November–December 2011 | Issue Nº8 | £2.95 www.norwichmagazine.co.uk
The independent voice of the city
AMY CONROY’S PARALYMPIAN
DREAM
STEW ARTISTS CO-OP
LOOKING UP?
RELIGION IN THE CITY
KEIR HARDIE HALL LISTINGS,
1960s ICON
PREVIEWS
AND MORE!
IN GOLD WE TRUST
The price is sky high, yet the city’s dealers, jewellers and goldsmiths are busy. Never mind the risk, “It’s gold, gold, gold!”
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Jonathan Leaman, A Jan Steen Kitchen (1995–6) © Tate, London, 2011 and the artist
Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery On show until 8 January 2012 Contact: 01603 493625/495897, 01603 493648 (24hr information) www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk/exhibitions
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CONTENTS Issue Nº08 November–December 2011
GAZETTE EDITOR’S LETTER 5 The material and the spiritual in tough economic times LETTERS 7 Coffee matters, Anglian rambling and Stateside cousins CROSSGROVE 8 Emoticons, season tickets and a mistaken appointment INTERVIEW 9 Amy Conroy, London 2012 Paralympics hopeful NEWS 10 PM visits Free School, greener city initiatives, ski champion IN THE PRESS 11 Wally hunting, feline Canaries fan, Jurassic technophobes WENDY ROBY 12 Norfolk’s canny entrepreneurs knock spots off the pinstriped brigade, says Wendy Roby
PHOTOS: JASON BYE (THE PROCLAIMERS), JON TONKS (CRAIG SNAPE’S WORKSHOP, SONKAI)
POLITICS 14 Parliamentary promotions, policy positions and your regular local CouncilWatch IN PERSON 16 Michael Davis and Michael Sampson of Keir Hardie Hall, the Norwich branch of the Working Men’s Club & Institute Union HAPPENINGS 18 Business, training and enterprise dates for your diary
ENTERPRISE FACTORY FRESH 39 Behind the scenes at Stew studios and gallery, run by Norwich Co-operative Arts
Front cover photograph by Dougal Waters
DAWN OF THE ‘TESCO LAW’ 42 Local solicitor Tammy Parnell on the legal revolution on the high street CHOCOLATE LESSONS 43 Two UEA students learned the value of ‘engaged ethics’ on a prizewinning trip to St Lucia
CULTURE FOOD 44 The River Green Café, Trowse
26
FREEDOM SONGS 46 As Amnesty International marks its 50th birthday, Norwich is leading the celebrations CALLING ALL WRITERS! 48 Launch of the annual Café Writers Norfolk Commission TELLING TALES 49 The winning entry in the children’s writing competition REVIEWS 50 Into the Silent Land, Laura Marling, Norwich Sound & Vision, 100 Years: The Maddermarket Story LISTINGS/PREVIEWS 52 Classical music 52 Comedy 53 Events & workshops 54 Exhibitions 55 Film 56 Jazz, contemporary & folk music 57 Literature 58 Rock & pop 59 Theatre & dance 60
FEATURES In gold we trust 20 In difficult times, a little bit of gold goes a long way. Laura Potts finds out exactly how far from pawnbrokers, jewellers and industry insiders
Believe it or not 26 As 2013 approaches, how important is religion to the people of Norwich? MC Burns visits the city’s spiritual centres and comes up with some surprising answers
Picture this 32 The world of the visual arts in Norwich is alive with enterprising artists, galleries, curators, studios, co-ops and collectives. Charlie Watson drops in on some great exhibitions and asks what it is that gives the city its creative energy
PUZZLER 61 Win a magnum of champagne in our crossword competition! DAILY BREAD 62 Q&A: Jane Walsh, Norwich Theatre Royal’s panto producer
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Glyndebourne on Tour
NOVEMBER Tues 25 Oct-Sat 5 Nov TOP HAT Tom Chambers, Summer Strallen star in Irving Berlin's musical masterpiece £6.50 - £42.50 Sun 6 Nov ROARY THE RACING CAR Children's TV favourite £5.50 - £13 Mon 7 Nov THE BIGGER BANG! Professor Hal Sosabowski and the Doc with a feast of spectacular science £5.50 - £10 Thur 10 - Fri 11 Nov RAMBERT DANCE COMPANY World class contemporary dance £5.50 - £21.50 Sun 13 Nov NORFOLK SCHOOLS PROJECT Three local schools perform opera Free Sun 13 Nov HIGH SCHOOL ROCKS! All the hits from HSM, Hannah Montana and more £5.50 - £15 Tues 15 - Sat 19 Nov GLYNDEBOURNE ON TOUR World class opera £6.50 - £50 Sunday 20 Nov RAF IN CONCERT Military big band £5.50 - £21.50 Tues 22 Nov-Sat 3 Dec GREASE No. 1 Greatest Musical £6.50 - £36 DECEMBER Mon 5 Dec UKULELE ORCHESTRA OF GREAT BRITAIN One plucking thing after another £5.50 - £23 Wed 14 Dec 2011 - Sun 15 Jan 2012 SLEEPING BEAUTY Traditional family panto £5.50 - £23 Sun 18 Dec Britten Sinfonia MESSIAH Handel’s choral masterpiece £6.50 - £36
