Waveney Valley Blog: 29/06/08 - 06/07/08

Thursday, 10 July 2008

The Green Grocers July Newsletter

Golden Triangle Farmers Market
Sunday 13th July 10-3

Come and meet all the producers. Our Farmers' Market is regulated by Produced In Norfolk to ensure all produce is Norfolk made. Click here for more details »

GreenStock08
24th August

It's back, it's on Sunday August 24th with more music, workshops, kids entertainment and eco stalls. It was a fantastic day last year. You can see more on last year here.

Currently we have
Misto (folk),
Rabo de Foguete (Brazilian music),
Sargasso Trio,
Andrew Kircham (folk) and The Vagaband ...

The full line up of music, stalls and kids entertainment will be announced in the next week along with a competition. Watch this space...

Supplier of the Month: Lakenham Creamery
They follow traditional batch methods to make the Gold Award winning Norfolk County Fresh Cream Ice Creams, using a pure fresh cream base. There are 24 mouthwatering flavours to choose from.
You can read more about them here»

Latest Blog...Is going Green worth it?
Click here to read our blog »

And Finally...
We couldn't resist this little YouTube snippet, and those of you who like a dance (warning: this is a corporate viral video - don't click if you will be offended by a global mobile phone brand) ....

Earsham Festival July 11th - 13th 2008

Earsham Festival 2008
July 11th to 13th

The Earsham Festival will take place this year on the weekend of July 11th-13th. The emphasis as in previous years will be on family entertainment.

Activities will start on Friday evening, July 11th, with a disco for the younger generation in the village hall. The early session from 6.00pm till 7.30pm will cater for the under 11s and the later session from 7.30pm till 9.30pm for older children.

On Saturday, July 12th, there will be the annual Mini Beer Festival in the village hall from 11.00am until late and a Family Fun Day and children’s entertainment on the village green in the afternoon.

Attractions will include Earsham School dancing display, Bungay High School musicians, charity stalls, traditional games and competitions, bouncy castles, roundabout and a variety of refreshments.

Good quality food and music will be available throughout the day and in the evening there will be dancing in the village hall to the music of three local bands.

On both Saturday and Sunday there will be a walking treasure trail round the village, a hanging baskets and garden tubs competition and a photographic display on the theme of childhood memories in All Saints Church.

Also, as part of the Harleston and Waveney Art Trail event, two local artists will invite the public to view their collections of paintings, sculpture, drawings and prints.

Morning coffee and cream teas will be available in the Church and the weekend’s events will conclude with Songs of Praise on Sunday evening at 5.00pm.

For further details please telephone 01986 895535 or 01986 893445

Donkey rides are back on Lowestoft Beach

Donkeys Korky, Billy, Henry and Noddy, will be giving rides on South Lowestoft Beach.

From 11am and 4pm at weekends until the school summer holidays, and then five days a week depending on the weather.



£2 per ride for children under 8 stone/51kg
(new animal welfare regulations)


For more information contact Lydia Ward on 01502 562921

Beccles, their sweet destiny - YouTube

see more videos via our BogPod

Local Mills - Diss Smockmill

c.1910

Diss Smockmill

Diss smockmill stood on the corner of Stuston Road and Victoria Road, having been erected on the site of an older postmill that was often known as Chase's Mill and had been destroyed during a gale in 1839.

The 5 storey mill had an 8 sided tower with a boat shaped cap that had a pettticoat, gallery and a 6 bladed fan. The 4 double shuttered sails each had 8 bays of 3 shutters, drove 2 pairs of French burr stones and were struck by rack and pinion. The upright shaft was made of cast iron.

A separate building stood adjacent that housed the steam roller mills.

c.1911

Rose Lane composite mill & Stuston Road smockmill during the flood in August 1912

c.1915

3 mills on Stuston Common c.1915

The above photograph shows the army from Diss Camp 51 about to give a demonstration with Maxim machine guns on Stuston Common with several civilians looking on.

Diss smockmill and steam roller mill is to the right, the steam chimney and Rose Lane composite mill to the left of centre and the sails of Victoria Road towermill are just visible on the left horizon above the back of the horse.

A quote from the past . . .

NARROW ESCAPE
Last week a young man of the name of Dykes, in the employ of Mr. Rush, miller of Diss, was caught by the gripe taking his handkerchief about his neck, and carrying him up; it must have proved fatal, but some person below, hearing his cries, suddenly stopped the mill, which would otherwise have, by coming in contact with the upper beam, severed his head from his body. - Norwich Mercury. The Times - 9th November 1840.

