Recherche de Musées et Peintures

Doncaster (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Doncaster est une ville britannique située dans le Yorkshire du Sud . Sa population est estimée à 109 850 habitants . Située à environ trente kilomètres de Sheffield, Doncaster est parfois appelé « Donny » par ses habitants et héberge le club de football de Doncaster Rovers FC.

Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery

Doncaster (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery is a museum in Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England.The museum is scheduled to close on 17 January 2020, with the collection being moved to a new site, due to open in summer 2020.

Mansion House, Doncaster

Doncaster (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Doncaster Mansion House is a Grade I listed building in Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England. It is owned and managed by Doncaster Council, and the venue is used for civic and private functions, including tours, afternoon teas, wedding services, and official receptions. The Mansion House stands on the site of the Carmelite Friary, which had been established in Doncaster in 1350 and remained until its dissolution on 13 November 1538, after which the buildings were destroyed. During the 18th century, Doncaster's position on the Great North Road brought wealth to the town. The town's corporation was frequently called on to host entertainments, initially at the mayor's house or the Angel or Three Cranes inns. In 1719, they took a lease on a house in the High Street for holding feasts, but let this lapse around 1727. They bought a site on the High Street in 1738, with the intention of building a permanent base for entertaining, but little construction took place for several years. In 1746, James Paine was appointed as architect in 1746. Although young, Paine had already worked on Nostell Priory and had designed Heath House, both near Wakefield.Mansion Houses had already been constructed in Newcastle-upon-Tyne , York and London. Whereas these other buildings contained both formal reception rooms and living quarters for the mayor, Doncaster's differed in being designed purely for entertainment, although some later mayors used space in the building as accommodation.Paine planned a building along the now established designs of Assembly Rooms. It was completed in 1748 and officially opened in 1749, the construction having cost £8,000. Paine was immediately offered more local work, starting with alterations to Cusworth Hall. He published his designs for the Mansion House in 1751. This work showed the building flanked by two other structures, marked as houses for the town clerk and recorder, but these were never part of the commission and were not built.William Lindley extended the building between 1801 and 1806, adding an attic storey, a rear banqueting hall and rear landing.

Brodsworth Hall

Doncaster (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Brodsworth Hall, near Brodsworth, 5 miles north-west of Doncaster in South Yorkshire, is one of the most complete surviving examples of a Victorian country house in England. It is virtually unchanged since the 1860s. It was designed in the Italianate style by the obscure London architect, Philip Wilkinson, then 26 years old. He was commissioned by Charles Sabine Augustus Thellusson, who inherited the estate in 1859, but the original estate was constructed in 1791 for merchant and slave owner Peter Thellusson. It is a Grade I listed building.

Cusworth Hall

Doncaster (Royaume-Uni) / Royaume-Uni

Cusworth Hall est un manoir situé à Cusworth, près de Doncaster, dans le South Yorkshire, dans le nord de l’Angleterre. Construit au XVIIIe siècle, Cusworth Hall et son parc sont un bon exemple de country house de l’ère géorgienne. Le bâtiment, qui est un monument classé grade I, a été acquis en 1961 par la municipalité de Doncaster pour en faire un musée, et il a subi d’importants travaux de rénovation entre 2003 et 2007.