(Gift from my lovely)

Heys everyone!

Hope your all enjoying the amazing and sometimes overpowering weather if your in the UK!

Things have been random and so fun the last couple of weeks.

Attending the end of year Uni shows of my friends was exciting and crazy.

I wish so many wonderful and big things for them on their next journey outside of being students.

 Also seeing the end of year art show at the uni I’ll be attending

left me so astonished and impressed by the students work and also inspired. 

It’s given me great hope and excitement to put my artistic skills to the test for university.

Some of the work was just incredible will need to check some of the artists out!

Aside from that cause of the amazing weather and spending time with my lovely and family.

Also wonderfully and such a surprise my hunny and me are going away camping this weekend!

And its to the Lake District waaaaaaaah.

I’ve never been camping or to the lake district and I’am a super nature and Beatrix potter geek.

I collect mostly anything Beatrix related as a hobby.

I’ll be sure to take lots of pictures for you guys.

Hope you guys have a good weekend to!

Take care

Love Debz

xxx

welovepaintings:

Thomas KenningtonGreat Britain 1856-1916Homeless 1890oil on canvas170.0 x 152.0 cm
___
Homeless, 1890, is one of a series of works in which Kennington depicts the plight of women and children who were impoverished or destitute. Subjects such as these gained popularity during the 1870s and 1880s, partly as a result of the increasing influence of illustrated journals, which regularly commisssioned artists to provide images of ‘real’ life.
In Homeless, the square-brush technique used by Kennington in painting the wet pavement and the river, and his focus on subtle tonal variations rather than on colour - as in the soft grey light illuminating this scene - were among the characteristics adapted by British artists from French sources at the time.
CultureVictoria

welovepaintings:

Thomas Kennington
Great Britain 1856-1916
Homeless 1890
oil on canvas
170.0 x 152.0 cm

___

Homeless, 1890, is one of a series of works in which Kennington depicts the plight of women and children who were impoverished or destitute. Subjects such as these gained popularity during the 1870s and 1880s, partly as a result of the increasing influence of illustrated journals, which regularly commisssioned artists to provide images of ‘real’ life.

In Homeless, the square-brush technique used by Kennington in painting the wet pavement and the river, and his focus on subtle tonal variations rather than on colour - as in the soft grey light illuminating this scene - were among the characteristics adapted by British artists from French sources at the time.

CultureVictoria

(via nightcircus)