Oct. 20th, 2018
Saturday Sonorities
Oct. 20th, 2018 11:51 amHoovered around the flat this morning and then selected a couple of items to put on eBay later.
Sold three items on eBay yesterday to be posted today. All three were on auction and I received £30 for them.
Three more auctions are ending tonight, so fingers crossed.
At the moment I am listening to "Newks Time", a CD by Sonny Rollins on Blue Note records.
Sold three items on eBay yesterday to be posted today. All three were on auction and I received £30 for them.
Three more auctions are ending tonight, so fingers crossed.
At the moment I am listening to "Newks Time", a CD by Sonny Rollins on Blue Note records.
After posting the goodies in town I hopped onto a bus heading towards Canterbury and then transferred to another going down to Dover. I did one of these mobile phone shop stores in the town and then had a Sub sandwich.
The weather was sunny but cooler today. Down to 18 degrees C but even now it is quite an Indian summer we are having.
I took a pic of the main high street.

Back in Canterbury, I popped into Poundland to get another magazine rack for my Wire magazines, and thus I have three racks holding around twelve issues in each.
The weather was sunny but cooler today. Down to 18 degrees C but even now it is quite an Indian summer we are having.
I took a pic of the main high street.

Back in Canterbury, I popped into Poundland to get another magazine rack for my Wire magazines, and thus I have three racks holding around twelve issues in each.
Peter Ackroyd "Turner: Brief Lives" (Vintage)

Ackroyd delves into the life of the man who was arguably England's greatest landscape painter. A Londoner to the core, he was the son of a barber and his mother's family were butchers. He began drawing quite young and, having initially apprenticed with an architect, entered the Royal Academy when he was only fourteen years old.
This little volume is jam-packed with information about Turner's rise to the top of the artistic heap, how he worked and taught, his techniques, his rivalries. He seems always to have been working. Ackroyd cites a comment made by a fellow traveler in Italy, who, not knowing who his traveling companion was, described Turner as "continually popping his head out of the window to sketch whatever strikes his fancy."
It's also the story of his personal life; although he never married, he was a great one for the ladies and had more than one long-term relationship. His mother is believed to have died insane, but he was very close to his father, who lived with him and worked as his assistant.
This is quite a good little introduction to both Turner and his work.

Ackroyd delves into the life of the man who was arguably England's greatest landscape painter. A Londoner to the core, he was the son of a barber and his mother's family were butchers. He began drawing quite young and, having initially apprenticed with an architect, entered the Royal Academy when he was only fourteen years old.
This little volume is jam-packed with information about Turner's rise to the top of the artistic heap, how he worked and taught, his techniques, his rivalries. He seems always to have been working. Ackroyd cites a comment made by a fellow traveler in Italy, who, not knowing who his traveling companion was, described Turner as "continually popping his head out of the window to sketch whatever strikes his fancy."
It's also the story of his personal life; although he never married, he was a great one for the ladies and had more than one long-term relationship. His mother is believed to have died insane, but he was very close to his father, who lived with him and worked as his assistant.
This is quite a good little introduction to both Turner and his work.