Showing posts with label norfolk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label norfolk. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 July 2008

Margaret Mellis, the Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Margaret Mellis - Fisherman 1990 / 1991
Private Collection © the artist, 2008
Photo: Andi Sapey


Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour
A new exhibition and a new film

The career of the artist Margaret Mellis is the focus of the new exhibition and the new film, Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour.

The exhibition, which includes excerpts from the film, opens at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich, on Tuesday 1 July and runs until Sunday 31 August.

The film
, produced by Jules Hussey and directed by Sue Giovanni, will première at the Picture House Cinema (Cinema City), Norwich, on Tuesday 8 July as part of the events programme accompanying the exhibition.

The Film
Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour is a 60 minute documentary film which tells the story of the Margaret Mellis’ life in her own words. The film brings together excerpts from Mellis’ diaries and writing, read by actress Susannah York, with interviews by Professor Mel Gooding (1993 and 1994) for the oral history project Artist’s Lives, which is run by the National Life Stories collection based at the British Library Sound Archive (see Notes to Editors for more information).

“The documentary, Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour, weaves together the artists’ words with archive photographs and film, new stills, Super 8 and video footage, to produce an in-depth study of Margaret Mellis’ life and work. It is an oral history about a visual artist told using a moving image medium”
– Jules Hussey, Producer.

The Exhibition
A Life in Colour is the first major exhibition of work since Mellis stopped making in 2001, aged 87, due to ill health and features over 60 paintings and sculptures. The exhibition spans Margaret Mellis’ career, from the early still-lifes to the abstract reliefs of the 1960s and the magnificent constructions made from driftwood found on the beach near her Suffolk home. The construction Scarlet Undercurrent, Mellis’ final work, is included in the show.

Margaret Mellis Photo: W.L Bednarski

The exhibition reveals Margaret Mellis’ life-long preoccupations: passion for colour and fascination with form.

“For me, painting is way of making discoveries and of making a thing. When the areas of a painting start reacting together and yet hold together, the thing starts to live. Sometimes it gives a sort of kick”
- Margaret Mellis.

Margaret Mellis’ Life
Margaret Mellis was born in China in 1914 of Scottish parents, and moved to Britain as a baby. Fascinated by colour as a child, her remarkable career began at just 16 years of age when she started studying at Edinburgh College of Art (1930 - 34). As a young woman she was awarded a coveted travelling scholarship that allowed her to travel to Paris and across Europe. In 1937 she held a fellowship at Edinburgh College of Art before studying at Euston Road School.

In 1939 Margaret Mellis moved to St Ives, Cornwall, with her first husband, writer and painter Adrian Stokes. They both became central figures in the St Ives School of artists, which included Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Naum Gabo. In St Ives, Ben Nicholson encouraged Mellis to experiment with collage and relief, prompting her to “think in a different way, not in colour, which was natural to me”. This was a formative period for Margaret Mellis, working alongside some of the most influential British artists in the 20th century.

In 1948 she married the artist Francis Davison and in 1950 they settled near Diss in Suffolk, moving to Southwold in 1976. It was after Davison’s death in 1984 that Margaret Mellis embarked on possibly her most creative phase, her ‘constructions’, made out of driftwood found on Southwold beach.



Great Bircham Windmill, Norfolk

Monday, 30 June 2008

Summer Fete, Hempnall Primary School, Sunday 13th July

Hempnall Primary School
Summer Fete

Sunday 13th July
1pm to 4pm

Doctor Who Exhibition
and the chance to meet a Cyberman

Live music from
Saxobility


Children's Sumo Wrestling

Bowling Alley

BBQ

Bar

Raffle
with lots of family prizes

www.hempnall.norfolk.sch.uk

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

Russian Watches in Norfolk UK, Exquisite Quality

www.RedSquareWatches.co.uk

*************************

Home Visits to Watch Collectors


Ken Bacon will happily bring out a selection of Red Square watches for you to view in your own home.

Please email him direct with your telephone number and he will call you to make an appointment and discuss the watches you may be interested in.
This is a regional service, but if you are unsure, email Ken to find out.


