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Christmas Cards 2024

Christmas Cards – NOW SOLD OUT

Our new range of Christmas cards have been very popular and have now sold out – thanks to all who supported us by purchasing some.

This year, there were five new card designs, capturing various views and inspirations of the library from a number of different perspectives.

Single cards – £1.50 each
Three cards of any design – £4.00
Five cards of any design – £6.50

 

Our first card shows a snowy Quay Street in Penzance in the 1950s, an image from our historic Photo Archive collection. The emulsion damage to the negative serves to enhance the chilly atmosphere in this photo. This card is now sold out.

Our next is a more recent, and quite rare, image of the library surrounded by snow, captured by our library assistant Harriet on the 18th January this year

Harriet also created our third card, The Morrab Gardens Christmas cats, inspired by our oft-seen furry visitors! This card is now sold out.

Library Assistant James has also contributed a design, inspired by a Christmas card in our Lamorna Birch scrapbook collection, an exciting new donation to the Photo Archive in 2024. This card is now sold out.

We welcomed library member Faye Dobinson as our artist-in-residence in 2024, and asked if she might create an exclusive Christmas design for the library, inspired by her time with us. She created this beautiful cyanotype of holly and ivy using plants from the surrounding Morrab Gardens.

Reading List | Wilkie Collins

Every month at The Morrab Library we host talks in the Reading Room for library members and non-members alike. The programme is as eclectic as the Library’s collection – from stories of standing stones to the Bumblebees of Cornwall – and meander through Literature, Poetry, Art, Geology and a host of other fascinating subjects in between. 

Often, the writers, academics, poets and artists we invite to speak at the Library generously let us record their talk so we can share them with a wider audience online. You can browse the selection of recorded talks here.

Some of our brilliant speakers also use the Library’s archive, newspaper and book collections for their own research. We like to share a “Reading List” to go with each talk recording, in case you would like to follow up on the talk by borrowing related titles from the Library or delving into our archives. 

In October 2024, Jak Stringer gave a light-hearted, multi-media performance delving into the writer Wilkie Collins’ formative years and his rambles around Cornwall. 

After discovering that Wilkie Collins had toured Cornwall in 1850 and written a travel journal, Jak Stringer felt inspired to follow in his footsteps. She wanted answers to questions; why did the people of Looe eat rats, the women of Saltash clean boots and the folk on Scilly never open windows. 

Reading List

Rambles Beyond Railways; Notes in Cornwall Taken A-Foot by Wilkie Collins – Non-fiction – Jenner Room. 

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins – Fiction (fiction can be found in the room with the Reception desk).
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins – Fiction
The Dead Secret by Wilkie Collins – Fiction
No Name by Wilkie Collins – Fiction

The following suggestions are not currently part of the library’s collection but if you have a copy that you would like to donate to us then please email enquiries@morrablibrary.org.uk. They may be available to borrow from the public library too. 

Wilkie Collins A Life of Sensation by Andrew Lycett
Brief Live: Wilkie Collins by Melisa Klimaszewski

Jak has also share a couple of useful websites to refer to. 

Wilkie Collins Info Pages

Wilkie Collins Society 

My Family and Other Animals – Meet our new artists-in-residence

September will see us welcome artists Philip Riley and Nadia Peters to the library, where they will explore the library’s relationship with nature, taking inspiration from our historic book collection.

Philip and Nadia work collaboratively with mixed media, inspired by their surroundings and incorporating found objects. From the 16th-25th September they will aim to use our historic book collection as a visual and literary starting point for the creation of sculptural work. They will focus particularly on the animal images from the work of Swiss naturalist, Conrad Gesner and his important 16th century encyclopedia Historia Animalium, (you can read a library blog about Gesner here). Found organic and vintage material collected locally will be incorporated into their sculptural response to the library building, historic artefacts and the location itself.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As well as the opportunity to meet the artists each day of the residency as they work on their creations, Philip and Nadia will present a talk about how the library and its collections has influenced and inspired their work on the 25th September – more details to follow. 

The artists will also host workshops at the local St Levan’s primary school, where students will have the opportunity to work with Philip and Nadia to create images based on the fantastic creatures depicted in Historia Animalium, which will subsequently be displayed at the library on the day of the talk.

Nadia Peters is a mixed media installation artist based in Manchester. Her work is inspired by her surroundings and incorporates found objects. Phil Riley is a Cyprus based artist. Working in plaster using natural forms found on location, his practice now includes casting in sand. Phil’s subject matter is influenced by both his international and Uk artist residencies.

We look forward to welcoming them and introducing you to their work.

Christmas Craft Fair – this Saturday 16th November

Don’t forget our Christmas Craft Fair will be held this Saturday from 10.30 am to 2.00 pm. We will be jam-packed with stalls showcasing a variety of beautiful crafts including ceramics, knits, cards, art, woodwork, books and more. Images from our Photo Archives will also be on sale. First prize in our raffle is a wonderful Christmas cake and we’ll have a Tombola too. And of course, our delicious refreshments will be available to enjoy. We really hope to see you there.

Book Review

Book Review – Our Place: Can we save Britain’s wildlife before it is too late?

by Mark Cocker.  London: Penguin Random House, 2018 

 

Our library member Katharine Mair has recently enjoyed this new addition to our library, and her review follows.

This is a timely book with a grim theme. It is also an easy and engaging read.  Mark Cocker is a working naturalist, who draws us into his own experience of delight in the living landscape that we share with other creatures.

In addition he gives us a lucid account of the work of  many individuals and organisations who have, over several centuries, worked to preserve threatened species and landscapes.This combination of personal anecdote and historical perspective tells us why we should be concerned, and highlights the many conflicts of interest that can get in the way of change, modern farming methods being just one example.

The title of this beautifully written book asks a question. To me it suggests the answer that we must never give up hope and stop trying.