BOX OFFICE: (01603) 63 00 00 BOOK ONLINE: www.theatreroyalno THEATRE STREET, NORWICH NR2 1RLrwich.co.uk
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PAGE FIVE Editor’s letter
Golden days
PHOTO: ANDI SAPEY
«Gold is a traded commodity, so people whose livelihoods depend on it are bound to have a turbulent time»
Write in to letters@ norwichmagazine. co.uk or by post to: Letters Page, Norwich Magazine, 9 Rigby’s Court, Norwich NR2 1NT
I
n hard times, where do we turn to for security and reassurance? Do we buy, covet and hoard things and tell ourselves that the more we have, the better we’re doing? Or do we pause, look inwards and think about how we are, rather than what we have? As Christmas approaches, it’s usually a bit of both: the buying of gifts and party clothes and food and drink assumes mammoth proportions, while churches have their biggest congregations of the year, for carol services and atmospheric midnight masses. This year, as the economic troubles rumble on, the tension is greater than normal. Anecdotally, although the city is weathering the storm better than many other places – in the last week, two visitors independently expressed their surprise to me at how unscathed Norwich seemed – businesses are still slashing costs and this is the first Christmas since the massive public sector cuts took effect. Retailers who count on Christmas each year are holding their breath. In this issue, we explore, in separate features, two high-profile sources of reassurance in difficult times: gold and religion. Finding out about the city’s gold economy was fascinating. It’s a traded commodity that goes in and out of fashion as the economy falls and rises, so people whose livelihoods depend on it are to some extent bound to have a turbulent time. But what was really interesting was the diversity of people involved in the gold trade in Norwich. When you think about it, that shouldn’t be surprising, but Laura Potts, our writer, met pawnbrokers, coin dealers, jewellers, a goldsmith and a former hedge fund manager. They had different insights to share, but one thing was clear: its price might have skyrocketed in recent years, but gold is still in fashion in Norwich. Diversity was also a highlight of MC Burns’s investigation of the city’s spiritual side. In the feature, she recalls the finding of the 2001 census that Norwich had among the lowest levels of religious belief in England: nearly a third of respondents said they followed ‘no religion’. Although our methods were by no means scientific, it looks as though things might be changing. Representatives of every religion and Christian denomination we talked to – Anglican, Catholic, evangelical, Unitarian, Buddhist, Hindu, Muslim and pagan – had a broadly positive story to tell. Our own positive story, meanwhile, is that Norwich Magazine has been shortlisted for a major national award: Launch of the Year, at the British Society of Magazine Editors’ annual awards. The competition on the shortlist of eight is very strong, so we’re not counting our chickens, but the BSME awards are the publishing world’s own, judged-by-your-peers awards, so it’s very pleasing simply to make it on to the shortlist. The winner will be announced on Tuesday 8 November. Finally, we have 10 free tickets to give away for the Festival of Christmas at Norwich Cathedral on 9, 10 and 11 December. See page 30 for details of how to enter. And of course (whether you win free tickets or not), a Merry Christmas and a happy new year from everyone at Norwich Magazine! Charlie Watson, editor norwichmagazine November–December 2011 5
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NEWS
PM in town, energy-saving, champion skier
Dave pays a visit
Coming soon...
