Monthly Archives: August 2006

Politics

When is the ‘third sector’ not the ‘third sector’?

When it is funded by the ‘first sector’, i.e. government.

From today’s Guardian:
State funding for charities has outstripped donations from the general public, putting the independence of the voluntary sector at risk, according to a report from the Centre for Policy Studies.
While donations from the general public grew by just 7% in three years (up to 2004), government funding over the same period rose 38%. State funding now accounts for 38% of charities’ total annual income of £26.3bn, compared with 27% from donations, says the report.

The theory that NGOs can provided better, more flexible services than the government sector might, if they are small and funded by donations, he true. But when they start providing government services, funded by the government?

Blogging/IT

Recycling computers

Got an old Pentium 2 desktop CPU that I want to do the right thing with – there’s lots of talk around about donating to Africa but there are obvious issues about the environmental cost of transport. Looking around I’ve found this listing of UK recyclers, and a useful site on how to wipe your hard drive.

Anyone had any good, or bad, experiences, or advice?

Environmental politics

Eco-schools

Can’t remember where I found this now, but since I’m about to start a new “career” as a school governor, I should point to the website of the eco-schools programme:

The Eco Schools programme can help schools to:
• improve the school environment
• reduce litter and waste
• reduce energy and water bills
• devise efficient ways of travelling to and from school
• promote healthy lifestyles
• encourage citizenship.

Women's history

Those amazing Tudor women

Over the whole period “between 12 and 19 per cent [of those whose letters survive] wrote all their own letters …. the number of women for who there is evidence of their actually writing letters rose from 50 per cent in the 1540s to some 79 per cent by the end of the 16th century … the proportion of women for whom no holograph letters survive fell from 28 per cent in the first decade of the period to an estimated 17 per cent by the years 1600 to 1609.” (p. 96)

From Women Letter-Writers in Tudor England, James Daybell, OUP 2006 (found today on the “new books” shelf at the London Library – which can be a really treasure.)

An nice example, Elizabeth Bourne, “wife of Anthony, the son of John Bourne, Mary I’s principal secretary of state”. Some 70 of her letters survive, written in holograph in several different hands. She also wrote original poetry and sometimes used the pseudonyms Frances Wesley and Anne Hayes, which she called her “secrete syphers”.

A search of the web and electronic academic database returned nothing on her – one more for the literary collection.

Arts History

The Bradshaw paintings: pre-Aboriginal art?

Somehow the rows and the mystery seem inevitable – there are some absolutely gorgeous rock paintings in a remote, inaccessible part of Australia that might date back 60,000 years, and might be by a pre-Aboriginal people.

The Times Literary Supplement has sent Robin Hanbury-Tenison, whoever they might be, on the trail, and aside from showing an unfortunate line in gullibility — (“It teems with poisonous snakes and spiders, as well as crocodiles and mad wild bulls.” – no if they were “mad” they wouldn’t survive very long in the Bush ) — the writer provides a decent account of the controversy.

I don’t think the “cradle of global culture” makes much sense – it is indeed never really explained – presumably there would be some trail out, some signs of artistic influence, were that the case – but that doesn’t make the paintings and their possibilities any less exciting.

Arts Women's history

Talking about 18th-century craftswomen …

… in the office, as I was the other day (there are BIG attractions about working at the Guardian), a name came up that I hadn’t previous encountered – Anna Maria Garthwaite (1690–1763).

She was “the pre-eminent silk designer of her period”. Spitalfields-based, her work was mainly based on botanical, painting-style patterns, which the V&A are still making money out of. A whole dress by her, with a well-documented history has also survived, as has a fancy waistcoat (which in 1747 still had sleeves).

She also did cut-paper landscapes and some of her pattern books have survived,

From the ONDB:

“…her father was a well-connected Anglican clergyman with family associations with the City of London. After his death in 1719 it is probable that she went to live with her elder sister, Mary, the wife of Robert Dannye, rector of Spofforth, Yorkshire… In 1729 or 1730 Dannye died, and both sisters then went to London, where they eventually settled in Princes Street (now 2 Princelet Street) in the parish of Christ Church, Spitalfields …
Her interest in textile design was apparent by 1726, when she collected and annotated a series of textile designs, ‘by diverse hands’, which included technically innovative and high-quality French work. Her first drawing, inscribed ‘sent to London before I left York’, was competent but simple. The largest series of her work, comprising many hundreds of drawings of silk designs and patterns, some of which are still enrolled in their contemporary arrangement covering the period from 1726 to 1756, has survived and is in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. It is clear that, at a time when the English silk industry vied with French manufacturers for the quality home and export market, she was one of the foremost designers of ‘flowered’, or brocaded, silks.
…She displayed a noteworthy grasp of textile technique, including technical direction as necessary. Surviving silks show how well her designs adapt to form and function. Garthwaite point paper, imprinted with squares for drafting designs in the early nineteenth century, may be a retrospective tribute to her expertise. The basis for her technical knowledge can only be conjectured, though Robert Campart, a Spitalfields ribbon weaver of Huguenot extraction, is named as a beneficiary, together with his wife, in Garthwaite’s will.