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176 Exchange (Penzance), Rail Ale Trail, 114 43, 49 Seven Stones pub (St Index Falmouth Art Gallery, Martin’s), 168 Index 101–102 Skinner’s Brewery A Foundry Gallery (Truro), 138 Abbey Gardens (Tresco), 167 (St Ives), 48 Barton Farm Museum Accommodations, 7, 167 Gallery Tresco (New (Lostwithiel), 149 in Bodmin, 95 Gimsby), 167 Beaches, 66–71, 159, 160, on Bryher, 168 Goldfish (Penzance), 49 164, 166, 167 in Bude, 98–99 Great Atlantic Gallery Beacon Farm, 81 in Falmouth, 102, 103 (St Just), 45 Beady Pool (St Agnes), 168 in Fowey, 106, 107 Hayle Gallery, 48 Bedruthan Steps, 15, 122 helpful websites, 25 Leach Pottery, 47, 49 Betjeman, Sir John, 77, 109, in Launceston, 110–111 Little Picture Gallery 118, 147 in Looe, 115 (Mousehole), 43 Bicycling, 74–75 in Lostwithiel, 119 Market House Gallery Camel Trail, 3, 15, 74, in Newquay, 122–123 (Marazion), 48 84–85, 93, 94, 126 in Padstow, 126 Newlyn Art Gallery, Cardinham Woods in Penzance, 130–131 43, 49 (Bodmin), 94 in St Ives, 135–136 Out of the Blue (Maraz- Clay Trails, 75 self-catering, 25 ion), 48 Coast-to-Coast Trail, in Truro, 139–140 Over the Moon Gallery 86–87, 138 Active-8 (Liskeard), 90 (St Just), 45 Cornish Way, 75 Airports, 165, 173 Pendeen Pottery & Gal- Mineral Tramways Amusement parks, 36–37 lery (Pendeen), 46 Coast-to-Coast, 74 Ancient Cornwall, 50–55 Penlee House Gallery & National Cycle Route, 75 Animal parks and Museum (Penzance), rentals, 75, 85, 87, sanctuaries 11, 43, 49, 129 165, 173 Cornwall Wildlife Trust, Round House & Capstan tours, 84–87 113 Gallery (Sennen Cove, Birding, -
3-Night Cornwall Self-Guided Walking Holiday
3-Night Cornwall Self-Guided Walking Holiday Tour Style: Self-Guided Walking Destinations: Cornwall & England Trip code: SVPOA-3 1, 2, 3 & 4 HOLIDAY OVERVIEW Enjoy a break on the stunning Cornish coast with the walking experts; we have all the ingredients for your perfect self-guided escape. Chy Morvah - our country house - is superbly situated in the charming harbour town of St Ives. It makes a great base from which to enjoy all the delights that Cornwall has to offer - stunning coast, historic buildings, glorious gardens, fabulous beaches and perhaps a cream tea or ice-cream or two! The house is geared to the needs of walkers and outdoor enthusiasts. Enjoy hearty local food, make use of our detailed routes notes and maps and enjoy exploring Cornwall. WHAT'S INCLUDED • High quality en-suite accommodation in our country house • Full board - from dinner upon arrival to breakfast on departure day • The use of our Discovery Point to plan your walks – maps and route notes available www.hfholidays.co.uk PAGE 1 [email protected] Tel: +44(0) 20 3974 8865 HOLIDAYS HIGHLIGHTS • Use our Discovery Point, stocked with maps and walks directions, for exploring the local area • Our walks will take you to rugged granite headlands and glorious sandy beaches • Explore off the beaten track to peaceful corners, hidden coves and sleepy fishing villages • Visit St Michael's Mount • Join the local surf school • Explore the numerous galleries in St Ives • Enjoy evenings in Chy Morvah where you can share a drink and re-live the day's adventures TRIP SUITABILITY Explore at your own pace and choose the best walk for your pace and ability. -
201914Th-28Th September Programme of Events
A TWO WEEK CELEBRATION OF MUSIC AND THE ARTS IN ST IVES CORNWALL ST IVES SEPTEMBER FESTIVAL 201914th-28th September Programme of Events Visit our website for updates and online booking: www.stivesseptemberfestival.co.uk and follow us on facebook, twitter and instagram. Tickets & Information Unless otherwise stated, tickets are available from: St Ives School of Painting l www.stivesseptemberfestival.co.uk Outside Workshops l Cornwall Riviera Box Office: 01726 879500 For outside workshops we recommend l Visit St Ives Information Centre, St Ives Library, Gabriel Street, St Ives TR26 2LU you bring sturdy walking shoes (or Opening hours: Mon to Sat 9.30am-5pm, Sun 10am-3pm 01736 796297 trainers) and either warm waterproof l Tourist Offices in Penzance, Truro, St Mawes, St Austell, Bodmin, Launceston, clothing, sunhats and sun cream as Liskeard. appropriate. We meet at Porthmeor l Tickets on the door if available. Studios but a few landscape workshops are based at the Penwith Studio, Information Points accessed via a steep cobbled ramp. l Café Art, The Drill Hall, Royal Square, St Ives. Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat 10am-4pm - Tues, Thurs 10am-5pm, Sun 11am-4pm l Outside Mountain Warehouse, Fore Street, Sat 14th and 21st 10am-5pm Pre-Concert Suppers The 2019 Festival Raffle Café Art, The Drill Hall, Win Cheese and Chocolate. Prize is donated by ‘Cheese On Coast’ and ‘I Should Chapel Street, St IvesTR26 2LR Coco’. Raffle tickets can be bought at a number of venues, including The Guildhall Vegetarian hot meals served in an and Café Art during the Festival. The winner will be announced at the end of October. -
