Gallery change over day & what you should know about Scottish Art & Kirkcudbright
Roy and I talk about what gallery changeover day like as artists and our fact finding visit to Kirkcudbright. It's the home of great Scottish Art, including Edward Hornel and Jessie M King, and the new gallery.
#art #scottishart #starsofscotland #exhibition #glasgowboys #kirkcudbright #kirkcudbrightartgallery #Hornel #Picasso #Penrith #Cumbria #EVANWest #Painting #artgallery #jessiemking #Japan #Japanese #Japanesegarden #edwardhornel
National Gallery of Scotland - Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
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National Gallery Of Scotland Edinburgh
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Travel blogs from National Gallery of Scotland:
- ... Royal Scottish Academy and the National Gallery of Scotland ...
- ... Que estamos de festival National Gallery of Scotland Por el camino hacia la Royal Mile me distraje un poquillo (sino, para que estan las vacaciones ...
- ... So we went instead to the National Gallery of Scotland ...
- ... My last day - and decided to go to the National Gallery of Scotland ...
- ... It too cost money, so out of sympathy for my withering bank account I carried on and went to the National Gallery of Scotland, where admission is FREE I love the fact that your eyes can glide from the heavy brush strokes of Van Gogh to ...
- ... I manage to find my way past the National Gallery of Scotland, in a very Greekly built building, out to the Prince's Street Gardens ...
- ... The Royal Scottish Academy and the National Gallery of Scotland are side by side on Princes St ...
- ... With a few hours before lunch, a few of us set out to visit the National Gallery of Scotland, a museum with a fantastic collection of European art ...
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- Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
Photos in this video:
- Rest of the National Gallery of Scotland by Cmvanacker from a blog titled Anglophile Spring Break: Edinburgh
- National gallery of scotland by Sweetmochigirl from a blog titled Last minute dash to Scotland for Easter
- National Gallery of Scotland by Cmvanacker from a blog titled Anglophile Spring Break: Edinburgh
- National Gallery of Scotland by Melmikaere from a blog titled Edinburgh, Scotland
Callum Innes Museum De Pont Tilburg met I'll Close My Eyes
With the song title I'll Close My Eyes from Dinah Washington the Schottish painter Callum Innes invites us to close our eyes and look again. Look again with a fresh view to discover the layers in his art work. Museum de Pont (Tilburg the Netherlands ) shows a big part of the painting collection of @CallumInnes like his series ' Exposed Paintings and Exposed Water colours'. Icon for me at this exhibition is his Stone Circle which has been re- enstalled for this exhibition.
@MuseumDePont #Tilburg #modernekunst #modernart #hedendaagsekunst #DinahWashington #sculpture #beeldendkunstenaar #artblogger #artblog
Dinah Washington continues in her song with ... and I see you with my heart. That's what I will do. Enjoy your day.
Places to see in ( Edinburgh - UK )
Places to see in ( Edinburgh - UK )
Edinburgh is Scotland's compact, hilly capital. It has a medieval Old Town and elegant Georgian New Town with gardens and neoclassical buildings. Looming over the city is Edinburgh Castle, home to Scotland’s crown jewels and the Stone of Destiny, used in the coronation of Scottish rulers. Arthur’s Seat is an imposing peak in Holyrood Park with sweeping views, and Calton Hill is topped with monuments and memorials.
Edinburgh is the capital city of Scotland and one of its 32 local government council areas. Located in Lothian on the Firth of Forth's southern shore, Edinburgh is Scotland's second most populous city and the seventh most populous in the United Kingdom. Recognised as the capital of Scotland since at least the 15th century, Edinburgh is home to the Scottish Parliament and the seat of the monarchy in Scotland. The city is also the annual venue of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and home to national institutions such as the National Museum of Scotland, the National Library of Scotland and the Scottish National Gallery. It is the largest financial centre in the UK after London.
