A Painting Holiday in the Dordogne
January 10, 2008
A relaxed painting holiday in the Dordogne where you will have a lovely time painting, drawing and seeing the sights…
Do you fancy a friendly, hands-on painting holiday where you can soak up the French life and learn to paint or draw the way you’ve always dreamed?
Do you feel frustrated by not being able to translate that beautiful view, building or still-life into an accomplished masterpiece?
‘Learn to Paint in France’ is run by English chef Jim Fisher and his wife, Lucy. Jenny, their fifteen year old daughter, goes to the local school at Montignac.
They live in a converted barn in the rolling Dordogne countryside, and it is from here that they run their cooking and art holidays.
They have worked hard to build their extremely popular cookery school and art holiday business, but thoroughly enjoy the challenge and experience of providing relaxing and fun activity holidays for their guests.

Learn skills that are already within you…
Well, our experienced friendly artists say that it’s all about showing you how to really ’see’ with artist’s eyes, and being able to build a successful painting while they gently tease out skills that are already in you!
In just a few idyllic days you’ll learn to paint and draw with skill and flair, enhance your painting technique and have a lovely time in great company and peaceful surroundings.
All subjects and media covered…
Between them, our tutors cover the complete range of subject matter:
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Landscapes
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Portaiture
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Still-life
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Animals
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Buildings and architecture
and the most popular media:
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Watercolour
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Gouache
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Acrylic
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Oil
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Pencil and charcoal
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Mixed media
We’re friendly, English-speaking and cater for all skill levels…
Our great value painting holidays prices (starting from just £120 per person)are conducted in English and are designed to cater for all skill levels. So, whether you’re an outright beginner, keen amateur or budding professional, you’ll always be in good company.
When you email us, or phone 0033 [0]553 302405, we’ll have a chat about what you want to achieve. Then, we’ll tailor the course to suit you and your fellow guests by gathering together similarly skilled painters on the same course. How simple is that?!
So, if you enjoy painting among friendly like-minded people in a warm relaxed atmosphere, come and learn to paint with us because you’ll quickly feel very much at home.
For more information about “Painting in the Dordogne” please visit: http://www.learntopaintinfrance.com/
Timeline
November 20, 2007

Combining time travel, archaeological exploration, and a power struggle in medieval Dordogne, this action-packed story will grab your attention from the very first page.
ITC, a company located in the New Mexico desert, is at the forefront of the new science of quantum technology. It has secretly developed a means of transporting humans back in time. In the Dordogne region of southwest France, a team of company-sponsored archaeologists and historians is unearthing the remains of a medieval castle, village, and monastery with the goal of developing a major tourist attraction. The words “HELP ME” followed by “4/7/1357″ written in ink and on paper used in the 14th century are found at the site. It seems that Professor Johnston, the team leader, demanded that he be transported back to the settlement, and obviously he is in danger there. A rescue effort is launched, and five people are transported back to April 1357: two escorts from ITC and three historians from the Dordogne project. Their time machine allows them 37 hours for the rescue, but within minutes of their arrival, the escorts are killed by a band of horsemen. The three survivors set out to find the missing man, and their race against time results in a gripping tale. YAs will be fascinated by this juxtaposition of modern-day physics with details of a medieval siege.
If you have ever been to the Dordogne, and have visited Beynac and Castelnaud you MUST read this book and watch the DVD.
Deadly Slipper by Michelle Wan
November 20, 2007
Deadly Slipper by Michelle Wan
Published by Vintage Crime/Black Lizard.
The Dordogne in spring - what could be lovelier or more peaceful, the air filled with the promise of summer and wild flowers blossoming in the hedgerows ? Read the Deadly Slipper and you may feel differently about this wonderful region of ours.
“For the first time in her life, she had an inkling of her sister’s mind, the passion that ruled true amateurs, motivating them to spend countless hours bending at the waist, as Julian had said, all for the sake of discovering and documenting the existence of a single flower or the breeding ground of a particular species.”

Beatrice “Bede” Dunn became fascinated with wild orchids when she got a summer job with the Ontario Ministry of the Environment. They sent her to the Bruce Peninsula to map orchids. She spent three months there, wandering around the woodlands, doing some serious hiking and camping-out. When she returned in the fall with fifty rolls of film, she had a new avocation - wild orchid hunting. Bede became passionate about “documenting the existence of a single flower or the breeding ground of a particular species.” In 1984 she and her boyfriend, Scott, went on a hiking holiday in the Dordogne region of southwestern France. When it began to rain, the couple had an argument about whether to leave their camp and seek shelter elsewhere or to stay put. Bede was adamant about remaining and so she did - alone. When Scott returned two days later the tent and their things were still at the campsite, but Bede was gone, along with her camera, backpack, Michelin guide and a book on wildflowers and orchids. No one ever saw the young woman again. After a massive search and investigation, which garnered much publicity, no evidence of foul play was discovered, no body, no crime scene.
Mara Dunn, Bede’s identical twin, has never resigned herself to the loss of her sister. She moved to the Dordogne after her divorce became final and went into the interior design business, all the while maintaining contact with the police. Nothing concrete, however, was found concerning the disappearance. During an antique hunting expedition in a near-by town, Mara discovered an old Canon camera in a pile of junk. She noticed it immediately, even though the case was mildewed and worn, because it was identical to the cameras her parents had given her and her sister for their high school graduation. She was sure it was the camera her sister had traveled to France with. Inside the case the initials “B. D.” were written, and inside the camera was an undeveloped roll of film. Damaged by time and dampness, but still viable, thirty-four photographs were revealed upon development, of wild orchids and a dovecote, taken in what appears to be the local landscape. Mara is convinced the photographs document her sibling’s final days.
Now, almost twenty years after Bede vanished, Mara, with the photographs in hand, makes yet another effort to find her sister, or her remains. Julian Wood is an English expatriate living in Dordogne and an expert on wild orchids. He is also the author of “Wildflowers of the Dordogne/ Fleurs sauvages de la Dordogne,” and the man Mara wants to assist her. She asks him to help her retrace her sister’s footsteps using the photographs as a guide. Julian is skeptical about turning up anything new on the missing person. He doesn’t really want to get involved and he doesn’t care much for pushy, intense women. Besides, the police have copies of the photographs and don’t seem very excited by them. When Julian views the final picture though, he becomes agitated and as motivated to begin a search as Mara, but for different reasons. The photo is of a Cypripedium - Sabot de Venus in French, sometimes called Lady’s Slipper in English. And since this rare wild orchid does not grow in the Dordogne, or anywhere in Europe, he has his own mystery to unravel - if he decides to become involved with Mara and her investigation.
Not only is Deadly Slipper a good literary mystery, it is really a fun book to read. Filled with an exotic cast of characters - from the local bogeyman and his mother, who is even scarier than her son, to the bizarre Sauvignac family, (the local nobility), to Julian Wood’s fanatic orchid hunting nemesis and competitor, and the regulars down at Chez Nous, the town’s cafe/bar/gourmet restaurant, plus a French police inspector and his lads, these personages all enrich the narrative. The horticulture tidbits are fascinating, and I’m no gardener. The description of food, wine, the gorgeous countryside - c’est tres magnifique! The setting IS France! There is even some romancing going on in between gruesome discoveries. You cannot go wrong, especially if you’re looking for something different in sleuthing.
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