"North Bovey Morning" England

  • Details

    North Bovey is a village and civil parish situated on the south-eastern side of Dartmoor National Park, Teignbridge, Devon, England, about 11 miles WSW of the city of Exeter and 1.5 miles SSW of Moretonhampstead. The village lies above the eastern bank of the River Bovey. from which it takes its name. In 2001 the population of the parish was 274, compared to 418 in 1901 and 519 in 1801.

    The parish church

    The parish church is built of granite and is dedicated to St. John the Baptist. It dates from the 13th century and was restored early in the 20th century by Sir Charles Nicholson. It is one of the several churches around Dartmoor that has a representation of the tinners rabbits on one of its roof bosses

    On the village green is an ancient stone cross which was thrown down during the Civil War and spent some time afterwards as a bridge over a local stream. In 1829 it was retrieved and installed into a socket-stone which had remained in situ on the village green, though it is not considered likely that it is the original cross that was mounted here as it appears to be older than the base.

    Sanders, a fine 16th-century longhouse at Lettaford

    The parish encompasses part of the eastern side of Dartmoor, an area rich in Bronze Age remains such as Grimspound, right on its boundary. The medieval Bennett's Cross, on the road between Moretonhampstead and Two Bridges is one of the markers of the parish boundary, and the Birch Tor and Vitifer tin mining area is nearby. In the north of the parish, the small settlements of Beeson and Shapley were mentioned in the Domesday Book. There are several preserved Dartmoor longhouses in the parish, notably at Lettaford and Westcombe.

    Also within the parish is Bovey Castle, designed by Detmar Blow and built in 1905–7 for Viscount Hambledon, son of W. H. Smith, the newsagent. It is now a grade II* listed building and a hotel with an 18-hole championship golf course.

  • Biography

    Eric Michaels (Born 1949)

    Living in Trinidad, Colorado, Eric Michaels is a plein-air landscape painter of Southwestern and European subjects using watercolors, pastels and primarily oils.

    He was raised in the Midwest and earned a degree in fine art and spent several years as a social worker with the Department of Welfare in Rockford, Illinois. He had both music and art talent, and played guitar with performing groups. He is now a full-time painter, and his wife, Maxine is his business manager, shipper, and framer. The couple lived in Santa Fe before settling in Trinidad.

    Some of Michaels' projects are huge including a 12-painting project on the history of El Paso, Texas, and three large paintings on the Battle of the Little Bighorn.

    Source:
    Art of the West magazine


    Perhaps the most distinctive feature of Eric Michaels' work is its international flavor. The subject matter spans four continents and both hemispheres. Painting in these various locations enables him to achieve an understanding of local light conditions and to participate in the native experience.

    Michaels was born and raised in Illinois. As a young boy, he cultivated an early appreciation for music and art. He spent a great deal of time drawing sports figures and Disney characters, and studying guitar with an old vaudeville banjo player. With the folk scene booming in the sixties, Michaels paid his way through college teaching guitar and performing in coffeehouses. After graduating with a B.F.A. in art, his wanderlust got the best of him, so he grabbed his guitar and took off across North America. For three years, he played clubs, coffeehouses and universities from Alaska to Mexico. As the folk scene ebbed in the seventies, Michaels decided to pursue a new musical venue. He began studying classical guitar at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. In 1983, on a music tour through the southwest, he and his wife passed through Santa Fe and decided to stay.

    The size and strength of the Santa Fe art community surprised Michaels, and within a year he decided to give up his music performances to concentrate on his art. He did a small bit of commercial illustration to help pay the bills, and, shortly thereafter, had enough viable galleries to begin making a living in fine art.

    Michaels still loves to travel. His art has taken him to exotic destinations in Africa, Europe, Central America and Indonesia. He also loves to paint the rich culture and landscapes of the region surrounding his home in Trinidad, Colorado.

    Michaels has exhibited at the Royal Watercolour Society in London, nine years in the Artists of America Show in Denver and is a regular exhibitor in the Great American Artists Exhibition in Cincinnati. His paintings hang in private, corporate, museum and state collections; including the Albuquerque Museum of Fine Art, the Americana Museum, the Institute of American Indian Arts, Phillips Petroleum, IBM, Honeywell-Sperry Inc., and the State Collection of the Governor's Gallery, Santa Fe, NM.

    Michaels is a signature member of the Oil Painters of America, National Watercolor Society and the Pastel Society of America.

    Born and raised in Illinois, Eric Michaels began his artistic journey by drawing sports figures and Disney characters. His love of drawing, however, was shared with a love of music; specifically the guitar. Paying his way through college by teaching guitar lessons and playing in coffee houses, Michaels left college with a BFA and a desire to travel.

    Wandering across the west, Michaels earned his living playing music. He eventually began studying classical guitar at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and while on a music tour through the southwest, Michaels and his wife found themselves in Santa Fe. Enamored with the city, they decided to stay. The size of the visual art community there surprised Michaels, and he was soon putting down his guitar to pick up a paint brush full time.

    Never losing his love of travel, Michaels has painted the landscapes of Africa, Europe, Central America, and Indonesia. His work has appeared in Art of the West and Art- Talk publications. He is a signature member of the Oil Painters of America, the National Watercolor Society and the Pastel Society of America.

    Michaels currently lives and works in Trinidad, Colorado.

    Eric Michaels was born and raised in Illinois. As a young boy, he cultivated an early appreciation for both music and art. He studied guitar with a former vaudeville banjo player while also amusing himself drawing sports figures and Disney characters. He went on to earn a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and to study classical guitar at the San Francisco Conservatory.

    In 1983, Michaels and his wife passed through Santa Fe on a musical tour of the southwest. They were so impressed by the size and strength of the art community there, the couple decided to move there. Eric gave up his musical career and devoted himself to art full-time. More than 20 years later, Michaels has achieved prominent status in the American art scene, and is perhaps best known for the distinctive international flavor of his subject matter, which spans four continents and both hemispheres.

    His paintings hang in private, corporate, museum and state collections. He is a Signature Member of the Pastel Society of America, the Oil Painters of America, and the National Watercolor Society.