We found 10155 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 10155 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
10155 item(s)/page
A quantity of home studio equipment comprising a pair of Bose 205 speakers, a Korg TR-Rack Expanded Access Module, a Korg D8 Digital Recording Studio, a Folio Notepad mixer, a Behringer Eurorack UB502 mixer, a Creative speaker system, a pair of Sennheiser HD650 headphones and various cables.
ORIGINAL JOY DIVISION BASS CAB SPEAKER. On wheels and measuring 113cm 60cm x 43cm. "This is the original. Used and re-wired and re-speakered for years as Joy Division. Went everywhere with us. Was used extensively in the van by Twinny as a bed and in the infamous crash incident was shot out of the van like a turbo charged coffin (luckily Twinny wasn't on it) and still it survived. Now fitted with Gauss Speakers."
Norman Stansfield Cornish (1919-2014) ''Solitary Miner'' Signed, watercolour heightened with white, 14cm by 22cm Provenance: The Stone Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne Artist's Resale Rights/Droit de Suite may apply to this lot, please refer to our Terms of Business See illustration Born in 1919 in Oxford Street, Spennymoor, Norman Cornish began working in the mines on Boxing day in 1933 and not long after he was accepted as a member of the Spennymoor Settlement, at just the age of 15. It was here that he met the author Sid Chaplin and fellow mining artist Tom McGuinness. The artists of the Settlement exhibited regularly at the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle and directly after the war Cornish held his first solo exhibition at the People's Theatre in Newcastle. The sale of five of his works at the exhibition resulted in him being asked to curate an exhibition on Oxford Street in London ''Art by the Miner''. The exhibition was organised to create awareness of the newly nationalised coalmines and resulted in Cornish being interviewed on television, it transpired that he was a natural speaker and he continued to converse with the media throughout his career. Cornish exhibited throughout the North East and nationally and in 1959 he first exhibited at the acclaimed Stone Gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne. The gallery prided itself on representing artists with local connections such as Sheila Fell and L.S Lowry in addition to many of the internationally acclaimed historical and old master artists. Cornish established a long standing relationship with the gallery which lasted for over twenty years.

-
10155 item(s)/page