Historically part of Midlothian, the city has long been a centre of education, particularly in the fields of medicine, Scots law, literature, the sciences and engineering. The University of Edinburgh, founded in 1582 and now one of four in the city, was placed 17th in the QS World University Rankings in 2013 and 2014. The city is also famous for the Edinburgh International Festival and the Fringe, the latter being the world's largest annual international arts festival. The city's historical and cultural attractions have made it the United Kingdom's second most popular tourist destination after London, attracting over one million overseas visitors each year. Historic sites in Edinburgh include Edinburgh Castle, Holyrood Palace, the churches of St. Giles, Greyfriars and the Canongate, and the extensive Georgian New Town, built in the 18th century. Edinburgh's Old Town and New Town together are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which has been managed by Edinburgh World Heritage since 1999.
Situated in Scotland's Central Belt, Edinburgh lies on the Firth of Forth's southern shore. The city centre is 2 1⁄2 miles (4.0 km) southwest of the shoreline of Leith and 26 miles (42 km) inland, as the crow flies, from the east coast of Scotland and the North Sea at Dunbar.[56] While the early burgh grew up near the prominent Castle Rock, the modern city is often said to be built on seven hills, namely Calton Hill, Corstorphine Hill, Craiglockhart Hill, Braid Hill, Blackford Hill, Arthur's Seat and the Castle Rock
Edinburgh Airport is Scotland's busiest and biggest airport and the principal international gateway to the capital, handling around 11 million passengers in 2015. Travel in Edinburgh is undertaken predominantly by bus. Lothian Buses operate the majority of city bus services within the city and to surrounding suburbs, with the most routes running via Princes Street. Services further afield operate from the Edinburgh Bus Station off St Andrew Square and Waterloo Place and are operated mainly by Stagecoach, Scottish Citylink, National Express Coaches, First Scotland East & Perryman's Buses. Edinburgh Waverley Station is the second-busiest railway station in Scotland, with only Glasgow Central handling more passengers.
Alot to see in ( Edinburgh - UK ) such as
Holyrood Palace
Arthur's Seat
HMY Britannia
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh
Mary King's Close
Princes Street Gardens
Camera Obscura
Scottish National Gallery
St Giles' Cathedral
Holyrood Park
Princes Street
Edinburgh Castle
Scottish National Portrait Gallery
Our Dynamic Earth
Scott Monument
The Georgian House, Edinburgh
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art
Surgeons' Hall
Edinburgh Zoo
Museum of Childhood
Edinburgh Waverley railway station
Inchcolm
Water of Leith
Inchcolm Abbey
Craigmillar Castle
Scottish Parliament Building
Gladstone's Land
Museum of Edinburgh
John Knox House
National War Museum
Holyrood Abbey
Greyfriars Kirk
National Monument of Scotland
Pentland Hills
Greyfriars Kirkyard
Murrayfield Stadium
Fruitmarket Gallery
Heart of Midlothian
Kirk of the Canongate
Dean Gallery
Royal Scottish Academy Building
Blackford Hill
Calton Hill
Dean Village
Writers' Museum
The Canongate
Nelson Monument, Edinburgh
( Edinburgh - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Edinburgh . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Edinburgh - UK
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Edging West | Exhibition of painting by Brendan Stuart Burns at Osborne Samuel Gallery
Edging West
Brendan Stuart Burns: New Paintings and Ceramics
28 Nov - 20 Dec
Online catalogue:
For all enquiries please email info@osbornesamuel.com
Since his last exhibition at Osborne Samuel Gallery in 2015 Brendan Stuart Burns has had a full programme of exhibitions and travelling. In 2016 he had a solo show at Rosenberg & Co on New York’s Upper East Side; 2017 saw a visit to Iceland culminating in a new body of work. In June 2018 Open Eye Gallery in Edinburgh held a solo exhibition. Later in 2018 he was invited to visit Southern California to complete a commission and he returned in the summer of 2019 for a residency, some of the resulting paintings are included in this exhibition. This autumn he returned to New York for a second exhibition at Rosenberg & Co.
