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“It was a complete surprise,” says Christina Faraday, a Cambridge art historian who specializes in Tudor visual and material culture, to BBC Radio Cambridgeshire’s Louise Hulland.
A Cowtown native makes his return to the city with a robust art collection and a top-to-bottom makeover of a 1930s Tudor.
An unassuming Tudor hunting lodge in the Cumbrian district in the U.K. just gave up a wild secret: rare wall paintings from the 16th century that depict a host of truly fantastical beasts.
ENGLAND—During renovations at a former Tudor hunting lodge known as The Ashes, which is located in Inglewood Forest, Cumbria, workers exposed rare sixteenth-century wall paintings, according to ...
Rare 16th-century Tudor wall paintings have been uncovered during renovations at The Ashes, a historic hunting lodge in Cumbria. Owners Jen and Richard Arkell stumbled upon the intricate wall ...
The paintings were created using a secco technique where pigments are applied to dry plaster Rare 16th Century wall paintings have been revealed at a former Tudor hunting lodge. The Grotesque ...
Conservationist Peter Martindale is one of two specialists working to restore the paintings Work has begun ... artwork at the National Trust-run Tudor Merchant House in Tenby, is thought to ...
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