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Bankside and Gallery
The southern end of the bridge is near Globe Theatre, the Bankside Gallery and Tate Modern, the north end next to the City of London School below St Paul's Cathedral.
In April 1994 the Tate Gallery announced that Bankside would be the home for the new Tate Modern.
The Bankside Gallery is an art gallery in Bankside, South London, England.
* Bankside Gallery website
it: Bankside Gallery
The Bankside Power Station in London was converted for use as the Tate Gallery.
The Tate Gallery, as it was formerly known, also became a major centre for modern art ; in 2000 this collection moved to Tate Modern, a new gallery housed in the former Bankside Power Station.

Bankside and is
It is based in the former Bankside Power Station, in the Bankside area of Central London.
Thomas Platter the Younger, a Swiss traveller, saw a tragedy about Julius Caesar at a Bankside theatre on 21 September 1599 and this was most likely Shakespeare's play, as there is no obvious alternative candidate.
The Millennium Bridge, officially known as the London Millennium Footbridge, is a steel suspension bridge for pedestrians crossing the River Thames in London, England, linking Bankside with the City.
The river is utilised as a means of transport with piers along the South Bank at the London Eye, Royal Festival Hall, Bankside and London Bridge.
On the south bank of the River Thames in London, near where the modern recreation of Shakespeare's Globe stands today, is a plaque that reads: " In Thanksgiving for Sam Wanamaker, Actor, Director, Producer, 1919 – 1993, whose vision rebuilt Shakespeare's Globe Theatre on Bankside in this parish ".
* Bankside Power Station, rather than the actual Tower of London, is the prison where Clarence is imprisoned.
It bears a marked resemblance to Scott's industrial architecture, a famous example of which is Bankside Power Station ( the home of the Tate Modern ).
Bankside Power Station is a former oil-fired power station, located on the south bank of the River Thames, in the Bankside district of London.
Bankside is a district of London, England, and part of the London Borough of Southwark.
Bankside is located on the southern bank of the River Thames, east of Charing Cross, running from a little west of Blackfriars Bridge to just a short distance before London Bridge at St Mary Overie Dock to the east.
It is part of a business improvement district known as Better Bankside.
Bankside is the riverside of the former liberties of the Clink and Paris Garden.
The skyline of Bankside is dominated by the former Bankside Power Station, which now houses the Tate Modern.
A major new development in the area is the Bankside 1 / 2 / 3 complex on Southwark Street.
Bankside 1, also known as the Blue Fin Building, is occupied by IPC Media, while Bankside 2 and 3 are occupied by The Royal Bank of Scotland.
It is part of the Borough and Bankside Community Council which corresponds to the Southwark electoral wards of Cathedrals and Chaucer.
Capable of seating well over a hundred, Garriott's Curtain theater is modeled after the style also replicated in full-scale by Sam Wanamaker's Globe Theatre replica in Southwark, on the south bank of the Thames, in an area known as Bankside.

Bankside and Royal
He has also been asked to style nine Royal Opera House Galas, the re-opening of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, the décor for the Centrepoint Ball at the Natural History Museum, and the styling of the inaugural dinner at the Tate Modern, Bankside.

