Wednesday, July 15, 2009

A website written by a resident…..

great for some local news and chat…

Spooky St. Ives, a website written by a resident, which will (hopefully) give you a little insight into the real St. Ives down in deepest, darkest Cornwall. Inside you will find some nuggets of information but really this is just intended to be a bit of a light-hearted look at the town everyone wants to visit (usually all at the same time).

Spooky St.Ives

Posted by Toby on 07/15 at 08:59 PM
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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

NEW WEBSITE

What do you think?

Let us know!

comment below…

Posted by Toby on 07/14 at 07:27 PM
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Monday, July 13, 2009

St. Ives September Festival 2009

For details of all the acts, performers,venues, tickets etc ...    go to http://www.stivesseptemberfestival.co.uk/

Posted by Christine on 07/13 at 05:46 PM
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St. Ives Festival

This year the St. Ives Festival runs from Saturday 12 th to Saturday 26 th September.
There’s music, comedy, poetry, films, exhibitions etc…
Tickets are available from St Ives Tourist Information Centre at The Guildhall.
Their ticket line:  01736 798577

Ralph Mctell is on at The Guildhall on 15 th September.

Posted by Toby on 07/13 at 05:32 PM
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Friday, July 10, 2009

Alfred Wallis at the Tate St.Ives

See Alfred Wallis (and others) at the Tate Summer Show May16th-27th September 2009.

 

Explore the exhibition

  For the Summer Season 2009, Tate St Ives presents seven one-room displays of fine and applied art produced during the last eighty years. Four of the seven artists are working now; three were working in the previous century.

  By bringing together historic and contemporary figures, the exhibition shows how avant-garde art made in earlier decades of the twentieth century continues to influence artists working today. Ideas and forms which were once considered radical return and reappear, before eventually becoming integrated into mainstream culture.

  The three earlier figures – Barbara Hepworth, Lucie Rie and Alfred Wallis – were each associated with the St Ives colony during the twentieth century. The contemporary work is by four important emerging and established artists whose works engage with the legacies of Modernism and who are, to a greater or lesser extent, critically rethinking both the style and ideology of Modernism. Together the seven rooms suggest shared themes and open up dialogues, between artists and across generations.

  The exhibition includes painting, film, text and sculpture but all of the works have a strong material presence. The time-worn surfaces of Katy Moran’s paintings are juxtaposed with the hand-crafted physicality of Barbara Hepworth’s carvings and casts. Alfred Wallis’ rough, scavenged boards are set alongside the evocative text works of Lawrence Weiner. Bojan Šarčević’s films address sculpture through the intangible media of time and light, whilst Carol Bove’s assemblages rely on the social, cultural and communal histories embedded in found objects and images. Lucie Rie is equally concerned with form and function; the honest usefulness of her handthrown pots is set against the aesthetic beauty of their extraordinary surfaces.

  The conversations across the seven rooms take us both forwards and backwards through time. The displays are neither surveys nor retrospectives, and the rooms are not arranged chronologically. Instead they emphasise that contemporary art inevitably contains references to the past, while historic art continues to engage with a constantly changing world. In this way the work of younger artists is shown in a rich historic context, whilst the work of older artists is reinvigorated for new generations.

Posted by Toby on 07/10 at 03:12 PM
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Radio 4, Alfred Wallis ‘The Wreck of the Alba’

Michael Bird, an art historian and surfer, uncovers the universal and local significance of one of the most popular pictures in the Tate, St Ives - The Wreck of the Alba by Alfred Wallis.

He interviews people in St Ives who remember the disaster, when the steamer’s crew was wrecked on Porthmeor beach in January 1938. Michael also gains access to many recordings of people who knew Wallis, made in the 1960s by Dr Roger Slack, a St Ives GP, and speaks to Chris Stephens, senior curator at the Tate, and to people looking at the painting and surfers on the beach.

Broadcast Thu 9 Jul 2009 | 11:30 | BBC Radio 4 (FM only)

Listen on the BBC iPlayer: Link

Posted by Toby on 07/10 at 03:11 PM
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This is the first post for St.Ives Cottages new blog.

Very Exciting.

Read it all here: Information about St.Ives, History on the town, Local News, Updates on St.Ives Cottages website and property and all sorts of other amazing things!

Posted by Toby on 07/10 at 03:11 PM
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