Prime Minister David Cameron dropped in at the new Free School (see NM07) in September. He said he wanted to see schools like it “replicated many, many times up and down the country”. In his speech he said: “We want to create an education system based on real excellence, with a complete intolerance of failure.” He said new providers would expose “complacency” and help drive up standards. Free Schools, which are being set up by parents, teachers, faith groups and other organisations, are state-funded but privately run. Opponents have criticised them as socially divisive and unaccountable.
Work to convert the former Ferry Boat pub in King Street into a backpackers’ hostel is about to start. The grade II listed building will be turned into a 200-bed hostel with a café and tourist information centre. Opening is scheduled for April 2012. Meanwhile, there are plans to reactivate a disused railway line at Chesterton sidings, to the north of Cambridge. The new Cambridge Science Park station would provide a direct link to London, Birmingham and Norwich and could be ready in four years.
Solar boost for tenants Council house tenants in Norwich could save up to £200 a year on fuel bills. Norwich City Council has announced plans to lease roofs on its properties to solar energy companies, who will pay for installation and sell unused or excess energy to the National Grid. Income from roof rentals will be invested in energy-efficiency measures for houses not suited to solar panels.
High pressure in the east
Mercury rising: sunny skies THE NEXT GENERATION Ofsted has rated Notre Dame High School and the Sure Start children’s centre in Clover Hill as ‘outstanding’. Top marks! \
OBSCURE SPORTS LOVERS The Angel Baton Twirlers from Norwich got the bronze in the World Baton Twirling International Cup competition in Florida \
GOURMETS
Green funding award The University of East Anglia (UEA) has been awarded £355,000 to assess how the government’s Green Deal incentives can be made attractive to consumers. The Green Deal is the government’s flagship energy policy to insulate Britain’s homes and businesses. The UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) award will fund a two-year project by the Norwich Business School and the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research at UEA. DIY retailer B&Q and the Low Carbon Innovation Centre at UEA are also participating in the research.
BAROMETER
Slalom triumph Norfolk Snowsports Club in Trowse hosted the 39th All England Championships in September, when 19-year-old Michael Molloy of Gorleston won the dry ski slope title. Molloy first learned to ski at the club when he was 10.
Tesco notches up 18 Tesco is to open its 18th store in the city, on the former site of The Dial pub on the corner of Dereham Road and Old Palace Road. Planning permission has been secured.
Roger Hickman’s restaurant on Upper St Giles Street (see review in NM01) has been named Regional Winner: East, in the 2011 Good Food Guide \
BOOZERS
A toast to The Whalebone, The Plough, The Jubilee and The Cottage – all four pubs have made it into the Camra Good Beer Guide 2012
Mercury falling: overcast and gloomy JIM DAVIDSON The former TV star’s website denied he was snubbing Norwich, after the Theatre Royal banned him for insulting staff in 2004
STOP PRESS: Norwich City Council has potentially brokered a deal with English Heritage to renovate the Britons Arms on Elm Hill at no cost to council tax payers.
\
FLYING FROM NORWICH The ‘airport development fee’ per passenger is doubling to £10 from January 2012 \
JOB SEEKERS
The number of JSA claimants in Norwich continues to rise (4,498, or 4.4 per cent of the population in September) 10 norwichmagazine November–December 2011
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IN THE PRESS How the journos saw it
COMING
SOON TO HERE’S WALLY! Daily Mail, 29 August 2011 One Where’s Wally fan will always be able to find his favourite stripy-shirted children’s character – after having him tattooed on his back. Music producer John Mosley, 22, sat patiently for 24 hours while tattooist Rytch Soddy created a scene featuring 150 characters and Wally hiding among them. The artwork was created in a studio in Norwich and raised £2,000 for charity. Tattooist Mr Soddy, 35, started the tattoo at noon on Friday and worked on it solidly for 24 hours with only a two-minute break every hour for him and John to stretch their legs. He said: “I had a basic plan to make it look like Norwich and then the rest got made up as I went along. I told John that I would be tattooing Wally last of all, but then I realised he would know where he was so I did him about 20 minutes from the end.” \
SEASON TICKET FOR KITTY
Eastern Daily Press, 24 August 2011 A number of Canaries fans have been caught buying concessionary season tickets they are not entitled to – with one fan even using their cat’s name to buy a cheaper ticket. Chris Bailey, head of stadium operations and supporter services at Norwich City Football Club, said the club found out what was happening after asking the 4,500 people with under-21 concessionary tickets to verify their dates of birth to improve the club’s database. “One person decided to create for themself an under-16 season
ticket application for their cat and when we asked for their date of birth they admitted they had applied using their cat’s name.” \
FIRE HAZARD
BBC website, 23 September 2011 The former main fire station in Norwich has failed a fire safety inspection delaying a move by new tenants. Temporary tenants were due to take over the building on Bethel Street last week, Norfolk County Council said. A final inspection by Norfolk Fire Service, county and officials deemed the building too unsafe for the new occupants to move in. \
BEHIND THE TIMES?