E M A I L :
Click here to send Email


*************************


NEW SHOP NOW OPEN
available during Hotel opening hours

at


The Swan Hotel
The Thoroughfare, Harleston,
Norfolk IP20 9AS

Tel: 01379 852221



*************************

RED SQUARE
Exclusive Russian watches brought to you by:


Ken Bacon of Harleston, Norfolk, UK
Purveyor of Fine Russian Watches

Red Square Mechanical Russian Watches are of exclusive design and exquisite quality. They are manufactured to the highest standards and specification.


Catalogues


Please click on the following links to enable PDF catalogue files of the watches that are available for purchase.

The pdf files will open in another window, or give you the option to download to your PC.

POLJOT watches Book 1 pdf

POLJOT watches Book 2 pdf

CCCP watches pdf

VOSTOCK watches pdf

To order please contact:

Ken Bacon
Purveyor of fine Russian watches

T E L E P H O N E :
0 1 3 7 9 8 5 2 2 2 1

*************************

Important information for like minded watch enthusiasts!
"If like me, you are passionate about buying, collecting and selling fine mechanical watches, and would like to discuss ways you could help sell Red Square Watches, please email me, and I will be very happy to contact you." Ken Bacon

E M A I L :
Click here to send Email


History

The Soviet space programs and the Russian armed forces have developed strong links with the Russian watch making industries throughout Russian history.

Working in extreme conditions and in unpredictable climates, which the space and military demands, these wrist watches have been designed and tested to be reliable in all conditions.

Please see a selection of pages supplied in the following pdf file:

Poljot Russian History pdf

click images to enlarge

watch enthusiasts links:
www.watchreport.net

Friday, 27 June 2008

Remember: Great Yarmouth Flood 2007

Family Fun Day at Frenze Beck, Diss

Family Fun Day

at

Frenze Beck Nature Reserve
Sawmills Road, Diss


There will be arrange of art and countryside activities on site with the addition of face painting and stilt walking bugs roaming around the site.

on

Saturday 19 July 2008

between

10am and 3pm

£3.00 per child
with accompanying adults free of charge

* * *

Frenze Beck

"We have embarked on the creation of a small wetland wildlife paradise on the western bank of the River Frenze in Diss, and this formerly unused ground has now been commended by the Environment Agency as part of its celebration of World Wetlands Day.

Frenze Beck was previously ecologically poor and overgrazed grazing marsh, within the floodplain of the river Frenze. It had become increasingly dry with peat build up and the remains of slubbing out works being deposited on the riverbank, reducing the ability of the river to flood onto the land".


More June Flowers - photos

courtesy Keith Moore

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Recruiting Trainee Reed and Sedge Cutters, Broads Authority

Recruiting for the Broads Heritage Skills
Heritage Lottery Funded Training Bursary Placements


The Broads Authority, supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, is recruiting five individuals who are interested in learning new countryside skills as trainee reed and sedge cutters.

The project aims to provide individuals with practical experience and skills required to work as a Commercial Reed & Sedge Cutter or to obtain employment in the environmental conservation sector. We offer a combination of practical work based training combined with formal training in a College to work towards NVQ Level 2 Environmental Conservation. In addition we offer specific skills based accredited training to enhance your employment opportunities for the future.

Trainees receive a full Training bursary for 83 weeks. During this time trainees will work with professional Commercial Reed & Sedge Cutters and gain experience in the work place as well as the formal training at College in identifying species, habitat management and ecology. The work is physically hard and involves working on sites that are isolated and difficult to access, these facts must be considered before you apply.



Further details along with an application form are available from the
Bursary Application Form (pdf document) [455kb] which can be downloaded here.

All applications and any queries must be made to the Broads Heritage Skills Project Team and applications must arrive by 27 July 2008.

Interviews will take place during August and successful candidates will start in September 2008.

broads authority

Conservation Management, Summer


CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT
IDEAS FOR SUMMER


AVOID DISTURBANCE TO NESTING BIRDS
It is important to delay management of field boundaries and margins until at least September when you can be confident that birds have finished rearing late broods. Mowing margins or trimming hedges during breaks before harvest or when weather prevents harvesting can be very damaging for local bird populations.

(Peter Cornelius, RSPB)

BEWARE OF NESTING BIRDS AND LEVERETS IF YOU CUT POLLEN AND NECTAR MIXTURES
Pollen and nectar mixtures are often cut in June to promote late-flowering (cutting half of each area to 20cm in June is a requirement of the English Entry Level Stewardship scheme), but try to check that there are no nesting birds or leverets in the mixtures before cutting and seek a derogation to avoid cutting if these are present. An alternative for future years is to cut this half regularly through April until June so that it does not form suitable nesting cover.

CONSIDERATIONS FOR INSECTICIDE USE IN SUMMER
June is the peak month for rearing chicks in the bird calendar – many of these are dependent on insects to provide the chicks with a high-protein diet for healthy development. Adopt the Voluntary Initiative best practice guidance on use of insecticides:

• Know your farm's potential for pest attack; field records are essential in this. Assess the implications of cropping sequences and likely attacks.
• Where possible, take full advantage of varietal resistance.

• Use cultivation techniques and sowing dates to deter attack.

• Use seed treatments where available if significant damage is
expected.
• Monitor crops regularly and base management decisions on the results.
• Make absolutely sure a treatment is really needed; treat only when pest thresholds has been exceeded.
• Wherever possible, use insecticides specific to a target pest. Try especially to avoid using broad-spectrum products when the young of birds are dependent on insects for food.
• Apply treatments as accurately and as close to ideal timings as possible.
• Use buffer zones and LERAPs to protect sensitive wildlife habitats and water courses.

DELAY SETASIDE MANAGEMENT
Any rotational set-aside that has not been sprayed yet will be providing important seed food for birds and nesting habitat for skylarks. Does the weed spectrum present problems for following crops? Consult your agronomist for the latest timing to achieve effective control. Non-rotational set-aside should remain uncut until at least mid-July (preferably August) to protect nesting birds, and up to 25% can be left uncut each year which will boost beneficial insects.

IS THERE A NEED FOR BRACKEN CONTROL?
Small stands of bracken, especially in upland situations, can provide useful habitat for some nesting birds, such as twite. However, large blocks of dense bracken are of little use for wildlife. Seek advice on whether spraying, cutting or rolling is the best management for your situation. Cutting and rolling will put ground-nesting birds at risk at this time of year. Spraying can be done later in the year, when the bracken is in full frond.

BIRDS NESTING IN HAY AND SILAGE MEADOWS
Several ground nesting birds that require cover are attracted to fields shut up for hay or silage. For these birds to breed successfully, they need sufficient time to complete incubation and for chicks to be able to be moved out of the field before mowing. The length of time needed will vary between species, but will generally be at least six weeks. Ground nesting birds are most commonly found in hay meadows as the grassland management generally results in vegetation that is less dense and cut at a more mature stage.

In fields where waders (snipe, lapwing, redshank, curlew) breed, leave damp hollows/corners uncut as unfledged chicks are most likely to use these areas.

DELAY CUTTING FLOWER-RICH MEADOWS UNTIL AFTER HERBS HAVE SET SEED
Hay meadows that are the product of traditional, low intensity farming support a rich variety of grasses and flowers. Such meadows are now a rare and irreplaceable habitat. Try to maintain the long-established management practices that have created these special areas.

TOPPING
Topping of pernicious weeds may need to be carried out relatively early in the season, but try to cut areas that are not as urgent as late as possible, if at all. Topping reduces the availability of seeds and the taller areas that many insects need to complete their lifecycles and over-winter. Always leave some areas uncut, even if only around edges of fields.

If these management ideas pose any questions, then post them on the discussion forum on www.farmwildlife.info to get your answers.

Monday, 23 June 2008

Wymondham Music Festival, 21 June to 6 July

Wymondham Music Festival
Sat 21 June to Sun 6 July 2008

Festival Fortnight starts on Saturday 21 June - the focus of a
summer of music in Wymondham.

Music styles include:
classical, folk, pop, world and jazz, with day-time recitals and
lively evening gigs.

Ticket prices range from £3 to £12, with
great discounts for children and many events are free!

Concerts in Wymondham Abbey include David Childs, one of
the world’s finest euphonium players, and Spanish Spice,
virtuosic early music with flamenco dance.

The varied jazz programme features Lewis Wright
(vibraphone), the Robin Phillips Sextet with Kirsty Jarvis
performing songs by Gershwin and others, and the Sole Bay
Jazz Band at our jazz picnic.

