Maddie Morris, the artist behind the exhibition, was inspired by James Herbert Draper's painting of Ulysses and the Sirens, ...
Hull City Council Maddie Morris with the painting by James Herbert Draper She added: "Art is able to tell so many different stories and I hope I'm able to do the same thing." The exhibition also ...
From a new Beatles mural being unveiled to an AI chatbot texting the city's carers, here are five Peterborough stories you ...
Conversations After Sex (30 April – 17 May) A sharp and unflinchingly honest play by Mark O’Halloran about unexpected encounters with anonymous strangers in hotel rooms, exploring themes of grief, ...
This year’s Valentine’s Swing Dance, an annual event put on by Santa Fe College, begins at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 14 in the lobby of ...
Park Theatre has unveiled a line up of theatre and comedy in its Summer and Autumn seasons, including shows set in Ireland, Japan and Italy, Edinburgh Festival Fringe hits, shows exploring the lives ...
TPG has compiled our annual list of the most exciting hotel openings, from new all-inclusive resorts to beautiful boutique ...
One of the many owners of editors of the Laramie Boomerang during the early part of its existence was James L ... A large mural by Wyoming artist Mike Kopriva dominates one wall in advertising ...
Imagine a place where the Wild West meets modern-day charm, perched precariously on a mountainside. Welcome to Jerome, ...
Assuming that on the contrary James did fulfill his task, in virtue of what other bent or bias does he espouse pluralism? The answer is, I think, the esthetic bent, the bias of the artist.
There is an 1881 print by the French artist James Tissot now showing at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto that depicts a fashionable woman relaxing in a garden on a summer evening. The Epiphany ...