Bankside and .
The galleries are housed in the former Bankside Power Station, which was originally designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, the architect of Battersea Power Station, and built in two stages between 1947 and 1963.
The nineteenth-century plaque at 49 Bankside which incorrectly identifies this house as one lived in by Wren.
In 1599, Shakespeare's Globe Theatre was erected on the Bankside in the Clink Liberty, though it burned down in 1613.
The Borough and Bankside Community Council corresponds to the Southwark electoral wards of Cathedrals and Chaucer.
Tate Modern, in Bankside Power Station on the south side of the Thames, opened in 2000 and now exhibits the national collection of modern art from 1900 to the present day, including some modern British art.
The rebuilt Globe Theatre and its exhibition on the Bankside remind us of the area's being the birthplace of classical theatre.
The new theatre was larger than the building it replaced, with the older timbers being reused as part of the new structure ; the Globe was not merely the old Theatre newly set up at Bankside.
As the settlement expanded its name changed: briefly known as " Bankside " in 1693, officially named Green's Farm in 1732 in honor of Bankside Farmer John Green and in 1835 incorporated as the Town of Westport.
Settlement by colonialists dates back to the five Bankside Farmers ; whose families grew and prospered into a community that continued expanding.
In 1587, Henslowe and John Cholmley built The Rose, the third of the large, permanent playhouses in London, and the first in Bankside.
In 1598, Burbage's company ( by then, the Lord Chamberlain's Men ) erected the new Globe Theatre in Bankside ; Henslowe moved the Admiral's Men to the north-western corner of the city, into a venue he had financed, the Fortune Theatre.
In 1614, he and Jacob Meade built the Hope Theatre in Bankside ; designed with a moveable stage for both plays and animal baiting, it was the last of the large open-roof theatres built before 1642.
Julian M. C. and Pat Miller, The Rose and the Globe Playhouses of Shakespeare's Bankside, 1989-1991 ( London: Museum of London Archaeology, 2009 )
1593 map showing The Rose in relation to the Bear Garden on Bankside.
) — and the first of several playhouses to be situated in Bankside, Southwark, in a liberty outside the jurisdiction of the City of London's civic authorities.

Gallery and is
He pointed out to the young musicians that the National Gallery `` is the only museum in the country to have a full-time music director, Richard Bales.
His Landscape with Footbridge ( National Gallery, London ) of 1518-1520 is claimed to be the first pure landscape in oil.
From 1586 is his altarpiece of the Madonna with Child and Saints, in the National Gallery of Parma.
There is a portrait of him by Francis Wheatley in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
File: Florence Arno 180. jpg | The River Arno in Florence, 180 degree view: the Uffizi Gallery is straight across and the Ponte Vecchio is to the left
The East Side Gallery is an open-air exhibition of art painted directly on the last existing portions of the Berlin Wall.
There is also a collection of her fungi paintings at the Perth Museum and Art Gallery in Perth, Scotland donated by Charles McIntosh.
The Tale of Peter Rabbit is owned by Frederick Warne and Company, The Tailor of Gloucester by the Tate Gallery and The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies by the British Museum.
Titian's Diana and Callisto ( 1559 ) portrays the moment when Callisto's pregnancy is discovered ( National Gallery of Scotland ).
One of the largest of these paintings is a view of St. Bartholomew's Church at Lawrie Park Avenue, commonly known as The Avenue, Sydenham, in the collection of the London National Gallery.
* 1922 – President of Poland Gabriel Narutowicz is assassinated by Eligiusz Niewiadomski at the Zachęta Gallery in Warsaw.
The national collection is housed in the National Gallery of Scotland, located on the Mound, and now linked to the Royal Scottish Academy, which holds regular major exhibitions of painting.
The painting is currently in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D. C.
The painting is displayed at the Pavilion Gallery in Assiniboine Park, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
An important cultural, artistic, and educational centre for the province, Fredericton is home to two universities, the New Brunswick College of Craft & Design, and cultural institutions such as the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, the York Sunbury Museum, and The Playhouse — a performing arts venue.
At the start of the Grand Gallery on the right-hand side there is a hole cut in the wall ( and now blocked by chicken wire ).
Also at the start of the Grand Gallery there is a Horizontal Passage leading to the " Queen's Chamber ".
The Grand Gallery continues the slope of the Ascending Passage, but is high and long.
There are seven of these steps, so at the top the Grand Gallery is only wide.
At the upper end of the Gallery on the right-hand side there is a hole near the roof which opens into a short tunnel by which access can be gained to the lowest of the Relieving Chambers.
The purpose of these slots is not known, but the central gutter in the floor of the Gallery, which is the same width as the Ascending Passage, has led to speculation that the blocking stones were stored in the Grand Gallery and the slots held wooden beams to restrain them from sliding down the passage.

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