business for sale gainsborough

Middlefield Lane, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, DN21 Residential Development Site - STP, popular residential location within Gainsborough - supported by a wide range of local amenities, OFFERS INVITED for the freehold interest.A pair of self-contained two bedroom A pair of self-contained two bedroom holiday cottages in an unspoilt rural location. Holiday Cottages, Holiday Lettings GAINSBOROUGH - Takeaway Business Tremendous Scope To Develop Sales Weekly Sales Approx £2,500 Strong Gross Profits Of Approx 70% Busy Main Road Location EPC - D Blacks Brokers are delighted to bring to the market this lucrative Chinese takeaway business... Free of Tie Freehold Pub and Restaurant Hilton Smythe is delighted to welcome to the market The Ingram Arms. The business has been in our client’s ownership since 1980. They are now looking to sell the business due to the desire to take a well-deserved retirement. Restaurants, Pubs, Guest Houses

Stunning Guest House in Marton, Hilton Smythe is delighted to welcome to the market the Black Swan Guest House in Marton, Lincolnshire. The old established business has been in our clients’ careful ownership since 2003. Only now is the business being offered to... Bed & Breakfasts, Guest Houses GAINSBOROUGH - Licensed Coffee Shop Strong Gross Profit Of 75% Secure 10 Year Lease Under L + T Act Currently Run Under Management EPC - C Blacks Brokers are proud to offer for sale Emmalooos; a licensed, independent and family run coffee shop... LINCOLNSHIRE BASED NATIONWIDE OUTSIDE Long established & highly regarded family-run Ltd Co offered for relocation providing superb range of bespoke menu options for weddings/private & corporate events with nationwide reputation & client base & HUGE scope to develop or... Catering Companies, Outside Catering Businesses, Catering equipment & restaurant supply shopsDetached house for sale Woodland Chase, Gainsborough DN21

FranKeys are proud to present this simply superb 5/6 double bedroom detached private residence situated on the exclusive Woodland Chase development made up of only five executive homes with ... Author interviews, book reviews, editors picks, and more. Eighteenth-century portraitist and landscape artist Thomas Gainsborough's most recent retrospective reaffirms for a new generation his sturdy place in the mainstream of British art history. Born in Sudbury in 1727, Gainsborough went to London to study (first as a silversmith), where he ran with the smart set but struggled to sell work. Commissions grew when he moved to Ipswich, but with money still a problem, he and his family moved to Bath, where he matured as an artist, painting-and socializing with-fashionable society. When he returned to London in 1774, his career as a courtier-artist in the tradition of William Hogarth was cemented. His work, Titian-like in its scrum of brushwork, was notable for its technical virtuosity, somehow resolving from mottled skeins of color close up into precise, naturalist shapes and hues at a distance.

Over the years, as this catalogue attests by its mere existence, he has remained a bedrock of British realism, his excellent society portraits (particularly his women in shiny dresses) and park-like forest scenes still beguiling to the modern eye. Less successful are his images of peasant life, however, which betray a deep unfamiliarity with those outside his social caste, and often compensate by blending them into the landscape as a kind of fleshy rock or tree.
craig's handyman service llcThe accompanying text, although printed too small and thin, provides ample if somewhat dry information on the artist and his oeuvre, with close readings of his wide-ranging pictures and social life.
starting a handyman business in nswThis handsome, well-illustrated catalogue will maintain Gainsborough's reputation admirably well until his next revival rolls around.
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254 illustrations, 195 plates in color. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. Michael Rosenthal is a leading expert on British social and cultural history and has written several books on 18th-century art. Martin Myrone is a curator at Tate Britain specializing in 18th- and 19th-century British art.
jd handyman services Publisher: Harry N. Abrams;
handyman in chicago illinois1St Edition edition (March 1, 2003)
business for sale tallinn 9.8 x 1.1 x 12.1 inches Shipping Weight: 4.3 pounds #1,673,628 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) in Books > Arts & Photography > Collections, Catalogs & Exhibitions in Books > Arts & Photography > History & Criticism > Criticism in Books > Arts & Photography > Individual Artists

55 star60%4 star20%3 star20%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsTo remember past emotions... See all customer images Gainsborough (World of Art) Ludwig Van Beethoven (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers) Thomas Gainsborough: 24 Cards (Dover Postcards)Save this home to compare later! Calculate your commute time See 10 schools assigned to this home. Price History & Trends Average listing price for similar homes Average listing price for all homes in Fenway-Kenmore Median sale price for all homes in Fenway-Kenmore View more Sales Trends for Fenway-Kenmore View all Boston real estate Agent Phone: (617) 784-6298 Alternatively, call your local newspaper on 0114 252 1390, or email us at classads@jpress.co.uk to book your ad today. If you would like to advertise a job via our recruitment team, please call 0207 855 7577 or email jobs.nmsy@jpress.co.ukTHE ELDEST daughter of a man who donated a Gainsborough painting now worth pounds 3m to Marlborough College said yesterday that her family had not been consulted on the school's decision to sell it.

Selina Hony said the public had been given the impression that the family had agreed to the sale but, she said, the school had presented it with a fait accompli. The life-sized family portrait of Ms Hony's ancestors, which was donated to the school by her father, Henry, is to be auctioned by Christie's next month. Marlborough has said an increase in the painting's value means that it can no longer afford to keep it secure and insured. The money raised by the sale will go towards a new swimming pool and arts centre at the pounds 4,930-a-term school in Wiltshire. But Ms Hony said the decision to sell was completely against the family's wishes. She claimed the school "gave a false impression about the decision to sell the great Gainsborough portrait, and the `agreement' of the donor's three daughters. "We are deeply upset that they have seen fit to proceed to an open sale in full knowledge of our opposition to such a course of action," she said. The portrait depicts George Byam (1734-79) of Apse Court in Surrey, with his wife and daughter, Selina.

They were a merchant family with interests in the West Indies and the painting was donated by one of their descendants, Selina'sgreat-grandson Henry Hony, in 1955. His daughter said: "Marlborough College has always played a great part in my life. "I can understand, though with deep regret, that the College no longer feels able to secure and insure the picture. However, I and my sisters, the donor's nearest surviving family, are profoundly opposed to the sale of the picture unless it is to a gallery or museum in the UK. A sale abroad or to a private buyer would not be in keeping with our father's wishes. I feel that Marlborough gave the impression that we were happy for it to go abroad and that is not the case." A spokeswoman for Christie's said both the Tate and the National Gallery had been approached about buying the painting but it had not been possible to raise the money at such short notice. Unless another public institution can find the estimated sale price of pounds 3m it is likely to go abroad.

The 2.5-metre by 2.3-metre painting is one of Thomas Gainsborough's most important works from his time in the fashionable spa town of Bath. He moved there in 1759 and almost immediately became the most sought- after artist in the town until he moved to London in 1774. The Byam family painting is the most successful of his group portraits from that period. Marlborough College yesterday declined to comment on the matter but a spokeswoman for Christie's said it was still trying to find a home in the UK for the painting, which she added had been donated by Mr Hony "unconditionally". "We are pursuing a few lines of inquiries with galleries but it is likely that it will be in the sale and we don't know who will buy it," she said. "The school felt that it was just hanging in a locked room and no one looked at it and because it needs to be kept under special conditions, they felt it should go to someone who will be able to look after it. The money will go towards the education of all the pupils."