Daily Mail, 31 August 2011 A pioneering scheme to bring Wi-Fi to a rural village could be scuppered by a ‘Luddite’ charity who says the technology damages people’s health. The Wispire project, run by the Norwich Diocese and internet service provider Freeclix, wanted to install a wireless broadband receiver and transmitter in the tower of Postwick’s All Saints Church. But ElectroSensitivity UK claimed the move would have a negative effect on the health of nearby residents. The project has now been suspended, pending an official clerical inquiry, for a debate which could have far-reaching consequences for cash-strapped rural communities and churches across the country. Alan Wood, chairman of Postwick parish council, dubbed the charity as “Luddite dinosaurs”.
NORWICH PLAYHOUSE COMEDY Seann Walsh Arthur Smith Shappi Khorsandi Chris Addison Mark Watson
3 7 8-10 15-17 26-28
Dec Dec Dec Dec Jan
MUSIC The Tiger Lillies 12-13 Dec The Pasadena Roof Orchestra 6 Jan Rita Kinka: 5HÀHFWLRQV 21 Jan
THEATRE Paul Daniels Charlie & Lola’s Best Bestest Play Great Variety Show Twelfth Night
26 Nov 29 Nov-11 Dec 19-20 Jan 23-25 Jan
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www.norwichplayhouse.co.uk
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Visual arts A culture of making and showing
PICTURE THIS The visual arts scene in Norwich is bursting with life, from major exhibitions to smaller commercial galleries and artists’ co-ops. Charlie Watson explores an exciting aspect of the city’s creative landscape
N
orwich is a city with a strong artistic tradition, running from the Norwich School of painters, which dates back to 1803, to the thriving community of artists at work in the city today. For a relatively small city, we’re also privileged to have Norwich University College of the Arts (NUCA), two institutions – the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts and Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery – with significant permanent collections and a regular schedule of major exhibitions, an eclectic range of private galleries and other venues showing new work, and several studio complexes and shops run by enterprising groups of artists. It’s an exciting environment for artists and art-lovers alike. Three current shows illuminate nicely the various dimensions of the Norwich art scene. At the Sainsbury Centre, Mary Webb: Journeys in Colour is the biggest-ever exhibition by a Suffolk-based artist, who for 24 years from 1966 taught painting at Norwich School of Art (now NUCA). The show, which runs until 4 December, includes paintings, screenprints, collages and drawings. Webb’s abstract work is inspired by her travels to far-flung parts of the world, including
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Russia, Crete and the United States, but the focus everywhere is colour itself. In the city centre, the second of the shows is Family Matters: The Family in British Art, at Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. The exhibition was developed by the curatorial team in Norwich as part of a four-year partnership with Tate Britain, Tyne & Wear Museums & Archives, and Museums Sheffield. The work on display ranges from paintings and drawings to photography, sculpture and film, and explores five themes: inheritance, childhood, couples and kinship, parenting, and home. The third show is Sunlight, by Roger Ackling, at The Gallery at NUCA. Although its space is much smaller than the Sainsbury Centre’s galleries, The Gallery at NUCA is also part of an educational institution and its shows are popular both with students and the wider public. “The Gallery at NUCA is very much a national gallery,” says Louisa Milsome, acting gallery coordinator, “but part of the university college at the same time. So our shows are very diverse. We put on seven a year, including one of undergraduate students’ work and one of graduate work. Our last show, Reflections on the Self, www.norwichmagazine.co.uk
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Visual arts A culture of making and showing
«People need to see really good art, and if you take away that opportunity, it’s a real loss»
Clockwise from above: Mary Webb in her studio, Suffolk, 1971 (photo: John Hinde); Utah II, 2011, oil on canvas (collection of the artist); Circle Line Series: The Isle of Manhattan 2, 1983, oil on canvas (collection of the artist)
