Ceramics artist. From our Picture source website: "Art on Tiles, the hand painted tile company was founded in the 1980s by Jonathan Waights, a British ceramic artist who – as a teenager – was apprenticed to a leading tile-maker in a small village near Lisbon in Portugal. On arriving in England he set up Art on Tiles where he is still the principal artist."
This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Jonathan Waights
Creations i
Winchester Palace
The Rose Window in the west gable of the Great Hall of the London Palace of t...
Other Subjects
H. M. Bateman
Cartoonist. Born Henry Mayo Bateman at Moss Vale, Sutton Forest, New South Wales, Australia. His family moved to Britain in 1888, where he studied at Westminster School of Art and Goldsmiths' Colle...
James McNeill Whistler
Painter and printmaker, born in Worthen Street, Lowell, Massachussetts. His family moved to Russia in 1843 and he received his first formal art instruction at the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts, St ...
Philip de Laszlo
Painter. Born Budapest. In 1907 moved to London and stayed, though he often travelled for portrait commissions which included many royal families. His good relations with what became the enemy in...
Previously viewed
Stratford Underground crash
E15, Stratford Station, Upper Level
{Above the London Transport logo:} In remembrance of the twelve people killed in the collision between two Central Line trains adjacent t...
William Thomas
From St Lawrence Fountain: "Relatively little is known of the contractor for the fountain, William Thomas, other than he was based at Clipstone Street, Westminster. He was previously based from Pri...
Edward McKnight Kauffer
Artist and designer. Born in Great Falls, Cascade County, Montana, USA. As an art student, he was sponsored by Professor Joseph McKnight, from whom he adopted his middle name. He moved to Paris whe...
Peter Anning Revell-Smith, CBE, Deputy
Commoner on the City Lands & Bridge House Estates Committee, 1994.
Dick Whittington and his cat - Highgate
N19, Highgate Hill
British History Online (1878) says that in about 1795 "the original stone, being broken in two pieces, was removed hence to the corner of...
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