Lucy Ward
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Lucy Ward
Joey Barton AVOIDS jail but is given a suspended sentence after being found guilty of six charges over 'offensive tweets'
Joey Barton has been handed a suspended sentence, a two-year restraining order and 200 hours of community service after being found guilty of six charges over ‘offensive tweets’ aimed at Eni Aluko, Lucy Ward and Jeremy Vine. The former footballer was sentenced to six months in prison, suspended for 18 months. He was told that if any other offence is committed in the next 18 months, he will be…
"I do now!" Lucy Ward says exasperatedly after Jonathan Pearce asks her if she knew another random fact about one of the players
And it’s blow the windy morning
Blow the wind aye-o!
Clear away the morning dew and sweet the wind shall blow
- The Baffled Knight by Lucy Ward
i like lucy ward when I've heard her on bt or bbc comms. she honest and tells it as she sees it. got a bit of the stoneys about her. i don't always agree with her but at least she's got opinions rather than parroting from the same silly hymn sheet about how great the usual suspects are.
^ what makes a commentator stand out as a good one imo
Lucy Ward
Text below by Henry F Skerrit:
Lucy Ward began painting in 2003 and has since established herself as one of the leading contemporary painters of the Wandjina. She has exhibited throughout Australia, as well as in Asia, Europe and America, and has held eight solo exhibitions through Mossenson Galleries in Perth, Melbourne and Sydney. Her works are held in several important public collections, including the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Western Australian Museum, the Berndt Museum of Anthropology at the University of Western Australia and Macquarie University. In 2006 she was awarded the City of Stirling Art Award, and she has been a finalist in numerous major art prizes, including the Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards, the Wynne Prize, the Arthur Guy Memorial Painting Prize, The Alice Prize and the Waterhouse Natural History Prize.
In the jubilant glow of Ward’s paintings there is a reflection on her long life lived in the Kimberley. She was born around 1920 at Ngarangarri country – the land of the Honey Dream – in what is now known as Beverley Springs Station. Her mother died while Ward was still an infant, so her father carried her around the bush in a bark coolamon, before finding a woman who was breastfeeding a little boy. According to Ward, “That little boy and I went share for her ngaman (milk), She was a good woman. That is why I am still alive today.”
(with thanks to Henry F Skerrit)
Anthony Ward