Oeuvre d'art

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    • http://vocabularies.unesco.org/thesaurus/concept3103

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      Termes hiérarchiques

      Oeuvre d'art

      Terme générique Arts

      Oeuvre d'art

      Termes équivalents

      Oeuvre d'art

      • Employé pour Art objects
      • Employé pour Art works
      • Employé pour Artifacts
      • Employé pour Artefact
      • Employé pour Objet d'art
      • Employé pour Travail d'artiste
      • Employé pour Artefacto
      • Employé pour Objeto artístico
      • Employé pour Obra artística
      • Employé pour Trabajo de artista

      Termes associés

      Oeuvre d'art

      2 Notice d'autorité résultats pour Oeuvre d'art

      1 résultats directement liés Exclure les termes spécifiques
      Loadman Family of York
      GB0192-785 · Famille · 19th century - 20th century

      At least two generations of the Loadman family ran a shop initially at 5 College Street, then at 37 Stonegate and at Minster Gates, York, as a dealer in antiques, old china, furniture, and curios.

      The shop was started by Thomas Loadman between 1871 and 1881, and operated until at least the 1950s. Thomas Loadman was born in Helmsley in 1819 as the son of a brewer. He married Jane Sollitt in 1845 in York. Thomas Loadman worked as a gas inspector for most of his career and appears to have opened the shop as a dealer in old china alongside this role later in life with the support of his wife and children. Several of his children helped to run the shop and continued to run it after his death. This includes: Margaret Elizabeth Loadman, born 1847, who moved the shop to Stonegate after Thomas Loadman's death; Eugene Loadman, born c 1865; and Herbert Myers Loadman, born c 1873.

      York Scribes
      GB0192-779 · Collectivité · 1990-2023

      York Scribes was established as a group in 1990 to promote calligraphy, illumination, and lettering through informal meetings, lectures, workshops, and other events. The group was aimed at participants across North Yorkshire, both beginners and experienced calligraphers. Pauline Hall, a professional calligrapher, chaired the group for the first few years before being made Life President in 1996.

      An initial open meeting was held to gauge interest, which attracted 30 attendees. This group went on to establish the York Scribes and write a constitution. Membership later grew to, and stabilised at, around 60-70 members.

      The group was established with the support of the London based group the Society of Scribes and Illuminators and of the Bar Convent's education programme. Meetings and workshops were held at the Bar Convent until 1993.