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  1. 8 de mar. de 2005 · Twentieth-Century Watercolours and Drawings. Earlier watercolours and drawings. This event is in the past. Daily (Tuesday, 8 Mar 2005 - Monday, 21 Nov 2005) The art collection formed by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother reflects her warm friendships with artists and her very personal response to a quality in works of art that she called ‘the ...

  2. 8 de mar. de 2005 · This first exhibition of 73 watercolours and drawings from her collection has been selected to show the range of Queen Elizabeth’s taste, embracing artists as diverse as Thomas Gainsborough and John Bratby.

  3. 5 de out. de 2007 · Sandringham House and Castle Acre Priory feature in an exhibition of more than 70 watercolours and drawings, from the collection of the Queen Mother, at Norwich Castle until Sunday, 6 January, 2008.

  4. 8 de mar. de 2005 · This first exhibition of 73 watercolours and drawings from her collection has been selected to show the range of Queen Elizabeth’s taste, embracing artists as diverse as Thomas Gainsborough and John Bratby.

  5. The catalogue is arranged in three parts: firstly, a biographical section, incorporating portraits and records of events of both personal and national significance; secondly, a section drawn from Queen Elizabeth's extensive collection of watercolours of her residences; and thirdly, a diverse section of landscapes, topographical watercolours, still lifes and figure studies by artists ranging ...

  6. RCIN 453428. Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon’s mother, Nina Cecilia Cavendish-Bentinck, married Claude Bowes-Lyon (the Earl of Strathmore from 1904) in 1881. They had ten children, of whom Elizabeth was the penultimate child and youngest daughter. Lady Strathmore had a close relationship with her children, and she taught the youngest ones to read ...

  7. RCIN 453343. In her single most important act of patronage, Queen Elizabeth commissioned a series of watercolour views of Windsor Castle from John Piper during the Second World War. They were intended to serve as a record of the Castle in case it was damaged by enemy bombs. The result was a virtuoso performance of topographical draughtsmanship.