Time & Tide – forthcoming exhibition

Time & Tide – forthcoming exhibition

Re-posted from

Flotsam Weaving

by Joanna Atherton


 

I am excited to announce that I will be exhibiting my flotsam tapestries in a new solo show at Artistsmeet in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire. Time & Tide opens on 19 January and runs until 26 February 2016.

Chronicle - Jo Atherton

The sea curates orphaned objects and presents them to the shore; a temporary narrative replenished with each changing tide. I am fascinated by these unexpected and ignored fragments, imagining who they were important to in another time and place. By weaving strands of found objects together, I am able to repurpose the lost and rejected, pondering threads of stories and yarns long forgotten.

Jo Atherton weaves with flotsam

As well as your chance to see a unique collection of tapestries handwoven from materials found on the British coastline, you are invited to create your own small tapestry using coastline curiosities. Join me on Wednesday 27 January 2016 from 11am to view the exhibition and learn more about weaving with found objects. Looms, materials, coffee and cake provided – just bring your imagination!

Entry is free, but booking is required. To secure your place, please call 01923 776611 or email leisure@threerivers.gov.uk

Download the Time & Tide exhibition flyer to book your place on a FREE 2 hour flotsam weaving workshop on Wednesday 27 January 2016 at the Gallery.

RGS Talk on the The ‘mega’ tides of South West Britain

The ‘mega’ tides of South West Britain – John Burrows

  • Wednesday 23 September 7.00pm-8.00pm
  • Lecture (Cheltenham)

Previewing the UK’s highest tides in 25 years that are set for 29/30 September, this talk will place the enormous tides of South West Britain in a global context.

Venue: Room TC001, School of Natural & Social Sciences, University of Gloucestershire,
Francis Close Hall Campus, Cheltenham, GL50 4AZ.

Places: free, no booking necessary.

Tidal Lagoons in estuaries are like plam oil plantations in rainforestss

Estuaries are very rich and complex habitats with a mix of processes, flows and exchanges between aquatic and terrestrial biodiversity. Brackish waters, (mix of salt and fresh water) and turbid waters (waters carrying silt etc) form unique, locally very varied and dynamic habitats. Inter tidal zones are some of the most biodiverse habitats known. So to build large tidal lagoons which radically change / degrade these conditions is an overwriting of rich, complex biodiverse landscapes for the sake of development. To me this parallels the clearing of rainforests for such purpose as palm oil production. This is rightly a cause for worldwide environmental concern, boycotts and campaigns (links below). Tidal lagoons (and barrages) should be seen in the same light. Yes, green / renewable energy is vitally important, but there are much better ways of going for that. Lagoon and barrage energy is not green energy it is ‘dirty’ energy.

See here for more on plam oil

http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/forests/palm-oil

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/harvesting-palm-oil-and-rainforests/

Barrages and lagoons are the dinosaurs of tidal power technology

What a nightmare vision is offered by the new tidal lagoon proposals on the Severn Estuary

tidal lagoon 1

Barrages and lagoons are very grim and environmentally destructive projects. The Severn Rivers Trust have calculated that power from the proposed Swansea lagoon will be the most expensive electricity in the world!! As usual in the UK, plans such as these are delivered by decision making systems in thrall to developers who want to make profits at the expense of the living environment. The Taff barrage being a very shocking example of that. In Canada / Bay of Fundy, where tidal power and its impacts have been studies for decades, Tidal Stream power is now the focus. Barrages and lagoons are the dinosaurs of tidal power technology. PLEASE do look at this website and move towards arguing for tidal stream power generation which will not involve destroying huge areas of an internationally important habitat.

http://acer.acadiau.ca/FERN.html.

Also tidal stream power could be one of THE green energies worldwide. There are development programmes in Scotland, Canada and elsewhere, if you are looking to develop the green economy that is where the potential is.

Art Atlas of the Severn Estaury

Owain Jones's avatarSEAA

This blog accompanies a public Google map, and together they form the  Severn Estuary Art Atlas (SEAA) .

SevernEstuaryArtAtlas

This aim is to show the location and content of a number of artworks which have been created in and around the Severn Estuary, and to reveal this extraordinary landscape through artworks created with(in) it.

Each artwork/project/event/artist has a dedicated page on this blog (see above) and these link to place markers on the accompanying Google map. In some instances a generic placemaker is used on the map for works which are not spatially specific.

This project relates to other academic work I have created on the Severn Estuary,  tidal landscapes and ‘tidal culture’. (The Breath of the Moon).

This work has been developed with the help and support of a number of people. Thanks to Michaela Riser, Natasha Barker, Davina Kirkpatrick, Iain Biggs, Stuart Ballard, Antony Lyons, Suze Adams…

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