For more history about this mill and many others, please visit - www.norfolkmills.co.uk

Flixton Aviation Museum - YouTube

GT YARMOUTH Sport

Information about sports clubs in and around Great Yarmouth, Norfolk

If you would like your local sports club entered here,
email your web address to:

email@waveneyvalleyblog.com


Great Yarmouth Town FC
yarmouthfc.tripod.com



Broadland RFC
www.broadlandrfc.com


Lowestoft and Yarmouth RFC
www.lowestoftandyarmouthrfc.com


Great Yarmouth Cricket Club
greatyarmouth.play-cricket.com



Great Yarmouth & District Table Tennis
www.greatyarmouthtabletennis.org.uk

Lowestoft Sea Glass Transformed, by Michele Bailey


Lowestoft sea glass found

My friend Flik and her 10 year old daughter Chloe agreed to collect some sea glass for me when they were visiting Grandma in Lowestoft. Grandma is Lowestoft born and bred and her grandfather was a well know skipper who participated in the storming of the beaches of Normandy on D Day. She very kindly donated all of her grandfathers things to the local Maritime Museum so do go and visit there as well.

Flik and Chloe started their hunt for Lowestoft sea glass at the South Pier. They walked all along the sea front and spent some 6 hours out on a windy cold April day. The haul was fairly small - only 5 pieces and so it would appear that Lowestoft sea glass is a rare find indeed. Flik said it was a great way to keep a 10 year old busy (after they have been told to only pick up the nicely smoothed pieces, of course). Most of the sea glass was found in the sandy places. Even though it was cold and windy Flik said it was great fun.

The romantic in me would like to think that Chloe found a piece of a bottle that was lost over board by her great great grandfather in the seas around Lowestoft. The little blue pebble is destined to become a special gift and Chloe has a promise of a little pendant of her own next time they visit Grandma.


Lowestoft sea glass transformed

You can see what I’ve done with these three pieces of Lowestoft sea glass.

The Blue pebble shaped one is enclosed in a sterling silver cage of wire and was chosen to be a very special gift.

The green teardrop shape was a tricky piece and I had to cheat a bit to bring the shape into focus with a grinder. Why did I do that? I only had 5 pieces to work with and I was determined to give Flik some choices. I think this one is less than a decade old as sea glass. I’ve called it ‘Stella Tear Drop’ because I’m fairly certain this is part of a beer bottle. It has a square profile wire to give a basic hold to the glass and then a round profile silver wire to stabilize it.

The slightly luminous yellowy greenish pebble I managed to set in sterling silver. I used glue to hold it still so I could push the sterling silver band to the pebble.


What is sea glass
Sea glass is ordinary glass that has found its way into the sea and over the years (decades and sometimes hundreds of years) the power of the sea smooths the surface of the glass transforming it.

How do you know if a piece of sea glass will make a nice piece of jewellery? Obviously it should be a nice smooth shape and the test is to imagine it hanging from your neck with no adornment at all. If it looks beautiful all on its own, it will probably be a nice subject for wire wrapping or setting.


Michele Bailey – aka HedgelandsGlassLass
I got into jewellery design through stained glass and my love of dichroic glass. I’ve widened the materials I use to include sterling silver, artisan made glass beads and semi precious gem beads and very occasionally sea glass.

my blog hedgelandsglassgems.blogspot.com
my website www.hedgelandsglassgems.co.uk

Wednesday, 9 July 2008

Mapping Norfolk, the Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Photograph of Norfolk by Kabir Hussain

Kabir Hussain
Mapping Norfolk


Mapping Norfolk, a new exhibition of work by artist Kabir Hussain, opens in the Link at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia (UEA), Norwich on 1 July and runs until 31 August.

The exhibition has been inspired by the Norfolk landscape, from the salt marshes of north Norfolk to the Broads and the flatlands of the Fens. At the centre of the show are large works in bronze that form a ‘sculptural map of Norfolk’.

Photography, sculpture and drawing by the artist will also be on display. The exhibition is curated by Atsuko Kikuchi, Curatorial Fellow in Cultural Diversity at the Sainsbury Centre.

“The Norfolk landscape expresses its energy in an embracing way, an impression reinforced by Norfolk’s big sky. It has a subtle and confident character”
– Kabir Hussain.