MAKING SPACE Mary Webb taught painting at Norwich School of Art from 1966 to 1990. During that time she made new work of her own in a studio space at the school, as well as in her own studio in Suffolk, and she developed a long-term collaboration with Mel Clark, who taught screenprinting. Today she is as productive as ever, as the current exhibition at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual arts demonstrates. But Webb is concerned that artists in the city and from further afield should be able to show their work here. “Norwich has a lack of good showing spaces,” she says, “particularly with the threat hanging over the space at the Castle used for showing modern work. At Newcastle [where Webb studied] we had the Hatton Gallery within the fine art department. It was very life-enhancing that you could go down into an actual gallery during the day and see really good work. Likewise with the Sainsbury Centre at UEA. I think it’s really important for not only fine art students, but for all students, to have a centre of excellence in terms of what they can show.” norwichmagazine November–December 2011 33
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«Family Matters charts the depiction of the family over 400 years of British art. What is a family and what is the idea of family?»
2011, the artist and Anthony Reynolds Gallery); Joseph Clover, The Harvey Family of Norwich, c.1820 (© Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service); Peter Blake in front of the portrait of him by David Bailey (photo: Dylan Thomas); Peter Blake, Homage to Damien Hirst: The Butterfly Man, Tokyo
PETER BLAKE IMAGES SUPPLIED BY ST GILES STREET GALLERY
This page and opposite, clockwise from above: Michael Andrews, Melanie and Me Swimming, 1978–9 (© Tate, London, 2011 and James Hyman Gallery, London); Frances Kearney, Five people thinking the same thing, III, 1998 (© the artist); Paul Graham, Television Portrait (Danny, Bristol) (detail), 1991 (© Tate, London,
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Visual arts A culture of making and showing
was a touring exhibition from the Hayward Gallery in London, and Sunlight is an outstanding show by Roger Ackling, a Norfolk artist. It’s difficult to know exactly who’s coming through the door every day, but we had 3,000 visitors in 15 days for Reflections on the Self.”
ART ON SHOW: PLACES TO GO
B
eyond the city’s ‘big three’ are several smaller, independent galleries. Unique among them is Outpost Gallery on Wensum Street, opposite the Maid’s Head Hotel. “Outpost is an artist-run gallery, formed seven years ago and interested in bringing art to the city,” says Glen Jamieson, a member of the Outpost committee. “We try to show a good selection across different forms of contemporary art during the year, and we try each year to include local artists within the programme. It’s about engaging with the community. People can sign up as members, for example, and submit work to be considered. We also do at least one off-site project a year – this year it was the summer fair at Anglia Square. And starting this year we’re part of NUCA’s curriculum, hosting seminars and talks by artists for students on the BA in fine arts course.” Close by are three commercial galleries. Art 18/21, on Tombland, specialises in contemporary work by established and emerging artists. Mandell’s Gallery, on Elm Hill, has added contemporary fine art to its original specialism in 19th-century artists from the Norwich School. The Crome Gallery, also on Elm Hill, shows original oils, and 19th-century and contemporary watercolours. On Unthank Road, meanwhile, the Grapevine gallery has combined fine art with activity – in this case, ceramics decoration. “Norwich has fantastic levels of interest in art,” says the owner, Peter Low, “but it’s a difficult location for galleries to trade in. One artist who showed with us said it’s because the city has such a big, dispersed catchment, so people come into the city irregularly, whereas a bigger resident population would buy more work. Strangely, our Burnham Market gallery
gets a lot of visitors from Norwich! “We never set out to be a local gallery – we show artists from all over the country, artists we believe in, artists we like. We’re not commercially driven in that sense. But we get some great shows. For three weeks in November, for instance, we’ve got the 74th annual exhibition of the Society of Wood Engravers.” Back in the city centre, David Koppel of the St Giles Street Gallery is exploring different territory, but agrees that Norwich isn’t the easiest location. “My background is Fleet Street photography and my home town is London,” he says, “so I’ve tried to bring a London contemporary feel to the Norwich art scene. We’re one of the only galleries in Norwich showcasing photography, and shows have included a mixed show of Sunday Times photography, and a recent, highly successful Terry O’Neill show. Because Norwich is so incestuous, I’ve tried to find artists outside of the city to showcase, preferably with an international feel. I tend to show what I would buy. We’ve also featured a Beatlesthemed show to celebrate the re-release of all their music. There are many creatives in and around Norwich, [but] too many artists and not enough buyers.”
