Monday, November 18, 2013

Museum Monday - Tate St. Ives




We had the pleasure of visiting the Tate St. Ives Museum on our trip to Cornwall in 2006. We walked up and up narrow streets and then suddenly came out to a view of the museum with the ocean sparkling with sun pennies beyond. In the fiction-induced world I live in I like to think that this museum is what followed the gallery Lawrence Stern and his fellow artists started in that time between the wars.  For all of us who have read Rosamunde Pilcher's The Shell Seekers, know that Porthkeriss is St Ives.  
The three-storey building, designed by architects Evans and Shalev, lies on the site of an old gas works, overlooking Porthmeor Beach. It was opened in 1993, the second regional gallery in the Tate Gallery network.
An extension to the gallery has been proposed in response to the large numbers of visitors the gallery attracts, with the aims of providing better education spaces and accommodating larger works of art. The plans have met with fierce objections from some parts of the local community. On 20 July 2010, Cornwall Council successfully bought the land for the proposed extension from the Penwith Housing Association which has pledged to use the money to build more homes for elderly people in the town.
Lawrence states that the new artists "will come to paint the warmth of the sun and the colour of the wind." It was a joy to wander through St. Ives and recognize so much from Pilcher's novels, and to sit in the museum and be surrounded by glorious art that fulfilled  his long-ago prophecy. 


4 comments:

  1. The Tate seems to have a knack for the unexpected, which this architecture must surely be in this place. Apropos of almost nothing, my son declared the bookstore at the Tate Modern to be his favorite place in London - and his grandmother was from Cornwall. xo

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  2. Marylinn - It is a bit of a gobsmack to wander up the little lanes with their centuries old cottages and then come across this magnificent structure. But that's Cornwall - always a land of contrast.
    Erin

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  3. I've never heard of this museum! And I just clicked over there via your link and that image on their home page is amazing! It's like something I'd like to draw, but would be harder than drawing a person doing gymnastics. Wow.

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  4. Chris - But not quite as hard as drawing while doing gymnastics!
    Erin

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