Access Statement for the Minack Theatre & Visitor Centre Introduction the Minack Theatre & Visitor Centre Is Located On
Access Statement for The Minack Theatre & Visitor Centre Introduction The Minack Theatre & Visitor Centre is located on the cliffside near Porthcurno in West Cornwall. The Minack is open all year for visitors, and presents performances from Easter to the end of September. Despite the location, we strive to make our facilities as accessible as practically possible. We can accommodate up to 14 people in wheelchairs (depending on the size of the chairs) to watch performances, our exhibition centre, shop and cafe are all accessible to wheelchairs, and we have an induction loop within the theatre for the hard of hearing. Pre-Arrival • A clearly worded brochure is available describing the main facilities, directions, opening times, public transport and cycle access via roads. The brochure includes our contact telephone number, email and web address. The brochure is widely distributed in the area. • The information is repeated on our web site. • The Minack is accessible by car - 8 miles from Penzance, just off the B3315. Leave Penzance on the A30 towards Lands End and follow the brown tourist signs to turn onto the B3315 at Catchall. Continue to follow the signs, turning left into Porthcurno valley, at the seaward end of the valley go up the winding hill, the Minack is on your left. • By bus: the 300 and 1A from Penzance run a scheduled service to Porthcurno Valley; the theatre is a 400m walk up a steep hill. We advertise a local taxi firm who can provide transport from the bus stop to the Minack car park. • By foot: the Minack is just off the South-West Coast Path, between Porthcurno and Wireless Point. -
The History of the Development of British Satellite Broadcasting Policy, 1977-1992
THE HISTORY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF BRITISH SATELLITE BROADCASTING POLICY, 1977-1992 Windsor John Holden —......., Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of PhD University of Leeds, Institute of Communications Studies July, 1998 The candidate confirms that the work submitted is his own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others ABSTRACT This thesis traces the development of British satellite broadcasting policy, from the early proposals drawn up by the Home Office following the UK's allocation of five direct broadcast by satellite (DBS) frequencies at the 1977 World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC), through the successive, abortive DBS initiatives of the BBC and the "Club of 21", to the short-lived service provided by British Satellite Broadcasting (BSB). It also details at length the history of Sky Television, an organisation that operated beyond the parameters of existing legislation, which successfully competed (and merged) with BSB, and which shaped the way in which policy was developed. It contends that throughout the 1980s satellite broadcasting policy ceased to drive and became driven, and that the failure of policy-making in this time can be ascribed to conflict on ideological, governmental and organisational levels. Finally, it considers the impact that satellite broadcasting has had upon the British broadcasting structure as a whole. 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract i Contents ii Acknowledgements 1 INTRODUCTION 3 British broadcasting policy - a brief history -
Laguna-Beach.Pdf
JOURNEY TO A LAGUNA BEACH Taking the Lay of the Land: Yesterday & Today in St Ives WRITTEN BY GROVE KOGER, PHOTOS BY GROVE KOGER AND THE TATE e had come zigzagging down Devon and Cornwall one hot August afternoon on a carriage of the Great Western Railway. It was the Friday before the last bank holiday of the season, and our carriage was packed with travelers fleeing London. As it rolled past our window, Devon’s countryside was green and soft and hilly, punctuated here and there with dense copses and distant church spires. Sheep grazed peacefully in its lush meadows. To BENT SZAMEITAT BENT our American eyes, it was a quintessentially English landscape. But by the time we Exterior of the Barbara Hepworth reached Cornwall, in the far southwestern Museum and Sculpture Garden. tip of the UK, the land had grown flatter and more austere, flintier. There were as many TATE stone walls as there were hedgerows. Barbara Hepworth’s stone workshop. 