Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The Bagshot Park side chair. Produced as part of Lockwood Kipling: Arts and Crafts in the Punjab and London at. Ran from 14 January 2017 to 2 April 2017 at. More about this exhibition. This elaborately carved side chair, designed by John Lockwood Kipling (1837 – 1911) and Bhai Ram Singh (1858 – 1916), reveals an unusual fusion of British ...

  2. John Lockwood Kipling: Arts & Crafts in the Punjab and London is the first major exhibition to examine John Lockwood Kipling (1837‐1911)—designer, architectural sculptor, curator, educator, illustrator, and journalist—whose role in the nineteenth‐century Arts and Crafts revival in British India has received little attention.

  3. 4 de mai. de 2019 · John Lockwood Kipling, C.I.E. (6 July 1837 – 26 January 1911), was an English art teacher, illustrator and museum curator who spent most of his career in British India. He was the father of the author Rudyard Kipling.

  4. Kipling nació el 30 de diciembre de 1865 en Bombay, y luego bajo la India británica.. 7. Sus padres lo nombraron por el Lago Rudyard en Staffordshire, donde se habían reunido por primera vez.. 8. Su padre, John Lockwood Kipling, fue un escultor y diseñador de cerámica de North Yorkshire.. 9.

  5. 24 de abr. de 2024 · John Lockwood Kipling (1837–1911) started his career as an architectural sculptor at the South Kensington Museum (today the Victoria and Albert Museum). Much of his life, however, was spent in British India, where his son Rudyard was born.

  6. Kipling's attention to local detail is particularly noticeable in his private collection of Indian popular art that he amassed in Lahore over an eighteen-year period between 1875 and 1893. By the time of his retirement in 1893, he had pasted 233 prints, paintings, pen and pencil drawings into an album, along with an additional 37 loose pages of ...

  7. John Lockwood Kipling: Arts & Crafts in the Punjab and London is the first major exhibition to examine John Lockwood Kipling (1837‐1911)—designer, architectural sculptor, curator, educator, illustrator, and journalist—whose role in the nineteenth‐century Arts and Crafts revival in British India has received little attention.