AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
Fully booked3/12/2023 If it turns cold, wet or windy and we’re full indoors it means we have nowhere dry, warm and comfortable to move you to. Please do not call asking to book outdoors we will not be able to book a table for you. Outdoor tables (offered on a first come, first served basis) may be available. None are held back for bookings by telephone or email. If you have tried to book a table online and found nothing, it really does mean there are no tables available. We are now fully booked on Tuesdays and Wednesdays in August and are closed on Mondays. Thank you to all who have already enjoyed Buon Apps and who have reservations during the remainder of August. Well it has certainly done that! We have been overwhelmed by the interest and demand. Sheffield Life and Times gallery at Weston Park Museum.The Eat Out to Help Out Scheme was introduced in August to encourage people to return to restaurants in the post-lockdown period. ![]() What on Earth gallery at Weston Park Museum. Sheffield Life and Times gallery at Weston Park Museum. This talk is part of a programme of events complementing the exhibition Beyond Bloomsbury: Life, Love and Legacy, which is open at the Millennium Gallery until Sunday 13 February 2022.īeneath Your Feet gallery at Weston Park Museum. ‘Sitwellism’ and the Bloomsbury Group shared similar principles on the one hand but fulfilled these in very different ways.īehind the Façade: The Sitwells Revealed is an invitation to learn more about Edith, Osbert and Sacheverell Sitwell and to gain some insight into their often-complicated links with their equally complex fellow writers and artists in the Bloomsbury Set.Īfter a decade of working in Renishaw’s private family archive, Chris Beevers will use images, letters, and stories never intended for publication, to present a fresh and entertaining narrative of the Sitwell ‘trio’, or this ‘nest of tigers’ as Edith described themselves, adding to the current exhibition’s welcome spotlight on the Bloomsbury’s often overlooked peers. They are as interesting for who they knew - friends and enemies - as for their literary output. So, who were Edith, Osbert and Sacheverell Sitwell, and how significant were their cultural contributions? From Avant Garde poets to cultural crusaders, art collecting to patronage across the arts, ‘eccentric’ exhibitionists to national treasures, the Sitwells certainly divided opinion. Their individual careers spanned more than half a century, during periods of immense social and cultural change in Britain.Īlmost 100 years on from the Sitwells’ explosive arrival on the British literary scene in the 1920s, the interest and appreciation of their work has faded, while their public personas continue to fascinate. Renishaw Hall, a mere 10 miles from the Millennium Gallery in Sheffield, is the ancestral home of the Sitwell ‘literary trio’ of Edith, Osbert and Sacheverell.
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |