Little Dean's Yard looking south
- GB 2014 WS-03-PIC-010/22
- Item
- 1870s
Source and artist unknown. View from Grant's boarding house Pictures two boysmasters in gowns and mortar boards; two boys in pink jackets and white trousers, with pink hats.
Little Dean's Yard looking south
Source and artist unknown. View from Grant's boarding house Pictures two boysmasters in gowns and mortar boards; two boys in pink jackets and white trousers, with pink hats.
Half-length portrait on a much reduced scale, in a roundel in the centre of the picture; he wears Eighteenth Century costume and holds a book, with the inscription
Dyer, John, 1699-1757
Ashburnham Garden by Francis Michael Yglesias
Rear of Ashburnham House, rear (now Ashburnham Garden) showing the building of a lavatory block 1883
Yglesias, Francis Michael, 1867-1950
Little Dean's Yard by Francis Michael Yglesias
Oil painting of Little Dean's Yard during the rebuilding of Turle's House (1883?) Little Dean's Yard in the foreground, Ashburnham House on the left and College on the far right. The entrance to School is visible on the right. In the centre, there is an area fenced off, where the rebuilding is taking place. In the back ground the Abbey is visible.
Yglesias, Francis Michael, 1867-1950
Spaull, L.C.
Liddell's Arch by Gerald Edwin Tucker (b. 1932)
Looking north, includes the former Bursary building where Singleton's now stands.
Tucker, Gerald Edwin, 1932-
School from the South by R. Monier-Williams
Up School from the south end; the chairs are set out as for prayers; the shell is absent; the bust of Busby now on the Grand Staircase is at the far end; there is a desk and chair on the left of the foreground.
Monier-Williams, Randall Herbert, 1891-1984
The Unknown Warrior was chosen for Westminster Abbey in 1920, from four unknown warriors who fought for Britain during the First World War, and who died in four different battle areas. In the summer of 2017 the artist spent time in the four locations (the Aisne, the Somme, Arras and Ypres), making studies of the landscapes as they are now. This oil painting is one of a series of four stemming from these visits. This painting has been made across four separate canvases, one for each unknown warrior and each canvas is the same size as a Commonwealth War Grave (2 ft 6 in. in height and 1 ft 3 in. in width).
Woodman, John