Kabir Hussain was born in Punjab, Pakistan, in 1960. At the age of 7 he emigrated to England with his family and grew up in Yorkshire. His fascination with the landscape stems from his memories of the terrain he saw from the aeroplane on this journey. His experiences of landscape have been diverse, from the altiplano of Peru to the craggy terrain of Eritrea through to the Thar Desert of India. These have informed his sculptural practice.

Work at the Foundry

Having lived in Kings Lynn since 2001, Hussain feels now is the time to explore the countryside he calls home. He explains that “Wanderlust takes you to faraway places. The buzz of a new and alien environment can be enthralling. Over time you become more appreciative of your immediate surroundings, as I have of Norfolk after living here for 7 years. I feel a familiarity with it and have an attachment to it that I wish to build upon. When I first visited the county in 1995, I was struck by its expansive nature. Now I feel is the time to adopt it for formal study”.

In preparation for the exhibition, Kabir Hussain has embarked on a number of journeys on land, by sea and from the air. He began in Kings Lynn where he took a fresh look at some of the routes that have become familiar to him over the years. From there he moved down the coast to explore the mud flats of Snettisham and the expansive views seen from locations which include Ten Mile Bank, Salthouse Church and Sheringham. Hussain then went inland visiting Thetford Forest and the Norfolk Broads.

Research to inform the exhibition has been carried out on a wide range of topics by Kabir Hussain and the curator, Atsuko Kikuchi. Literature and archival materials have been studied and interviews conducted with local residents and experts on topics from history and archaeology to wildlife. Norfolk organisations that have contributed to the research include Norfolk Wildlife Trust, the Norfolk Coast Partnership, Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service, Norfolk Heritage Centre and the School of Environmental Science at UEA.

Kabir Hussain is a master bronze founder, with over 17 years of experience. His new works that form a ‘sculptural map of Norfolk’ have been cast at the AB Fine Art Foundry in London. Hussain uses a combination of bronze, wax and paper to form delicate textures and shapes giving them the immediacy and intimacy of a watercolour. Displayed with the bronzes will be sculpture, drawings and photographs by the artist.

“We hope the exhibition will inspire people with a sense of community, encourage lively debate about our local environment and give people a fresh perspective on the Norfolk landscape”
– Atsuko Kikuchi.

Accompanying the exhibition will be a new website - www.mappingnorfolk.com - which will feature work by the artist and interviews with local residents and experts. People will also have chance to take part in an online mapping project to create a map of Norfolk with their videos and photographs. For information about events accompanying Mapping Norfolk visit www.scva.org.uk or telephone 01603 593199.


Waveney Rural Community Partnership Conference

Waveney Rural Community Partnership
Rural Conference
16th July 2008
3.30pm – 8.30pm
Ilketshall St Andrew Village Hall, near Beccles

If you have an interest in rural Waveney why not come along to the Waveney Rural Community Partnership Rural Conference on 16th July 2008 at Ilketshall St Andrew Village Hall, near Beccles.

This is a free event for voluntary and community organisations, business groups, local councillors and social enterprises, in fact anyone with an interest in the rural area of Waveney.

There will be presentations about Rural Tourism, Leader Funding, and a Social Enterprise success story. This event is also an opportunity for you to have your say about the area and what you want to happen, and to meet other people who care about their community.

The conference runs from 3.30pm – 8.30pm, but you’re welcome to visit throughout the event. A buffet and refreshments will be provided, so it would be very helpful to us for you to book your FREE place by contacting
Ellen George telephone 01502 582201
or email admin@waveneycf.org.uk

Find out more by checking out the RCP website www.wrcw.org.uk

The event is supported by the Big Lottery Fund and Waveney District Council.
It is being organised by Waveney Community Forum.

Gemstone Castle - games

Click image to play game

Halesworth Arts Festival - programme launch

Announcing the Launch of the
Halesworth Arts Festival 2008
Programme


which will take place at

The Cut, New Cut,
Halesworth, Suffolk
IP19 8BY

on
Monday 14 July 2008
6pm – 7pm

where we will announce the fabulous line up for this year

for more information contact:
Jo Leverett
52 London Road
Halesworth IP19 8LS
or email
jo@halesworthartsfestival.org.uk

www.halesworthartsfestival.org.uk
Halesworth Arts Festival 2008
11-26 October 2008

The Fugitive Futurist c1924 - BFI YouTube archive

Tuesday, 8 July 2008

Norfolk coastal flood plain communities reassured!

Norfolk flood plain communities reassured

Floods Minister Phil Woolas talked to local people at Sea Palling.

Villagers in Norfolk in fear of a scheme to flood them to save the coast have been told that is not the government's intention.

The floods minister, Phil Woolas, has been visiting Sea Palling, 15 miles up the coast from Great Yarmouth. He told people there that a scenario by Natural England to allow six villages to succumb to rising sea levels, was not what was going to happen.

He said it was the government's duty to protect the area.

Natural England, which advises the government on environmental issues, drew up a list of possible outcomes from rising sea levels.

One option was to allow Eccles, Sea Palling, Waxham, Horsey, Hickling and Potter Heigham to flood.
Local pressure groups have been fighting any such proposal.

While visiting the area, Mr Woolas explained that the idea was simply a scenario and was not policy.

'Good news'
He said: " I have asked the Environment Agency to provide reports on what can be done for a 50 to 100 year period because it is no-one's intention to allow this area to flood".

He added the likelihood of swathes of Norfolk being allowed to flood like this was "about as likely as Oldham Athletic winning the European Cup".

Many residents have reported a significant fall in house prices with one woman claiming her property had been valued at a pound.

The North-East Norfolk Coastal Parishes Group, set up by councillor Michael Walker, said this was "extraordinarily good news" but was not a resolution to the matter.

He said what was needed now was clarity over sea defences beyond the next 50 years.

Mr Woolas said "Of course we value this beautiful area. This is people's livelihoods as well.

"This is where they have lived with their families for many, many generations and the government's duty is to protect it and that is what we are going to do."

Source: news.bbc.co.uk

see also:
savethebroads.blogspot.com

Lowestoft Energy Challenge

Lowestoft Energy Challenge

What role can young people play in coming up with ideas around the pressing issue of climate change? Judging by the response of students taking part in the Lowestoft Energy Challenge, then the answer is quite a lot.

The Challenge
The Energy Challenge is a pilot project developed by NESTA and the Make Your Mark campaign. It involved teams of students from a primary school, secondary school and a college in Lowestoft, Suffolk taking responsibility for researching and learning about the issue of climate change, coming up with ideas about how they could improve the energy efficiency of their school and then pitching these to a panel of judges to secure funding to implement them.

The teams organised field trips, visits from specialists and conducted research to build their knowledge about climate change and discover what individuals can do to reduce their environmental impact.



Several local businesses and organisations were consulted by the young people. These included SLP Energy, a major offshore engineering company, and the University of the East of England’s Carbon Reduction Programme (CRed). 

Through interaction with these and other organisations, the Energy Challenge is helping to raise awareness among young people about local careers and business opportunities in the renewable energy industry. Lowestoft is part of a regional hub for the renewable energy industry in the East of England, as this is expected to be a significant growth area for the local economy.

The ideas put forward by participating students
The two schools - Deans High School and Poplars Primary School – and the college have all been successful in their pitches. The schools both came up with plans for wind turbines to generate electricity, with Denes High School proposing to link theirs to an information system in the main school hall to show how much electricity it generates.

Students from Lowestoft College are going to purchase a compactor to turn wood chippings from their carpentry department into solid fuel. They also plan to create a waste sculpture to highlight the need for greater recycling among local residents.



The College and the schools have also come together to plan the launch of a website to highlight the steps students and other members of the local community can take to reduce their energy use. As well as information and tips, it will include games and fun activities on an environmental theme.

Click image to view Teachers TV video

What the judges said
Katherine Mathieson, Head of NESTA's Future Innovators team, was one of the judges. She believes that the young people developed skills crucial for innovation through taking part: “As well as devising energy-saving ideas, which could benefit the whole community, the students gained skills and confidence from researching and developing their ideas. They have learned about teamwork, communication, persuasion, problem-solving and research.” 



Saskia Kent, Campaign Leader for Make Your Mark in Lowestoft and also one of the judges, said: “This practical, real-life experience will set participants up for life. What’s more, having a group of children and young people who have developed skills in these areas is a great resource that can be drawn on by the whole community.”

The young people are now working on the next and arguably most difficult phase of the project – how to put their plans into practice. Mandy Booysen, a student from Denes High School said: “This has been an amazing experience and has been key in making us realise the effect of our energy use."

Source: www.nesta.org.uk

EU rules hitting Norfolk poppy fields

poppy image: www.freefoto.com

EU rules hitting Norfolk poppy fields
The poppy fields of Norfolk are vanishing because of new rules on crop production, wildlife enthusiasts fear. Poppies have thrived in recent years on land uncultivated as part of a European Union "set aside" policy to cut over-production.