«We show artists from all over the country, artists we believe in, artists we like» These are some of the main gallery spaces in the city, but there are many smaller venues, where art is often only a part of what’s on offer. Beneath the Rumsey Wells pub, Art in the Underbelly is building a reputation for art and events in a unique cellar space, and art-inspired cafés nearby include Expresso, on St George’s Street, and Wholesome, which is finding creative new uses for its upstairs rooms. The Forum and the Hostry at Norwich Cathadral also stage regular exhibitions in airy modern surroundings. norwichmagazine November–December 2011 35
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Above: Roger Ackling, Sunlight on wood (Voewood 2011) Below: Alec Cumming, 08.07.11, oil and charcoal on canvas, 2011
JOINING FORCES
B
ut what of the city’s artists? Where are they? Well, if you look hard, they’re all over the city. Many work from home or individual studios, but others have banded together with like-minded souls to share costs and space and ideas and problems and solutions. Outpost Gallery, for example, has created Outpost Studios at Gildengate House, Anglia Square, where 90 artists are accommodated over three floors of the former office building. On Fishergate, Norwich Co-operative Arts has turned a former handbag factory into Stew (see pp39–41), a thriving artists’ co-op. And St Etheldreda’s church on King Street was converted to artists’ studios as long ago as 1981. Still other groups of artists have opened art shops. Verandah on Upper St Giles Street is one such, and the Jade Tree, on Elm Hill, incorporates studios,
a gallery and a shop selling the artists’ work. It's appropriate that the final word belongs to Alec Cumming, a painter who studied at NUCA from 2004 to 2007. He was one of the founders of the Stew artists’ co-op, and has chosen to remain in Norwich to develop his career.
«Norwich has fantastic levels of interest in art» “Norwich has its own hub of cultural things going on,” says Cumming. “There’s an environment you can nurture yourself in. I don’t think there’s a need to escape to the capital city to make art. When they left university a lot of my friends went to London, because they thought that’s where you had to be. I talk to them now and they’re mostly not continuing their practice. I wanted to stay here, rent a flat and a studio, and do my thing. “There's something about Norwich and the surrounding areas – their pace, their size. It’s small enough that you can get to grips with it. There are lots of [artistic] groups and organisations in a small city. It’s bustling... a kind of haven. After art school now, more and more people are sticking around.” p www.art1821.com www.artintheunderbelly.blogspot.com www.cromegallery.co.uk www.grapevinegallery.co.uk www.mandellsgallery.co.uk www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk/visit_us/norwich_castle www.norwichoutpost.org www.nuca.ac.uk/thegallery www.sgsgallery.com www.scva.org.uk www.thejadetree.co.uk www.verandah-norwich.co.uk
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East Anglian Pictures Tuesday 15 November Knightsbridge, London 12pm Previews The Athenaeum Angel Hill Bury St Edmunds IP33 1LU Tuesday 8 November 9am to 4pm Wednesday 9 November 9am to 4pm Bonhams Knightsbridge Montpelier Street London SW7 1HH Sunday 4 December 11am to 3pm Monday 5 December 9am to 6.30pm Tuesday 6 December 9am to 10.30am 01603 871 443 norfolk@bonhams.com John Berney Ladbrooke (British, 1803-1879) A view at Bramerton in the valley of the Yare oil on canvas ÂŁ15,000 - 20,000
International Auctioneers and Valuers - bonhams.com/norfolk
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