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Tuesday 8 October 2013

At St Ives Tate from this Friday - Aquatopia: The Imaginary of the Ocean Deep




This major exhibition brings together over 150 contemporary and historic artworks that explore how the deep has been imagined by artists, writers and poets through time and across cultures. Its briny depths are populated with ancient sea monsters and futuristic dolphin embassies, beautiful sirens and paramilitary gill-men, sperm whales and water babies, shipwrecks and submersibles, giant squid and lecherous octopuses.


Joseph Mallord William Turner
Sunrise with Sea Monsters circa 1845
Oil on canvas
support: 914 x 1219 mm frame: 1066 x 1373 x 75 mm
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856

Developed in collaboration with Nottingham Contemporary, the exhibition has been curated by Alex Farquharson, Director of Nottingham Contemporary, and reconfigured for St Ives with Martin Clark, former Artistic Director of Tate St Ives. Ninety percent of the Earth’s oceans remain unexplored. Science knows more about outer space than the ocean deep. Scores of ‘new’ species, weirder than any fiction, are found each time a submersible descends to the ocean’s deepest trenches. In the absence of knowledge the deep is a site where the imagination has full rein. The ocean has always bred monsters, and like outer space has been a setting for science fiction since Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. But unlike outer space, the oceans are part of our own planet – and by extension a part of us too.

Throughout recorded history the deep has been the site of shared myths, subconscious fears and unnamed desires. Aquatopia, then, is less about the ocean as it actually is and more about how it lives within us. But our wild imaginings about the ocean aren’t simply escapist. The ocean is the keeper of political histories that continually resurface in the present day. Ocean myths both ancient and modern have been shaped by conquest and colonialism, and more recently by the tide of gender politics. Featuring important and iconic paintings, drawings and sculptures by artists including J.M.W. Turner, Marcel Broodthaers, Oskar Kokoschka, Barbara Hepworth, Odilon Redon, Lucian Freud and Hokusai, amongst others, Aquatopia also includes video, performance, sculpture and painting by more recent figures in contemporary art, such as Mark Dion, Spartacus Chetwynd, Steve Claydon, Juergen Teller, The Otolith Group, Mikhail Karakis and Wangechi Mutu. Occupying all of the spectacular galleries at Tate St Ives, the exhibition is presented at the very edge of the ocean, overlooking Porthmeor beach and the restless Atlantic beyond.

The art in Aquatopia has strong links with powerful literary archetypes, including The Odyssey, The Tempest, The Ancient Mariner, Moby Dick and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. The richly illustrated catalogue, published by Tate St Ives and Nottingham Contemporary, includes newly commissioned and recent critical essays by leading thinkers and writers on the sea, including Philip Hoare, Marcus Rediker, Marina Warner, Kodwo Eshun, Simon Grant, David Toop and Celeste Olalquiaga, as well as a selection of classic literary extracts and texts (available from the Tate St Ives shop for the special exhibition price of £19.99).

An exclusive limited-edition print has also been commissioned to coincide with Aquatopia.Thames and Thames and Thames and Thames (Japanese Orange) by Steve Claydon is an edition of just seventeen at £395 (unframed). To order, please call 01736 796 226 or download an order form. A version of the print is also available in black squid ink from Nottingham Contemporary.

Monday 7 October 2013

Despite 'security' - hundreds of pounds worth of lobster goes missing at Newlyn Harbour

This story has appeared on the Cornishman web site:




"A FISHERMAN has found nearly £500 worth of lobster missing from his boat at Newlyn Harbour. Graham Nicholas, who is currently working his crabber the Girl Pamela, discovered his stock was taken directly from his pots on two separate occasions."

According to the report:

If, what Girl Pamela skipper Graham Nicholas says is true; “There are cameras but they haven’t worked for three months.” 

and a representative of the the harbour has said...

 “We’ve got cameras on the harbour. No one has told me they don’t work.

The just what has the security guard been looking at for the last three months?

Blank screens?

Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm.

Benyon out Eustace in!

As was his predecessor Jonathon Shaw, tory MP Richard Benyon will no longer be harangued by local fisherman like Mick Mahon (R) on the thorny subject of haddock quotas and discards!