But the European Union has now ruled that farmers do not have to leave fields uncultivated and their set-aside policy could be abandoned from 2009.

The Norfolk Wildlife Trust warned this is reducing the number of poppy fields.

David North, education manager at the Norfolk Wildlife Trust, said: "There are fewer fields of poppies around this year - and that's because of the change in the set-aside rules.

'Set-aside success'
"Just driving around Norfolk, you can see that. You notice the odd one that is there more than ever. The set-aside policy has been good for poppies and many other wildflowers."

Two years ago the trust said some of the UK's most famous of poppy fields had been lost because of intensive farming methods introduced in the 1950s and 1960s.

Staff said a survey showed that there were no longer any fields of poppies in an area of Norfolk traditionally known as "Poppyland".

Travel writer Clement Scott gave the Norfolk coast between Cromer and Overstrand the name in the 1880s in recognition of the scarlet landscape.

Source: news.bbc.co.uk

CONSTRUCTED 40 Years of the UEA Collection, the Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Lazlo Moholy-Nagy, Composition

CONSTRUCTED
40 Years of the UEA Collection

Constructed, the most extensive exhibition of the UEA Collection of Abstract and Constructivist Art, Architecture and Design, opens at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia (UEA), Norwich, on Tuesday 1 July and runs until Sunday 14 December.

The collection, which was founded in 1968, features sculpture, painting, graphics and design, together with architectural models, stage sets and furniture. Works by David Bomberg, Marcel Breuer, Charles Eames, Le Corbusier and François Morellet will be amongst those on display.


The UEA collection was begun as a response to the modernity of the University of East Anglia’s architecture. In 1968, UEA was one of England’s ‘New Universities’ with a bold concrete campus designed by architect Denys Lasdun to reflect the ambitious inter-disciplinary approach of the young institution.

“Although the UEA Collection was developed in response to Denys Lasdun’s concrete campus, the artists’ use of mathematical systems and repeated geometrical forms make the works in the UEA Collection the perfect complement to the architecture of Norman Foster’s Sainsbury Centre today” – Amanda Geitner, Keeper of the UEA Collection and Head of Collections and Exhibitions at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.

The UEA Collection was begun in 1968 with a grant of £10,000 from the University Council to form a collection of twentieth century art. The late Peter Lasko, founding art history professor at UEA and subsequently Director of the Courtauld Institute in London, was the founding honorary curator and worked with Alastair Grieve, a lecturer in art history, to identify works for the collection.

The UEA collection, which was moved to the Sainsbury Centre when it opened in 1978, has grown to over 400 objects. New acquisitions to the collection continue to be made; work generously gifted by Ian Tyson and Laura Castagno and work by Jean Spencer (acquired with the support MLA / V&A Purchase Grant Fund) will be on display in the 2008 exhibition.

Gerrit Rietveld - Red-Blue Chair, (replica 1968)
UEA Collection of Abstract and Constructivist, Art, Architecture and Design
UEA 31220 Photo: James Austin

The earliest group of works in the exhibition date from between circa 1910 and 1930 and reflect the origins of a modern ‘movement’. Early exponents included artists and architects associated with the De Stijl Group such as Gerrit Rietveld and those associated with the Bauhaus in Germany such as Wassily Kandinsky (see Notes to Editors for more information).

Works in the 1910 - 1930 section of the show include a Le Corbusier chair and architectural model, a painting by Sonia Delaunay, the Pravda Tower model by the Vesnin brothers, Rietveld chairs, a charcoal drawing by David Bomberg and 2D works by Wassily Kandinsky and Lazlo Moholy-Nagy. Artists began making work now described as ‘constructivist’ in the second decade of the twentieth century.

The First World War and the creation of a new social order through the Revolution in Russia were instrumental in causing many artists to rethink how art and design shapes the way people live. A visual language of order and clarity drew some inspiration from other abstract movements but more importantly, embraced the possibilities presented by rapid technological development and engaged with other disciplines such as mathematics, science and architecture.

“The artists, architects and designers whose work has been chosen for the UEA Collection have a common concern to construct an ordered and rational environment appropriate for the modern world. An underlying theme in the collection is ‘Art and the Machine’, encapsulating the idea that artists strived to control and harmonise machine production”
- Veronica Sekules, Former Keeper of the University Art Collection and now Head of Education and Research at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.