In the spring of 2020, Burns will take up a two-month residency at Earthskin, a charitable trust whose mission is environmental stewardship to foster and inspire the creative arts, based in Muriwai on the west coast of New Zealand’s North Island. This will be followed by an exhibition in April at Artis Gallery in Auckland.
We continue to successfully exhibit Burns’ work at various art fairs – the London Art Fair, masterpiece, The British Art Fair and Art Miami; all have brought new admirers and collectors from all over the world.
Burns’ paintings reflect his intimate study of rocks and mud-pools, the lichen in all weathers, the sand and pebbles, the powerful ebb and flow of coastal tides and winds and the erosion caused; the shimmering light on the spindrift bubbles of the sea and the vegetation on the coastal edge. All are thoughtfully observed, drawn and photographed. This provides the inspiration for Burns’ unique visual language, the ecology of the Pembrokeshire coast that also fascinated esteemed predecessors such as Graham Sutherland and John Craxton. Inevitably the topography, light and atmosphere of California has influenced his recent paintings and the upcoming New Zealand trip will surely do likewise.
These works have an understated power and energy; inspired by nature and the elements they also exude a Zen-like sense of calm. In conversation with the Welsh poet, Professor Tony Curtis, Burns explained: “Landscape art is an appropriation of nature; therefore, the painting will always be an abstraction. …. my work is not abstract in the formal sense, but it has enjoyed the relationship with ambiguity, it is concerned with inner emotion and the sensed experience of the viewer, it is about the contemplative and experience of self-reflection.”
Scotland.
Scotland’s towns, villages, cities, iconic attractions and stunning landscapes are as varied and as diverse as they come, so no matter where you end up you’ll be blown away by the breathtaking setting around you.
In the Highlands, one of the most famous and iconic landscapes is Glen Coe. Well-known across the globe for its features in big blockbuster movies, such as Braveheart and Highlander, its landscape is made up of swooping glens, towering mountains and an atmosphere that will leave you in awe. Nearby, the scenic Loch Leven is a perfect location for picturesque walks and exploring. Making an appearance in the Harry Potter films, the Glenfinnan Viaduct is an easily recognisable attraction, located in the incredible setting of Loch Shiel on the west coast. Take a trip on the Jacobite Steam Train and venture across the viaduct for a unique and memorable day out. Probably the most photographed castle in Scotland, Eilean Donan Castle near Dornie is a famous Scottish icon and once you set eyes on it, it’s easy to see why.
In the east, Dunnottar Castle is an incredible fortress perched on the Aberdeenshire coastline that is must-see when in the area and is home to many rich secrets of Scotland’s colourful past. Further south, head to the newly-opened and world-renowned V&A Dundee. This museum hosts incredible exhibitions of art and design from throughout the years and is Scotland’s first design museum and the only V&A museum in the world outside London.
Edinburgh & The Lothians has bundles to offer too. Connecting Edinburgh and Fife, the Forth Road Bridge in South Queensferry is one of the most iconic man-made structures in Scotland that dates back to the 19th century. Take a stroll across the bridge and marvel at the views out to sea. Edinburgh is bursting at the seams with attractions, famous locations, historic museums and more. Edinburgh Castle, Scott Monument, National Museum of Scotland, Royal Mile, Calton Hill and Princes Street Gardens are just a few of the places to visit. Just outside of the city, Rosslyn Chapel is nestled in the heart of Midlothian and boasts unique and mysterious carvings, tales of age-old myths and legends, and stunning grounds to explore.
Due south from Edinburgh, Dumfries & Galloway is home to the peculiar triangle-shaped Caerlaverock Castle. This medieval fortress features a moat, twin-towered gatehouse and imposing battlements, giving it a real ancient feel and atmosphere.
The Borders Railway encapsulates the enchanting regions of Edinburgh, Midlothian and the Scottish Borders alongside the rich history, landscapes, outdoor activities and more that these areas boast. Starting in Edinburgh Waverley, the train stops at various locations including Brunstane, Shawfair, Eskbank and Gorebridge before terminating in Tweedbank.