Fisheries minister Richard Benyon tweeted earlier today after his demise as and removal to the back-benches in David Cameron's Cabinet re-shuffle. 




Cornish born George Eustace, parliamentary representative for Camborne and Redruth and a former UKIP candidate will take over the helm.





Mr Eustice, MP for Camborne and Redruth, is the son of West Cornwall strawberry farmers, and his promotion from the backbenches will mean playing a key role is shaping argiculture and fishing policy.

A former member of Praze Young Farmers near Camborne, the 42-year-old replaces Richard Benyon. Mr Eustice, a former Press secretary to David Cameron, is a former director of Trevaskis Farm at Gwinear, near Hayle. He will be responsible for fisheries, floods, biodiversity and land management. 

Dan Rogerson, Liberal Democrat MP for North Cornwall, has also been given a ministerial post in Defra. 

 Read more in the full story from the WMN:


Monday is just bustling!


A big trip of white foish from the gill netter Govenek of Ladram...


scads may well prove an interesting dilemma for trawlers when the total discrads ban come into force...


squids in!...


sometimes it's really rewarding to be in the red...


two big beam tralwer trips filled one end of the market...


with some top quality handline fish sprinkled throughout the auction floor...



its that tome of year when heavy skies pass over the Bay.

Bass boys bass!

Newlyn Arts Festival - Newlyn's Choice


This year organisers of Newlyn Arts Festival are hoping to reflect the community as a whole, as well as the artists themselves, at the port's annual event.


Ron Hogg nominated  'Newlyn Fish Festival'  by Jeremy Thompson

'Newlyn's Choice' is this year's standout feature – a collection of exhibits chosen by residents. The aim is to capture favourites and thoughts from across the port, drawing on inspiration and appreciation from every angle.


​NAF Simon Jaques, operations officer at Newlyn Art Gallery and one of the event's organisers Annie Metcalfe

Simon Jaques, operations manager at Newlyn Art Gallery, is excited about what is to come and noted the inclusive aspect of 2013's showcase.

"It reflects what the people of Newlyn love," he said. "It's a nice idea. There are lots of different names – it's fresh and will be interesting to see.

"We're involving the whole community and have invited all sorts of people," he added.

Friday night sees the event's opening at the gallery at 7pm, which will be a first viewing of the display alongside music from Baldrick's Plan, a welcome from St Ives' abstract painter Anthony Frost and a few conjured words from poet Bob Devereux.

The exhibition then runs from October 5-19, with a variety of other creative performances peppered throughout the two weeks including a number of literary spectacles, musical performances and insights into surfing heritage through a variety of mediums.

While from Friday 11 to Sunday 13 the festival's famous 'Open Studios' weekend takes place, allowing the public entry into many local artists' studios and creative workspaces to gain an insight into the person behind the painting.

Events, October:

Friday 4: Opening of Exhibition - Newlyn’s Choice, Newlyn Art Gallery, 7pm

Saturday 5: Great Expectations, The Centre, 7.30pm

Tuesday 8: Meet the Author’ Alan Kent talks about his plays including Surfing Tommies, Music from violinist Allen Samuel, Newlyn Art Gallery, 7pm

Thursday 10: Poetry Evening and songs from Boilerhouse Singers, Newlyn Art Gallery, 7pm

Friday 11: Surf Action talk and film: The new generation of surfing tummies, Newlyn Art Gallery, 7pm

Saturday 5 October 2013

#TheMaritimeArtist - Mark Dion - #StIves


Inspired by fisherman John Pearce’s fascinating selection of fishing gear, Dion has assembled a collection of artefacts evoking the long established connection between fisherman and artist – roles strongly connected within the history and culture of Porthmeor Studios and St Ives.

During the course of his project Mark Dion was assisted by artist James Barber and eight graduate students from Falmouth University.

Marc Messenger, one of Dion’s assistants, said: “This installation is a testament to the industry and creativity that is symbolic of the heritage of St Ives. It is also a poignant story of a working life, narrated through sun-bleached buoys and briny baskets, all set within the sound of the sea.”