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Wednesday 7 September 2011

Fishing People of the North: Cultures, Economies, and Management Responding to Change



With the coverage of commercial fishing popularised on TV through shows like the Deadliest Catch on the Discovery Channel conference like the one above should attract a huge following. It would be good to see a similar event take place in the UK that addresses the same issues in a pan european context - the response to change is every bit as crucial here in the UK as elsewhere in the world. This is a document that would make good reading for the current harbour commissioners as the future of Newlyn as a fishing port depends to some degree on their vision of the future and how the harbour intends to manage its responds to change.

The international symposium is a forum for scholars, fishery managers, fishing families, and others to explore the human dimensions of fishery systems and the growing need to include social science research in policy processes. It will be a place for sharing what we have learned about the opportunities and constraints that fishing people in northern countries encounter in a time of significant environmental, social, and economic change. Diverse panels and presentations will address sources and effects of external impacts on fishing people and their communities.

27th Lowell Wakefield Fisheries Symposium

Hilton Downtown Anchorage Hotel
Anchorage, Alaska
September 14–17, 2011

Contact: Courtney Carothers, clcarothers@alaska.edu

Tuesday 6 September 2011

It was cold, wet and miserable outside.....

 So, out with Keith Floyd's must have, Floyd on Fish.......
substitute haddock for the brill and creme fraiche for the cream and voila!, comfort food in a jiffy!

Wintry weather courtesy of hurricane Irene.

Good looking JDs from the beamer Aaldtje Adriante.......
while the Chloe T lands her first post-refit trip......
giving the buyers something to fight over on a slack Tuesday market.......
South Coast Fisheries had their eye on these big tub gurnards.......
the green all at sea........
a pair of Nowells........
glad to be in away from the strong westerly winds courtesy of the remnants of huricane Irene.
A quick check with the Newlyn weather site sheds some light on just how breezy it is out to sea this morning.

Monday 5 September 2011

Porthleven Storm.


The wedding present - Porthleven Storm March 2008 - from a photograph by James Hibbert.

The arts in and around Newlyn.

It's show time, head for University College Falmouth for their MA Shows till September 10th........
if your interests are in the more physical world of Rugby Union then the Pirates will be back in action at their Menaye Field ground against Doncaster this Saturday.......
Newlyn Art Gallery is hosting an archive film show during the Arts Festival.......
while Zoe Wilton has a show opened by Anthony Frost at the Tolcarne Inn.......
a clearish sky for a few minutes......
on the market the Storm Petrel has been amongst the bass again......
looks like Debbie has ice ready for one of her famous G&Ts......
there's an insulation job to be done on the beamer Algrie.......
St Piran flying at half-mast.......
one of those Bideford boys is in foreign parts........
those Cornish Sardines can be seen everywhere these days!

Sunday 4 September 2011

Saturday 3 September 2011

Newlyn School of Art to open in what was the Board School.






A NEW art school which is set to contribute to Newlyn's proud artistic heritage is opening after several years of hard work by its founder and director, local artist Henry Garfit.The school will draw on the talents and experience of 15 local artists, including Neil Pinkett, Jason Walker, Jesse Leroy Smith, Jane Ansell, Mary Crockett, Mark Spray and Paul Wadsworth, and will host short courses in oil painting, printmaking, drawing, stone carving, professional development and art history.
Newlyn School of Art, which will be based at the Old Board School, Chywoone Hill, is the creation of Mr Garfit, an artist who has worked in the area for eight years and the man behind the community of 15 art studios at Trewidden Garden, opened in 2008.

Mr Garfit says that he is "delighted that after several years of development work the school is now in a position to start taking bookings".

"The project was awarded a £30,000 Arts Council grant through Grants for the Arts, which is Lottery funded; the highest sum available to an application of this type.

"The funding has helped towards some of the equipment set-up costs but has not covered all the costs and so I have had to beg and borrow from friends and family to get the remaining funds we needed to start up the school."

"The school is a privately run, not-for-profit organisation with all surplus funds being ploughed back into buying new equipment and expanding the resources and facilities of the school.

"We received valuable business advice from Bryn Hackland, enterprise facilitator at Cornwall Development Company who has helped us make vital links with many local businesses.

"The school will offer a great deal to the local arts community with year-round access to high quality facilities and much needed part-time employment for artists to supplement their earnings.

"We also aim to cater to the many annual visitors to West Cornwall who come to the area because of its long-standing reputation for art."

Mr Garfit explained why Newlyn School of Art was chosen as the name for the school. "A fact which isn't known to everyone is that the well known art school in Newlyn was called the Forbes School of Painting and the term 'The Newlyn School' refers, in fact, specifically to the group of painters who were based here from the mid 1880s onwards," he added.
"The daughters of Billy Stevenson who own the building have been extremely supportive of the project and are also making efforts to find a permanent year-round public exhibition space for their father's extensive collection of Newlyn fishing memorabilia."
"I have had so many local people tell me proudly that they attended the Board School and we hope that the local community will feel able to use the school again."
Mr Garfit will be working closely with Penlee House Gallery & Museum, Newlyn Art Gallery and Tate St Ives to provide art history courses for the school as well as Newlyn Art Gallery and The Exchange to provide year-round professional development.
Penlee Gallery, director, Alison Bevan, said she was delighted that the school was opening: "Penlee House Gallery has long seen the potential for the success of such a present day art school."
The first course – Oil Painting, by tutor Neil Pinkett – starts on September 14.
The school's website – http://www.newlynartschool.co.uk – is now live and a course discount is now available.