wordsincompany.wordpress.com
To the North | Words in company
https://wordsincompany.wordpress.com/2011/04/01/to-the-north
Words, brave books, impassioned reading and other sources of solace. A few of the latest…. How did they bury them all? In Times Like These. The Cook’s Tale. Come to the Feast. The word is given a body…. The Principle of Camouflage. First World War poetry. How to be a cook. The Women's Library. Laquo; No temple but the wood. The Principle of Camouflage ». April 1, 2011. The view from the hill – photograph by Liz Mathews. Recently I wrote about Gillian Tindall’s classic. A walk round Camden. Gillian Tindal...
wordsincompany.wordpress.com
Come to the Feast | Words in company
https://wordsincompany.wordpress.com/2012/05/21/come-to-the-feast
Words, brave books, impassioned reading and other sources of solace. A few of the latest…. How did they bury them all? In Times Like These. The Cook’s Tale. Come to the Feast. The word is given a body…. The Principle of Camouflage. First World War poetry. How to be a cook. The Women's Library. Laquo; Trespassers W. The Cook’s Tale ». Come to the Feast. May 21, 2012. The Prospect of Happiness – paperwork by Liz Mathews. This beautiful work (with text from my book. The Principle of Camouflage. The exhibiti...
a-n.co.uk
Towards The Dunkirk Project « a-n The Artists Information Company
https://www.a-n.co.uk/link/towards-dunkirk
On this site both for essential site functionality, and to better understand our audience. Please read our Privacy Policy. Towards The Dunkirk Project. Towards The Dunkirk Project. For the last year I’ve been engaged with the largest single work I’ve ever made – a free-standing hand-made paper sculpture, 1 metre high and 17 metres long, constructed in the form of a huge concertina book, called Thames to Dunkirk. At http:/ thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com. I’m very pleased to be able to conclude this...
wordsincompany.wordpress.com
The Cook’s Tale | Words in company
https://wordsincompany.wordpress.com/2013/09/07/the-cooks-tale
Words, brave books, impassioned reading and other sources of solace. A few of the latest…. How did they bury them all? In Times Like These. The Cook’s Tale. Come to the Feast. The word is given a body…. The Principle of Camouflage. First World War poetry. How to be a cook. The Women's Library. Laquo; Come to the Feast. In Times Like These ». The Cook’s Tale. September 7, 2013. Exchange cup – photograph by Liz Mathews. In exchange for a china teacup (number 85 of Clare Twomey’s installation Exchange.
wordsincompany.wordpress.com
How did they bury them all? | Words in company
https://wordsincompany.wordpress.com/2014/08/04/how-did-they-bury-them-all
Words, brave books, impassioned reading and other sources of solace. A few of the latest…. How did they bury them all? In Times Like These. The Cook’s Tale. Come to the Feast. The word is given a body…. The Principle of Camouflage. First World War poetry. How to be a cook. The Women's Library. Laquo; In Times Like These. Flying over Bloomsbury ». How did they bury them all? August 4, 2014. Wild poppies – photo by Liz Mathews. The first is Neil Astley’s new Bloodaxe anthology. The Hundred Years’ War,.
thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com
The Dunkirk Project | The Dunkirk Project
https://thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com/the-dunkirk-project-2
An interactive installation by Liz Mathews. Second edition, fully revised for 2015. Imagine a river of stories flowing through time. In the river are all our stories, those we live and those we imagine, all in the same river. 75 years ago in May 1940, thousands of people shared a story that has become one of our national legends. The Nine Days Wonder,. In Which We Serve. And Richard Eurich’s. Online has two elements: first Thames to Dunkirk. Many thousands of people saw Thames to Dunkirk. 8211; which hav...
thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com
2nd June 1940 – Tatter’d colours | The Dunkirk Project
https://thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com/the-dunkirk-project-2/the-dunkirk-project/2nd-june-1940-tatterd-colours
An interactive installation by Liz Mathews. 2nd June 1940 – Tatter’d colours. About an hour after the setting of the sun. Captain Anthony Rhodes, 253 Field Company Royal Engineers, from Max Arthur’s. In the account of this day. Commander Clouston had been of the utmost service in helping the escape of nearly two hundred thousand men under frightful conditions of strain and danger. It was a grief to many that he did not live to see the lifting brought to an end. Even though they must have known. Her broth...
thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com
3rd June 1940 – Towards the end | The Dunkirk Project
https://thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com/2015/06/03/3rd-june-1940-towards-the-end
An interactive installation by Liz Mathews. 26th May 1940 – A very tight corner. 27th May 1940 – An extraordinary armada. 28th May 1940 – Out there. 29th May 1940 – Nightmare. 30th May 1940 – The view from the air. 31st May 1940 – Lovely on the water. 1st June 1940 – Homeward. 2nd June 1940 – Tatter’d colours. 3rd June 1940 – Towards the end. 4th June 1940 – Beyond Dunkirk. BG Bonallack, Virginia Woolf’s diary and the making of Thames to Dunkirk. Dunkirk Phossils by Charlie Bonallack. C) Words in Company.
thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com
1st June 1940 – Homeward | The Dunkirk Project
https://thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com/2015/06/01/1st-june-1940-homeward
An interactive installation by Liz Mathews. 26th May 1940 – A very tight corner. 27th May 1940 – An extraordinary armada. 28th May 1940 – Out there. 29th May 1940 – Nightmare. 30th May 1940 – The view from the air. 31st May 1940 – Lovely on the water. 1st June 1940 – Homeward. 2nd June 1940 – Tatter’d colours. 3rd June 1940 – Towards the end. 4th June 1940 – Beyond Dunkirk. BG Bonallack, Virginia Woolf’s diary and the making of Thames to Dunkirk. Dunkirk Phossils by Charlie Bonallack. C) Words in Company.
thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com
28th May 1940 – Out there | The Dunkirk Project
https://thedunkirkproject.wordpress.com/2015/05/28/28th-may-1940-out-there
An interactive installation by Liz Mathews. 26th May 1940 – A very tight corner. 27th May 1940 – An extraordinary armada. 28th May 1940 – Out there. 29th May 1940 – Nightmare. 30th May 1940 – The view from the air. 31st May 1940 – Lovely on the water. 1st June 1940 – Homeward. 2nd June 1940 – Tatter’d colours. 3rd June 1940 – Towards the end. 4th June 1940 – Beyond Dunkirk. BG Bonallack, Virginia Woolf’s diary and the making of Thames to Dunkirk. Dunkirk Phossils by Charlie Bonallack. C) Words in Company.
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