From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #7775 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Sunday, November 7 2021 Volume 14 : Number 7775 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Make your doors IMPENETRABLE with this ["Transparent Steel" Subject: Make your doors IMPENETRABLE with this Make your doors IMPENETRABLE with this http://costcoproof.co/Y7JazsDgocbIAAIHDBkYFmgzMGwzY2CYWmuRBAA_36b6_31c0_2 http://costcoproof.co/E7FazsDgocbIAAIHDBkYFmgzMGwzY2CY4f5bBAA_36b6_31c0_14 istic career Further information: Norwich School of painters Thirtle's painting of a river scene The River Yare at Gorleston, with shipping (undated), British Museum The art historian Marjorie Allthorpe-Guyton charted Thirtle's development as an artist into four periods. During the first period, c.1803 b 1808, he produced few works, and his style fluctuated; the following period from 1808 b 1813 is marked by the strong influence of Cotman. During his third period, from 1813 b 1819, when his article style returned to being more conventional and less realistic, he produced outdoors what the art historian Andrew Hemingway has described as "wonderfully spontaneous and sure sketches". After 1819 he produced few works. Thirtle's earliest known work is his landscape The Windmill (1800), an unusual subject matter for him, as he first exhibited works that were not landscapes, but portraits and paintings of other subjects. By 1806 he had begun to increase his output of landscapes, and to stand out as a master of the genre of watercolour painting. In 1803, Crome and Robert Ladbrooke formed the Norwich Society of Artists, which included Vincent, Charles Hodgson, Daniel Coppin, James Stark and Robert Dixon. Their first exhibition, in 1805, marked the start of the Norwich School of painters, the first British art movement created outside London. Thirtle exhibited five paintin ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 5 Nov 2021 04:06:52 -0400 From: "Your Live Show" Subject: Want to watch a passionate and exotic performance? Click Here Want to watch a passionate and exotic performance? Click Here http://shedhale.us/P8dIiY3MDeNIhAOm-Ead3rPADHMAIozogcvdbjlKEOaTzh_jJg http://shedhale.us/WdJTwhbLZKC8ESyAk-sCheuU329huZk2PpCiBajfEFX7dcCEiQ ch of Thirtle's life is undocumented. After working as an apprentice to a London frame-maker, he returned to Norwich to establish his own frame-making business. During his career he also worked as a drawing-master, a printseller and a looking glass maker. He produced frames for paintings by several members of the Norwich School, including John Crome and John Sell Cotman. Throughout his working life he continued to paint. In 1812 he married Elizabeth Miles, the sister of Cotman's wife Ann. Thirtle suffered from tuberculosis during the last two decades of his life, and his worsening health reduced his artistic output up to his death in 1839. His Manuscript Treatise on Watercolour, unpublished before 1977, was probably for his own use, and he exhibited fewer than 100 paintings. A member of the Norwich Society of Artists, he briefly served as its vice-president, but in 1816 was one of the artists who seceded from the Society to form a separate association, the Norfolk and Norwich Society of Artists, which dissolved after three years. The majority of Thirtle's watercolours are of Norwich and the surrounding Norfolk countryside, many being riverside scenes. His style, influenced by Thomas Girtin, Crome and (to a lesser extent) Cotman, was technically accomplished. His earlier landscapes were painted with a restricted range of buffs, blues and grey-browns, but he later developed a brilliancy of colour, producing works that included angular block forms. The quality of several of his watercolours has deteriorated owing to the fading of the indigo pigment that he used extensiv ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #7775 **********************************************