td>
<td>Oyster Bar</td>
<td>Theatrical Properties</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-pharmaceutical-chemist.jpg" alt="" width="94" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-hams.jpg" alt="" width="89" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-second-hand-furniture.jpg" alt="" width="103" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Pharmaceutical Chemist</td>
<td>Hams</td>
<td>Second Hand Furniture</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-restaurant-and-grill-room.jpg" alt="" width="102" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-amusement-arcade.jpg" alt="" width="152" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-letter-maker.jpg" alt="" width="126" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Restaurant And Grill Room</td>
<td>Amusement Arcade</td>
<td>Letter Maker</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-wedding-cakes.jpg" alt="" width="110" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-family-butcher.jpg" alt="" width="106" height="145" /></td>
<td><img src="http://www.bookroomartpress.co.uk/uploads/tn_eric-ravilious-hardware.jpg" alt="" width="79" height="145" /></td>
</tr>
<tr height="50" valign="top">
<td>Wedding Cakes</td>
<td>Family Butcher</td>
<td>Hardware</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
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