44 ART PatronMagazine.com ART PatronMagazine.com 45 PHOTOS: TATE. MARCUS LEITH & ANDREW DUNKLEY, 2007 MARCUS LEITH & ANDREW DUNKLEY, TATE. PHOTOS: LEFT Barbara Hepworth, Spring 1966, 85 x 57 x 53 cm; RIGHT Barbara Hepworth, Four-Square (Walk Through) 1966, Bronze, 429 x 199 x 229.5 cm LEFT Barbara Hepworth Museum (interior view); RIGHTT Barbara Hepworth Museum (interior view). Lent by the Trustees of the Barbara Hepworth Museum & Sculpture Garden; River Form 1965, cast 1973, Bronze, 87 x 193 x 68.8 cm. to Bee out of my own memory what we may never see again.” Striving to escape the straitjacket of Britain’s “fine art” Our destination was one of Laguna Beach’s “sister” cities, St pottery, set up base in the little port in 1920, and a St Ives Society Young Ben Nicholson, who had studied at the Slade School of tradition, Nicholson himself had once experimented with a faux- Ives. -
Sketching the Art & Gardens Holiday in Cornwall
Sketching the Art & Gardens Holiday in Cornwall Destinations: Cornwall & England Trip code: SVPSD HOLIDAY OVERVIEW Capture your passion for sketching art and gardens by learning about the artists who have created work in Cornwall and sketch whilst in the galleries, learning from the masters of the Newlyn and St Ives schools of painting. We'll follow in their footsteps, sketching as we explore along the beautiful coastline and through towns and countryside. WHAT'S INCLUDED • High quality Full Board en-suite accommodation and excellent food in our Country House • Tuition from our knowledgeable HF Holidays’ leader, to ensure you get the most from your holiday • Admissions to advertised venues/gardens • All transport to and from sites/gardens on your holiday • Small groups of up to 14 guests • Loan of lightweight wooden A3 art boards www.hfholidays.co.uk PAGE 1 [email protected] Tel: +44(0) 20 3974 8865 HOLIDAYS HIGHLIGHTS • Tate, St Ives • Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden • Newlyn Art Gallery • The Exchange in Penzance TRIP SUITABILITY Suitable for all levels of experience. ACCOMMODATION Chy Morvah Sea, sand and (hopefully) sun await at Cornwall’s Chy Morvah. This coastal bolthole, whose name means ‘House by the Sea’ in Cornish, basks in the famously lovely light of this artist-retreat town on the north coast of one of England’s most desirable holiday destinations. Those artists may have come to paint the sea and sky but you can simply admire it from the house’s privileged position. The building has been designed to maximise the effect of its elevated location, with stunning sea views and vistas of sandy beaches, while the bustling harbour and array of cafés and artists galleries are just a short cobbled street walk away. -
Appendix A: Non-Executive Directors of Channel 4 1981–92
Appendix A: Non-Executive Directors of Channel 4 1981–92 The Rt. Hon. Edmund Dell (Chairman 1981–87) Sir Richard Attenborough (Deputy Chairman 1981–86) (Director 1987) (Chairman 1988–91) George Russell (Deputy Chairman 1 Jan 1987–88) Sir Brian Bailey (1 July 1985–89) (Deputy Chairman 1990) Sir Michael Bishop CBE (Deputy Chairman 1991) (Chairman 1992–) David Plowright (Deputy Chairman 1992–) Lord Blake (1 Sept 1983–87) William Brown (1981–85) Carmen Callil (1 July 1985–90) Jennifer d’Abo (1 April 1986–87) Richard Dunn (1 Jan 1989–90) Greg Dyke (11 April 1988–90) Paul Fox (1 July 1985–87) James Gatward (1 July 1984–89) John Gau (1 July 1984–88) Roger Graef (1981–85) Bert Hardy (1992–) Dr Glyn Tegai Hughes (1983–86) Eleri Wynne Jones (22 Jan 1987–90) Anne Lapping (1 Jan 1989–) Mary McAleese (1992–) David McCall (1981–85) John McGrath (1990–) The Hon. Mrs Sara Morrison (1983–85) Sir David Nicholas CBE (1992–) Anthony Pragnell (1 July 1983–88) Usha Prashar (1991–) Peter Rogers (1982–91) Michael Scott (1 July 1984–87) Anthony Smith (1981–84) Anne Sofer (1981–84) Brian Tesler (1981–85) Professor David Vines (1 Jan 1987–91) Joy Whitby (1981–84) 435 Appendix B: Channel 4 Major Programme Awards 1983–92 British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) 1983: The Snowman – Best Children’s Programme – Drama 1984: Another Audience With Dame Edna – Best Light Entertainment 1987: Channel 4 News – Best News or Outside Broadcast Coverage 1987: The Lowest of the Low – Special Award for Foreign Documentary 1987: Network 7 – Special Award for Originality -
London Cornish Newsletter