Glasgow, Scotland’s biggest city, offers the liveliness of city life, alongside striking architecture, fascinating museums, bustling streets and more. Explore the Riverside Museum, Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum, People’s Palace and more to get a real feel of what the city is all about. North west of Glasgow in Argyll, the romantic Inveraray Castle on the shores of Loch Fyne is one of Scotland’s finest stately homes that has complimented the surrounding landscape since the early 15th century.
Explore the traditional and cultural side of Scotland on our incredible islands. In the Outer Hebrides the Hebridean Way from Vatersay in the south to the Isle of Lewis in the north is not to be missed. It’s a wonderful way to explore the islands either by bike on the 185-mile cycle network or on the long distance 156-mile walking route. On the Isle of Lewis, the popular Calanais Standing Stones are 5,000 years old with a visitor centre that guides you through the ages and tells the story of this world-famous attraction. Nearby on the Isle of Harris, Seilebost Beach will make you think you are somewhere in the Caribbean. With crystal clear waters, golden sandy beaches, and crisp sea air, the scenery will really take your breath away.
Further north, Orkney is another fascinating collection of Scottish islands. Visit the Neolithic site of Skara Brae and learn about the prehistoric settlement that was once found here and delve into what life was like on the islands some 5,000 years ago.
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ING Discerning Eye 2014
A pan round the Mall Galleries and the ING Discerning Eye 2014 Exhibition. Six small exhibitions with works selected by six curators: artists Nicola Green and Emma Stibborn RA; collectors Chris Ingram and Dr. Giles Brown; critics Simon Martin and Helen Sumpter
Exhibiting the Benin Bronzes - The Arts Past & Present
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The academic dilemmas behind curatorial decisions on ways of displaying the Benin Bronzes.
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The Liverpool Complaints Choir
The Complaints Choir is an international art project that invites you to sing your gripes aloud. In Summer 2019, The Liverpool Complaints Choir was formed to transform our personal moaning into something great and powerful. Created by artists Tellervo Kalleinen and Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen and led by Choir Director, Jennifer John, the choir is made up of participants of all ages and backgrounds, coming together to performance their complaints in public spaces across Liverpool.
fact.co.uk
The Liverpool Complaints Choir is part of Real Work, a legacy project from The Future World of Work season, commissioned by Culture Liverpool as part of the Liverpool 2018 programme. Supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England and The Baring Foundation as part of Young At Art, a partnership between FACT, Open Eye Gallery and National Museums Liverpool.
Music composed and directed by Jennifer John. Produced by FACT.
The Liverpool Complaints Choir is:
Alan Kelly
Rose McNamara
Leo Svendsen
Anahid Kassabian
Sheila McGowan
Kenny Thompson
Anna Reid
Dee Coombes
Sharon Watkins
Alexandra Selecka
Dorothy Jackaman
Natalie Mortlock
Elaine Collins
Anna Saunders
Christine Robson
Bethan Williams
Vicky Harris
Camilla JaneDean
Jenny Watts
Kaya Herstad-Carney
Rene Alberto Garcia Cepedce
Emelio Pinchi
Stella Cairns
Kenny Thompson
John Prescott
Corinne Jones
Gary Bowman
Louise Harrison
Pippa Hall
Robyn Hart
Lauren Heywood
Amy Heywood
Jess Hynes
Kate Lattin
Amy Pulford
Poppy Smailes
Arden Williams
Robert Burns Sculpture National Gallery Edinburgh Scotland
Tour Scotland video of poet Robert Burns sculpture in the Scottish National Gallery on ancestry visit to Edinburgh, Britain, United Kingdom. Sir John Robert Steell, born 1804, died 1891, was a Scottish sculptor. He was born in Aberdeen on 18 September 1804, but his family moved to Edinburgh around one year after his birth. He was one of the eleven children of John Steell senior, an Edinburgh carver and guilder, and Margaret Gourlay, the daughter of William Gourlay, a Dundee shipbuilder. He died on 15 September 1891 and is buried in an unmarked grave in Edinburgh's Old Calton Cemetery.