There’s a great night for country
fans with Kenny Lee and Hustler and another big session
planned for folkies.

Wymondham’s first Teddy Bear’s Picnic is a must for young
families.

An African Music and Dance Day with Anna Mudeka
and her band make a spectacular finale to the fortnight.

Get details of all Wymondham’s 70 or more music events this
summer. Send a C5 large SAE (70p) to the Festival Office or
pick up a programme in arts racks or libraries from mid-May.

For more information
Visit: www.wymfestival.org.uk

Tel: Barbara Randall on 01953 601939

Email: office@wymfestival.org.uk

Address: Wymondham Music Festival, St Edmunds,
Norwich Common, Wymondham, Norfolk, NR18 0SP

June Flowers - photo

courtesy Keith Moore

Saturday, 21 June 2008

The Royal Norfolk Show 2008

THE ROYAL NORFOLK SHOW
25 June 2008 - 26 June 2008

Opening Times:
8am daily


The Royal Norfolk Show is the largest two-day agricultural show in the country. In 2008 we are celebrating the centenary of the granting of our Royal Charter and therefore plan a bumper Show for our visitors.

This will include spectacular Grand Ring displays by The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery and breathtaking performances by the Bolddog Lings Freestyle Motocross team.


Contact Details:
Royal Norfolk Agricultural Association (Tel: 01603 748931)

Tickets can be purchased online:

www.royalnorfolkshow.co.uk

spectacular video from last year courtesy YouTube

Friday, 20 June 2008

Mother Shipton Moth in Norfolk - photo

Working in the west of the county this morning, I took my lunch break at Syderstone Common. A short walk across some open grassland kicked out a day flying moth that I've been wanting to see for ages, a Mother Shipton. It eventually settled down where I managed to get a couple of record shots with my old 2 megapixel camera!

This moth gets its name from the witch of the same name who was reputed to have a long crooked nose and chin, check out this moths wing pattern.

Courtesy Andy:

Business Weekly, digital edition 20 June 2008

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

Click the front page to access

Thursday, 19 June 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.


amber jewellery, earrings, pendants, rings, necklaces, bracelets

Amber Jewellery Shop
Specialing in 925 Solid Sterling Silver
set with Genuine Baltic Amber

Pendants, Necklaces, Earrings, Bracelets, Rings

We also have a selection of Unique Hand Crafted Pieces,
see examples below

Top Quality & Quick Delivery.

Our checkout is securely managed with options to pay via
Credit/Debit Card or Cheque.

All our items of jewellery have been sourced with a specific aim to bring instant pleasure to the purchaser. Most items are everyday jewellery, that can be enjoyed and admired all year long.

Email: sales@imajaz.com

© imajaz limited

click here to enter shop

Tuesday, 17 June 2008

Red Tailed Bumblebee in the Waveney Valley

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Spotting a Little Tern in East Anglia - Waveney Wildlife

Little Tern
Sterna albifrons

This small chattering bird puts on one of the best displays in British skies, an imposing aerial courtship dance that begins when the male calls, carrying a fish to attract a mate. The female responds by chasing him to dizzy heights, before he outwits her by descending at speed with wings held out in a "V" shape.

Little terns can be seen in the UK from April to September, but as they only number about 5,000 they are a difficult bird to spot.

The little tern is grey and white with a short tail and yellow legs, a yellow bill with a black tip, and a white forehead (which distinguishes it from other types of tern). It is fast in flight and has a frantic, jerky wing action.

Where they live
Unfortunately for the little tern, its nesting sites are very popular with humans too, as they favour shallow nests on sand and shingle beaches. The UK's largest little tern colonies are found along the south and east coasts of both Scotland and England. They lay their eggs in nests on the ground and can be quite defensive when breeding.

How to spot them
Good spots for seeing the little tern include Blakeney Point and Great Yarmouth in Norfolk, Minsmere in Suffolk and Langstone harbour in Hampshire. Watch out for a hovering bird that plunges head first into the water to catch fish. These noisy birds make a high-pitched chattering sound

Source: www.guardian.co.uk/environment

www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife

Friday, 13 June 2008

Harleston & Waveney Festival 2008, 19 to 25 August