Cowethas Kernewek Loundres www.londoncornish.co.uk As I sat down to prepare this newsletter, I ‘younger’ audience, we need to make use realised that this was number 45 for me! My of the social media which are so much a first issue was Spring 2005 which means part of life today. that I am now entering my 12th year as Over the years, we have been confronted editor! Where has the time gone? Of with several challenges – but the Cornish course, it would not be possible to produce spirit lives on and we are constantly looking a newsletter without the support of many for innovative ways of adapting. The rise in 130th Anniversary people. I rely on your input, and am finding the costs of renting venues in London has Dining Event it more challenging now as the amount of encouraged us to review our social pro- Saturday 12th March ‘copy’ being sent in has dropped substan- gramme and we now include more outings. 12pm for 1pm tially. That said, I have to thank those who Some are more structured, and include a have sent in items and reports over the talk or a tour – such as the recent visit to the years – but please don’t stop. We really AGM and Trelawny Foundling Museum - whereas others are Lecture want to hear from you. Articles do not have more about visiting places with like-minded to be long and could include something you people and being free to roam at our own Saturday 16th April have seen or done in Cornwall, a place or pace. -
Cornwall Calling
Explore CORNWALL CALLING Rugged coastlines with beaches punctuated by dramatic cliffs. Charming villages with castles, moors and ruins, and of course, sweet tea with warm scones and clotted cream. These are a few of our favourite things about Cornwall—England’s southernmost Celtic regional wonder. Text Girija Duggal Image copyright Visit Britain and Adam Burton Visit Britain and Image copyright p As the name suggests, Land’s End is where mainland England ends—culminating in rugged cliffs that flank the dramatic Celtic Sea. 50 JetWings International June 2014 JetWings International June 2014 51 Image courtesy Adam Gibbard Image courtesy s you cross the river Tamar and enter England’s southernmost county, the landscape changes dramatically, the accent develops a definite lilt, and the rhythm The majestic landscape and Aof life noticeably slows down. With a heady mix of friendly locals, a seemingly magical light of southwest endless coastline, stunning landscape, a rich history dating to the Stone Age, a distinct Celtic culture and even its own flag, Cornwall stands proudly apart from the rest of the Cornwall have drawn country. It comes as no surprise then that Britain’s favourite vacation spot was recently voted the world’s most family-friendly destination, beating Orlando, Florida to top spot. artists to seaside towns Here are 10 reasons to head to the land of beaches, pasties and cream teas this summer. such as Newlyn, St Ives and Penzance since the 19th century and spawned major schools of art. Land’s End: The westernmost point of mainland England draws hordes of visitors for its unique location and stunning views of the Atlantic. -
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Truro Art Society Newsletter Summer 2017
TRURO ART SOCIETY also overdue for retirement, according to the Constitution, so please give some NEWSLETTER serious thought to joining the Committee, even if only to help Pat Cunningham with SUMMER 2017 tea duties. Webmaster Martin Perman would like you to send him more images of your work and Jan Lobb would appreciate more in the way of Members’ News. The exciting part of the evening was, of course, TRURO ARTS, who had brought along a fantastic variety of art materials for us to try out, representing just a few of the thousands of items they stock in their shop next to the Museum. There were samples of different quality watercolour papers, pastel papers, art boards, etc. in black as well as white. There were conventional ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING brushes and bamboo brushes, various thicknesses of charcoal, black and coloured This was well attended. The business graphite sticks, pigment and dye inks, gold was kept as brief as possible, as all reports inks, brush pens, drawing and calligraphy were available in printed form for members pens and automatic pencils, acrylics and to read in advance. Our President, Heather watercolours, even rocksalt! We had a Phillips welcomed everyone to the meeting great time trying everything out and went and thanked the Committee and the away with free samples of oils, etc., that we exhibition helpers. The current Committee had not been able to test there. Short video was re-elected without opposition, with the presentations gave advice on techniques introduction of Phil Willetts who is and a brochure of their workshops will, no shadowing John Pedler (with a view to doubt, entice some of us to go along.