You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
It began as a barn and became New Hampshire's oldest continuously operating summer theater. But after 90 years of summer plays and musicals, the New London Barn Playhouse needed renovation. With overwhelming support from the community, the Barn was reborn as a year round campus for the performing arts. Artist Sue Anne Bottomley's sketchbook records the week-by-week construction that transformed the Barn. Follow its progress in these delightful sketches of how a dream is realized.
Pep Talks is the inspiration you need to get up and out and start working on your art! Sue Anne Bottomley is a New Hampshire native. Raised in NH and Massachusetts, and an art major at the University of New Hampshire, she left the area after her college graduation to live in Washington State, Maryland, and England. After many years away, she returned to live in New London, NH, in 2008. Her first book was "Colorful Journey: An Artist's Adventure Drawing Every Town In New Hampshire."
New Hampshire is a small state, but it has seven distinct and engaging regions. Colorful Journey includes an illustration and some history about every town from each region by artist Sue Anne Bottomley. From the smallest settlement to the major cities of Concord, Nashua, Manchester, and Portsmouth, follow along on one artist's endeavor to draw New Hampshire. Sue Anne Bottomley is a New Hampshire native. Raised in NH and Massachusetts, and an art major at the University of New Hampshire, she left the area after her college graduation to live in Washington state, Maryland, and England. After many years away from home, she returned to live in New London, NH. With her goal of exploring every corner of the state within two years, she drew all 234 towns on location-with colored pencil, ink and watercolor.
Feminist perambulations : taking the law for a walk in land / by Anne Bottomley and Hilary Lim -- National nature reserves : nature as other confined / by Sue Elworthy -- Ancient monuments of national importance : symbols of whose past? / by Penny English -- A trip to the mall : revisiting the public/private divide / by Anne Bottomley -- Scapegoating and the legal landscape : homeless women and the law / by Rosy Thornton -- Women's work : locating gender in the discourse of anti-social behaviour / by Helen Carr -- Women travellers and the paradox of the settled nomad / by Margaret Greenfields and Robert Home -- 'Land doesn't come from your mother, she didn't make it with her hands?' : challenging matriliny in Papua New Guinea / by Melissa Demian -- Unfair shares for women : the rhetoric of equality and the reality of inequality / by Rosemary Auchmuty -- The shared home : a rational solution through statutory reform? / by Simone Wong -- Networking resources : a gendered perspective on Kwena women's property rights / by Anne Griffiths -- Accidental Islamic feminism : dialogical approaches to muslim women's inheritance rights / by Hilary Lim and Siraj Sait.
First published in 1996. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
None
Walk along with the artist, a New Hampshire native, as she sketches whatever stops her feet and tugs at her heart.
None
None
Whilst equal pay, maternity rights and sex discrimination have received attention from feminist scholars, there is an increasing awareness that the whole working environment needs to be examined. This text presents a discussion of traditional and less obvious aspects of employment.