|
|
| VIEW
ALL WORKS |
|
| All Artists A-Z |
|
| The
Archives |
|
| Under £250 |
| £250 to £1,000 |
| £1,000 to £5,000 |
| Over £5,000 |
|
|
Contact:
Address & Opening Hours
info@haylegallery.co.uk
Tel: 01736 758465 |
|
|
Newsletter:
Sign up for our monthly newsletter and we'll keep you informed
of all the latest news, new acquisitions and special offers.
|
|
|
Paintings Wanted
We purchase paintings with a Cornish interest, please
contact us for further details. |
|
|
Picture Sourcing
If we don't have the artist or the subject that you require
please contact us- we
can generally source paintings by most artists. |
|
Art Galleries in Hayle
Alan Coombe Fine Art
www.alancoombe.co.uk
The town of Hayle now easily boasts more
traditional Cornish art than any other town in the county. Just a
small distance apart, Hayle Gallery and Alan Coombe
Fine Art have over 300 paintings on display. |
|
|
Payment
We accept all leading credit and debit cards
|
|
|
Links
This
is Cornwall
Cornwall
Guide |
|
Cornwall Artists Index
The story of art in Cornwall
The purpose of the Cornwall Artists Index is to preserve and make accessible the invaluable history of the art and artists of Cornwall. The index is an invaluable and ever-growing database of artists known to have worked in the county.
|
|
From Newlyn to Lamorna
From Newlyn to Lamorna is an exhibition of paintings by artists associated with the early Newlyn School and pre-WW1 Lamorna Group. The exhibition is a collaboration between two galleries and will be "fluid" as paintings will be changed during the show. One of the highlights is a series of Lamorna paintings by Eric Ward, one of Cornwall's leading contemporary artists.
29th March to 27th July 2013 |
|
|
|
To enquire about this painting please call 01736 758465 or email: info@haylegallery.co.uk
We accept all leading Debit/Credit Cards and offer a fast postage & packaging service
Summer Time, St Ives Bay
Price: £950.00
Click here to ask a question...
|
George Gordon Byron Cooper (1850-1933). St Ives Bay from Carbis Bay, circa 1890. Watercolour, 18ins x 12ins. Presented in a superb period frame.
|
Carbis means "cart bridge" and there was a stone bridge over the stream at Carbis Bay in olden days. Legend has it that when plague was raging in St. Ives in 1640 the country folk brought food for St. Ives, leaving it on or under the bridge, and the money to pay was left in the water - to be purified. The beach was called Barripper or Porthrepta, or Carrack Gladden Cove and was only used by fishermen. Carbis river splashed out of the valley and wound its way across the sand to the sea, dividing the beach.
Medium:
Watercolour -
Frame:
Yes
Size:
18ins x 12ins -
Status:
Available
|
|
|