This is the gatehouse of a wonderful old building that was originally an alms house; the interior has been fully modernised and is now providing sheltered housing for infirm elderly people; it has beautiful gardens too for the residents to enjoy, naturally the waiting list to become a resident is very long. I do wish that I had ignored the shadow thrown by the building opposite the gate house when painting this, but maybe one day I will re-do it. I have a painting of part of the main garden that can be seen from outside the walls, I will submit this at a later date. All of my work is under copyright.
5 of 12 Comments Show All 12 Comments
margaret mckeehan 14 Aug 2008
LOVELYradfax radfax 17 Jul 2007
Another great piece, this style is most effective 10/10sheila stanley-powell 17 Jul 2007
this kind of reminds me of my dads old 2 room school house (he's 87 this year) which has now been converted into a tea shop. he took my son over a few years back and took him to see it. david was in total awe that they actually had schools that small (the one he went to at the time had 3 floors and close to 600 kids). growing up in canada has given him a completely different view of the planet and i like to show him images like this to let him know the varieties of living styles. he went back with me about 3 years back (he was then 14) and he got to see england how I remembered it from being there when i was 6 and 16 for long stretches. it's funny, for allthe many, many years it'd been since i was last there nothing really changes. here, you're gone for a month and a new housing survey has gone in in and they've torn down a couple of buildings and replace them with something else and you've no idea what was there before just that it's different. makes for very little history in comparison with the other side of the pond. oooh, but i do babble on.............. sorry.sheila stanley-powell 17 Jul 2007
this kind of reminds me of my dads old 2 room school house (he's 87 this year) which has now been converted into a tea shop. he took my son over a few years back and took him to see it. david was in total awe that they actually had schools that small (the one he went to at the time had 3 floors and close to 600 kids). growing up in canada has given him a completely different view of the planet and i like to show him images like this to let him know the varieties of living styles. he went back with me about 3 years back (he was then 14) and he got to see england how I remembered it from being there when i was 6 and 16 for long stretches. it's funny, for allthe many, many years it'd been since i was last there nothing really changes. here, you're gone for a month and a new housing survey has gone in in and they've torn down a couple of buildings and replace them with something else and you've no idea what was there before just that it's different. makes for very little history in comparison with the other side of the pond. oooh, but i do babble on.............. sorry.Jeanne Santiago 14 May 2007
Lovely!