ONE UNITED KINGDOM
I am so sick of this
Fatboy Slim @ British Airways i360 for Cercle
Fatboy Slim playing a special DJ set 450 feet high on the British Airways i360 in Brighton for Cercle.
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☞ Fatboy Slim
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Video credits:
Artist: Fatboy Slim
Venue: British Airways i360
Produced by Cercle
Executive producers: Philippe Tuchmann & Derek Barbolla
Film directed by: Pol Souchier & Derek Barbolla
Directors of photography: Anatole Vaillant, Jérémie Tridard & Mickael Fidjili
Drone: Cercle / Anatole Vaillant
Sound Engineer: Timothée Renard assisted by Aurélien Moisan
Light Engineer: Lucas Enguerrand
Stage Manager: Fabrice Marchand
Special thanks to i360 team for all their help & their warm welcome.
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Man stabbed '18 times in 25 seconds' on train
A security camera shows the moment Lee Pomeroy was stabbed 18 times in 25 seconds, on a train from Guildford to London in January.
The Old Bailey sat in silence during the graphic clip of the quick and frenzied attack on a train from Guildford to Waterloo.
The 51-year-old was stabbed by fellow passenger Darren Pencille on 4 January.
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University of Glasgow campus tour
Join our students Shumail, Patrick and Amy as they take you on your very own private tour of the University of Glasgow.
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Peter Doig’s 'Cobourg 3 + 1 More': ‘A Veil of Memory’
The artist’s former teacher, art critic Adrian Searle, discusses a work ‘so rich he could look at it for days’ — a highlight from our 7 March Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale.
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‘It’s this place of the imagination as much as a real place,’ says art critic Adrian Searle, discussing the landscape of mist and snow in Peter Doig’s Cobourg 3 + 1 More, a highlight of Christie’s Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale on 7 March.
The artist was one of Searle’s first pupils when he taught at London’s Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, and Searle recalls ‘a cowboy character, full of life’. Although he studied in London, the Edinburgh-born artist spent his early childhood in Trinidad and, later, in cities across Canada, whose vast, snow-whitened landscapes came to shape his later canvases.
Cobourg, the Ontario town from which his 1994 painting takes its name, is one of the places where Doig’s family settled. Searle comments: ‘I think a lot of the paintings he was making at this time do capture specific memories of youth, but they go beyond the anecdotal. If you like, the painting could be about the act of remembering and how fugitive that is.
‘Doig discovered what an apt medium painting is to try to capture something like memory or mood,’ Searle continues. ‘Paint is fluid: it resists you a bit, but it flows and curdles in places. It’s infinitely malleable, like memory.’ In Cobourg 3 + 1 More, Doig’s figures seem to ‘swim’ out at the viewer through a translucent field of white snow that appears, impossibly, to fall out in front of the painting.
‘Our interior worlds are coming in and out of focus all the time and that’s exactly what’s happening in this painting,’ says Searle, describing the work’s shift between ‘clarity and indistinction’. While making his snow paintings, Doig commented: ‘I was looking at a lot of Monet, where there is this incredibly extreme, apparently exaggerated use of colour’. Here again, an ‘interior world’ emerges: Doig has talked about ‘painting the space behind the eyes’, capturing the darts of colour that can, with concentration, appear to play across the insides of closed eyelids.
In Cobourg 3 + 1 More, Doig captures the transitory, half-way state between waking and sleeping — between day and night, winter and spring — that lies at the heart of his practice. It is a suggestion of a memory just out of reach, an evocation of the irretrievability of youth; a work, says Searle, that has an ‘orchestral quality’.
Andrew Carnegie Lecture Series – Tacita Dean
*THIS VIDEO IS AUDIO ONLY*
The fifth annual Andrew Carnegie Lecture at Edinburgh College of Art (ECA) was delivered by Tacita Dean.
