| January 31st, 2010 | Comments are closed
University College FalmouthMA Art & Environment: 2010 For centuries artists have interpreted and represented the natural environment. It has provided materials and subject matter, as well as inspiration and knowledge. In recent times – particularly since the growth of the environmental movement – there has been a dramatic change in our understanding of the many ways our society impacts upon
[read more]
| December 26th, 2009 | Comments are closed Just in case you’d missed the BBC’s Now Show clip, here’s the transcript. Brigstocke was one of those on the 2008 Cape Farewell expedition.
The delegates came and the delegates sat And they talked and they talked till their bums all went flat Then a delegate said of the country he knew
[read more]
| November 20th, 2009 | Comments are closed http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ1D22fIpi4″>www.youtube.com
Anthem
Beth Derbyshire with Ulrike Haage opening performance: 14 November exhibition continues to 9 December Mediterranean Biome at the Eden Project, Cornwall
The Eden Project and Cape Farewell present
[read more]
| October 1st, 2009 | Comments are closed There was a great article on Edward Abbey by Robert MacFarlane in the weekend’s Guardian. [I'm inclined to superlatives here, as MacFarlane generously bigged up the RSA Arts & Ecology Centre and our fellow organisations
[read more]
| May 29th, 2009 | Comments are closed Well we have to be doing something right, because McKie’s article got this response from factually wayward Daily Telegraph young fogey James Delingpole, lambasting “eco-luvvies”. It’s a conspiracy! froths Delingpole:
What Cape Farewell does brilliantly, Delingpole fulminates, is breed wave after wave of high profile propagandists for the authorised Al
[read more]
| May 25th, 2009 | Comments are closed Well we have to be doing something right, because McKie’s article got this response from factually wayward Daily Telegraph young fogey James Delingpole, lambasting “eco-luvvies”. It’s a conspiracy! froths Delingpole: What Cape Farewell does brilliantly, Delingpole fulminates, is breed wave after wave of high profile propagandists for the authorised Al … Go
[read more]
| May 20th, 2009 | Comments are closed Caleb Klaces writes:
Frank Hurley, official photographer of Shackleton’s 1914-16 Antarctic expedition, went to great lengths to get the photographs he wanted. After the rescue and return home of the expedition members, Hurley went back to try and follow the route Shackleton and two other men had taken on foot across South Georgia
[read more]
|
Welcome to the CSPA Quarterly 7 is now available
|
|