The exhibition will also feature two other major groups of work. The first, includes a room setting with Isokon furniture, the work of émigré artists who came to England during the Second World War at the invitation of Isokon’s founder Jack Pritchard after the Nazis closed the Bauhaus. It includes furniture designed by the Bauhaus masters, Marcel Breuer and Walter Gropius.

The second is a group described as ‘The British Constructionists’, which includes artists such as Victor Pasmore, Mary and Kenneth Martin, Peter Lowe, Gillian Wise and Anthony Hill. Work of this type was also being made in Europe and further afield – examples by artists such as Jesus Raphael Soto and François Morellet will be on display.

The artists and designers in this section of the show are all interested in the links between art, mathematics and geometry and were inspired by the rapid development of technology. The works include striking 3D constructions, sculptures, reliefs and works on canvas that use a strong simple palette of colours, clean lines and geometric shapes.


Business Weekly, digital edition 3 July 2008

The latest edition of Business Weekly's epaper has been uploaded.

Click the front page to access

Treasure Hunt, Bungay Youth Association, 12 July 2008

Bungay Youth Association

Treasure Hunt

Saturday 12th July 2008
11am start at Castle Hills
estimated finish time 12.30pm

£2.50per child
pay on gate

Prize for Best Dressed Pirate
Prize for Best Pirate Flag
Prizes for finding the treasure

Organised by Bungay Youth Association
and proceeds
towards the new play park and family area

Prizes kindly donated by the
Toy & Gift Emporium

Part of the
Bungay Summer Festival 2008

click here for full programme

Monday, 7 July 2008

Thorpe Abbotts Flower Festival, All Saints Church

THORPE ABBOTTS

All Saints Church Flower Festival

15-17 August 2008

On a theme of “All the Saints”
11.00am – 4.00pm


Refreshments on all days

Stalls on Saturday

Entrance free together with a warm welcome
.

Contact for further details Simon Beet on 01379 669068
(Sec All Saints PCC)

www.allsaintsthorpeabbotts.com

Harleston & Waveney Art Trail 2008

Image detail from: The Wrecked West Pier, Brighton, II - Gill Levin

Harleston & Waveney Art Trail 2008

Sat 5 & Sun 6 July 2008 11.00am - 6.00pm
Sat 12 & Sun 13 July 2008 11.00am - 6.00pm
Sat 19 & Sun 20 July 2008 11.00am - 6.00pm

Thirty professional artists, all within an easy bike ride of Harleston, invite you into their studios over three July weekends to see where and how they work, and to browse a wealth of paintings, prints, sculpture, photography, studio ceramics and textiles. Some studios offer workshops; and at all of them you can purchase original works of art at studio prices.

Entry to all studios is free, and many artists open their gardens too. You can follow the Trail as the mood takes you - a Harleston town route; a village route; or a Bungay route. Bikes are available to hire at the Swan Hotel, Harleston.

Throughout July there will be an exhibition by Trail artists at the new Harleston Gallery and Studio Café where you can see examples of their work and plan your route over a refreshing drink, snack or light meal.

Here's a list of the artists opening up their studio for the art trail weekends.. (which are the weekends of the 5th/6th, the 12th/13th, and the 19th/20th of July).

1 Harleston Gallery
2 Alan Frewin - see Waveney Valley Blog - Mill House Pottery
3 John Lidzey
4 David Rock
5 Christina Greathead
6 Rosemary Elliott
7 Dom Theobold
8 Jilly Szaybo
9 Poppy Szaybo
10 Ian Scott
11 Jazz Green
12 Val Lindsell
13 Mark Goldsworthy
14 Agnes Compton
15 Alice Paulser
16 Jane Callender - see Waveney Valley Blog - Callishibori
17 Gill Levin
18 Parr & Lyne
19 Noelle Francis
20 Nell Close
21 Timothy Summerson
22 Geoffrey H King
23 Anya King
24 Dee Nickerson
25 John Ogden
26 Nicola Slattery

Pick up an illustrated brochure with map and brief descriptions of artists’ work, from the Harleston Gallery, Harleston Information Plus, the Fisher Theatre Bungay, and shops and other public places in Harleston, Bungay and the surrounding villages - and meet for yourself some of the tremendously diverse community of artists living and working in the Waveney Valley.

Click image to view brochure pdf

For more information
Tel: Lesley Rock on 01379 854897
Email: harlestongallery@btinternet.com
www.south-norfolk.gov.uk/leisure