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Galapagos (Paperback, New ed.)
Sian Ede; Edited by Sian Ede, Bergit Arends; Contributions by Richard A. Fortey, Greg Hilty, …
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R334
Discovery Miles 3 340
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Galapagos archipelago in the Pacific Ocean is a place of
extraordinary biodiversity, home to species found nowhere else on
Earth and synonymous with the discoveries of Charles Darwin. But it
is also a place of competing interests: those of the rare animals
and plants, the scientists who are trying to conserve them, the
settlers from Ecuador seeking a way to support themselves, and the
tourists who travel across the world to encounter the astonishing
environment. Galapagos is the result of a five-year artists'
residency programme set up by the Galapagos Conservation Trust,
working with the Charles Darwin Foundation, as a unique way of
highlighting some of the complex issues that relate to the islands.
Twelve international artists were invited to engage with the
Galapagos on their own terms, to mix with the local and the
scientific communities, to find inspiration for original new work
and eventually to share it with a wide audience. The artworks and
essays in this book prompt comparisons with other places in the
world that are beset by multiple demands. Artists: Jyll Bradley,
Paulo Catrica, Filipa Cesar, Marcus Coates, Dorothy Cross
(accompanied by Fiona Shaw), Alexis Deacon, Jeremy Deller, Tania
Kovats, Kaffe Matthews, Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman and Joe
Gerhardt) and Alison Turnbull.
'Mr Roscoe's Garden is a key outcome of The Fragrant Liverpool
project. Conceived by Jyll Bradley, this is a unique international
art project exploring the stories, rites and exchanges that occur
when a flower is cut and placed in the human hand. The project
centres on the fascinating story of the Liverpool's Botanic
Collection and the people involved in its intriguing history.
Established by William Roscoe in 1802, and moved to more extensive
sites in both 1846 when it became a public facility and in 1964,
the complete Botanic Collection has not been on display since 1984
when it closed to the public in a political storm that mirrored the
cataclysmic 1980s decline of Liverpool itself. The collection thus
has both a glorious and tragic past. Jyll Bradley draws together
the compelling tales of the Botanic Collection's history in this
creatively ambitious and beautifully illustrated book, evoking the
people that made the collection and the distant lands that supplied
the plants. By the early nineteenth century the Liverpool Botanic
Collection was one of the greatest botanic gardens of its day,
filled with strange and rare plants arriving on ships through the
City's port from an ever-widening imperial world. By the
mid-twentieth the Collection included the greatest orchid
collection ever amassed in municipal Britain, as it still does
today. While the indignity of the closure lives on, so do, by
miracle, the living plants and the dried plants (in Liverpool's
magnificent Herbarium); the books; the paintings and all the other
riches that have, at one time, or another, co-existed in the
Liverpool Botanic Gardens. The glory days are still in the past,
but the plant collections have continued to be nurtured and grown
and Liverpool's current revival has signalled a new future for the
Collection. Painstakingly designed by Jyll Bradley, Mr Roscoe's
Garden is a work of art in itself. Its publication also coincides
with the re-emergence of the collection as goes to the Chelsea
Flower Show for the first time in 30 years and the Gardens open
once again to the public.
Sybilla Kellaway's volatile marriage to unfaithful David is ending.
She has flown the marital nest and taken refuge in a summer-house
at Silversands, a remote coastal promontory. Sibylla's flight has
bitterly divided friends and family and opened old wounds. Anna, a
young birder, is also at Silversands. Binoculars and notebook in
hand, she secretly records all she sees - the nesting terns and
rare waders...and the glamorous, defiant Sibylla. Darkly comic and
provocative, Girl Watching charts a young woman's transformation -
from silent observer to vocal witness - told through the language
and rituals of bird-watching. Girl, Watching was commissioned by
the Birmingham Repertory Theatre. It opens on 30th January 2003 at
The Astor Theatre, Deal in Kent, following a month-long residency
on the south coast, including work with the Sandwich Bay Bird
Observatory. It later transfers to the Birmingham Rep.
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