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Henry Davis wins the Guild Outstanding Service Award for his role in negotiating health care benefits.
The Guild Inn art show of 2006 was my first major photography project. The art was superb, the people interesting and the grounds stone works and statues were incredible. I took so many photos that I just got around to editing them. Enjoy.
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Down, But Not Out
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The guild of fishermen was charged with defending this part of the Vár in the middle ages but the bastion is late nineteenth century. It is essentially a decorative viewing platform for the fantastic view across the river and a foil for the Mátyás Church. It has seven turrets representing seven Magyar tribes.
The Guild Inn art show of 2006 was my first major photography project. The art was superb, the people interesting and the grounds stone works and statues were incredible. I took so many photos that I just got around to editing them. Enjoy.
If you have an event to record or need other photography services or would like to purchase a print of one of my works please contact me at...
ronzig@rogers.com
View my all new website about poverty, homelessness & addiction...
Down, But Not Out
View my all new portfolio, references & upcoming shows website...
ronzigsportfolio.synthasite.com/
All rights reserved
Go to Page 34 in the Internet Archive
Title: The guilds of Florence
Creator: Staley, Edgcumbe, 1845- n 87819484
Publisher: London : Methuen & co
Sponsor: Wellcome Library
Contributor: Wellcome Library
Date: 1906
Language: eng
Bibliography: p. 585-599
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
Read/Download from the Internet Archive
Very little is known about the still-life painter Adriaen Coorte. He belonged to the Coorte family of IJzendijke, a small town near the Dutch city of Middelburg. The Coortes were a relatively well-off family who, according to land registers from the period, owned many of the dikes and polders surrounding the town. Although Adriaen’s birth date is not precisely documented, records of his siblings’ births and deaths suggest he was born between 1659 and 1664.[1] Information concerning his artistic training is similarly elusive. His earliest known painting dates to 1683, by which time he would have been between 20 and 24 years old.[2] Coorte may well have continued to live in his home town, as he eventually inherited two IJzendijke polders from his parents. Based on the fact that many of his paintings appeared in sale catalogues and inventories in Middleburg in the eighteenth century, it seems probable that he worked in proximity to that city. In 1695–1696, the Middelburg Guild of Saint Luke fined Coorte one Flemish pound for selling paintings as an unregistered master, suggesting he was active within the city, even if he did not keep a permanent residence there.[3] In any event, he must not have been well known within the guild, as guild records misspell his last name and entirely omit his first name. Coorte continued to be associated with the area after his death. An estate inventory from 1783 makes note of “a flower piece by Coorde of Vlissingen,” a community located just to the south of Middelburg.[4]
Coorte’s paintings, which number about one hundred, consist primarily of high-quality, small-scale still lifes depicting fruit, vegetables, flowers, shells, wild game, and vanitas subjects on a ledge or in a niche, arranged against a dark background. His latest known work dates to 1707. Descriptions of his work that survive from the early eighteenth century suggest that he was held in high esteem at the time.[5] In spite of this, Coorte’s name was virtually forgotten until the 1950s, when his artistic qualities were newly recognized by the Dutch art historian Lawrence Bol.
The Guild Inn art show of 2006 was my first major photography project. The art was superb, the people interesting and the grounds stone works and statues were incredible. I took so many photos that I just got around to editing them. Enjoy.
If you have an event to record or need other photography services or would like to purchase a print of one of my works please contact me at...
ronzig@rogers.com
View my all new website about poverty, homelessness & addiction...
Down, But Not Out
View my all new portfolio, references & upcoming shows website...
ronzigsportfolio.synthasite.com/
All rights reserved
Built in the 14th century, as the Guild of St Mary. It now acts as a museum and also the town's council chamber.
This was a gift art from the Feeders of Stein's guild members, Battery Acid Included or BAI for short. She drew this for me in the guild's event called Steinmas: The Best Kind of Holiday on gaia. She did a great job with them.
Piik Tanav 17, Tallinn. The Guild was founded fro Talllin's merchants and artisans and the building was erected in 1407-1410. It now houses the Estonian History Museum.
Photos from May The Fourth Be With You screening of Empire Strikes Back at the Guild Cinema presented by New Mexico Entertainment magazine
Photos from May The Fourth Be With You screening of Empire Strikes Back at the Guild Cinema presented by New Mexico Entertainment magazine
Saint Nicholas' Church, with its distinctive Scheldt Gothic style, stands as a testament to Ghent's medieval past. Constructed in the early 13th century, it replaced an earlier Romanesque church and was built using blue-gray stone from Tournai.
Its central tower, once an observation post with town bells, contributes to Ghent's iconic skyline alongside the belfry and Saint Bavo Cathedral. The church's rich history is intertwined with the city's trade heritage, reflected in the guild chapels added in the 14th and 15th centuries.