Tacita Charlotte Dean OBE RA (born 1965) is an English visual artist who works primarily in film. She is one of the Young British Artists, was a nominee for the Turner Prize in 1998 and was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts in 2008.
Tacita Dean’s interest in landscape phenomena has taken her around the world; from the unspoilt landscape of Bodmin Moor in England, to the open rangelands of Wyoming in the American West to film a rare solar eclipse. Dean is a champion of photochemical film, yet her wide-ranging practice extends across a multitude of mediums.
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The UK premier of leading South African artist John Meyer’s landmark collection “Lost in the Dust”
The UK premier of leading South African artist John Meyer’s landmark collection “Lost in the Dust”
Watch our video which unveils the launch of a fascinating exhibition that has never been seen outside of Africa.
“Lost in the Dust” is a powerful exhibition celebrating a series of narrative paintings of the Anglo-Boer War by John Meyer, South Africa’s leading contemporary realist artist.
We caught up with John Meyer on the evening of his big opening; tune in to watch the construction and debut of the astonishing exhibit. Our video captures the reaction of its initial viewers and includes interviews with the artist himself.
The collection which has never been exhibited outside of Africa is an emotionally raw demonstration of the truth about war and the people affected by it.
John Meyer’s featured interviews include commentary on the creative stimuli behind “Lost in the Dust”, which is being hosted by Investec and Bonhams. He also explains the drive for his artistry as a whole and educates us with a brief history of South African art, the meaning of the exhibition’s first time in the UK and its significance in today’s modern society.
Notes to Editors:
The exhibition will open to public viewing from Wednesday 22 July to 30 July in London, and in Edinburgh from 11 August to 20 August. Press preview days will take place in London on 21 July and Edinburgh on 10 August.
Talks & Lectures | Rembrandt | Britain's Discovery of the Master
Rembrandt | Britain’s Discovery of the Master is an exclusive new exhibition that will only be shown in Edinburgh. The show reveals how the taste for Rembrandt’s work in Britain has evolved over the past four hundred years - from early beginnings around 1630; it grew into a mania that gripped collectors and art lovers across the country, reaching a fever pitch in the late-eighteenth century. It also explores how Rembrandt has impacted the British artistic imagination, exploring the native artists who have been inspired by the Dutch master from the 17th century, right up to the present day
Here, Dr Tico Seifert, curator of Rembrandt | Britain’s Discovery of the Master introduces the exceptionally rich story of Rembrandt’s art in Britain, and how it inspired collectors, artists and writers from about 1630 until the present day.
The exhibition runs from 7th July through October 14th 2018. Tickets £15 to £10, concessions available. For more information, visit
Rachel Maclean: Spite Your Face - Scotland + Venice 2017
Artist Rachel Maclean talks about her Scotland + Venice exhibition at the Biennale Arte 2017 in Venice.
Spite Your Face is a dark Venetian fairytale presented as a large-scale portrait projection at the altar of the deconsecrated church, Chiesa di Santa Caterina, Cannaregio, Venice.
The exhibition is open from 13 May - 26 November 2017.
Referencing the Italian folk-tale the film is a tale across two worlds - with a bright, glittering and ordered upper world, and a warped, dirty, impoverished lower world - where the lure of wealth, power and adoration entices a destitute young boy into the shimmering riches of the kingdom above.
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The presentation is commissioned and curated by Alchemy Film and Arts, in partnership with Talbot Rice Gallery and the University of Edinburgh.
Scotland + Venice is a partnership between Creative Scotland, National Galleries Scotland and British Council Scotland.
Watch Sky News live
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Today's top stories: Britain has left the European Union, bringing the curtain down on 47 years of membership, the first two people in the UK confirmed to have the coronoavirus had been staying in York and athletes will be allowed to continue wearing controversial running shoes that can provide significantly better times.
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????#BrexitDay: Celebration and regret as Britain leaves EU after 47 years
????First UK cases of #coronavirus were staying in York
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