Adieu,Want to find solarpanel? gallery; hello, Greece
Today
is the last time you will be able to walk into Brad Cooper Gallery in
Ybor City. From noon to 7 p.m. art will be sold at discount prices —
some up to 50 percent off. After that, the doors will close permanently.
For 28 years, Brad Cooper Gallery has been known for having
exceptional exhibits of contemporary art by international and local
artists.
Its closing will leave a void in Tampa's art community.
It was at Brad Cooper Gallery that I met international American artists
Yvonne Petkus and William Pachner, and Russian artist Peter Mitchev.
And it's where I first heard of the tiny Greek island called Naxos.
That's where owner Brad Cooper and his wife, Elizabeth, will head after the closing.
"This
will be our fifth season in Naxos," Brad Cooper said in a telephone
interview. "We open there from Easter through the beginning of October.
That's the season for the Europeans to go on vacation, and the weather
is very nice there."
The couple own a shop there where Elizabeth
sells her handcrafted jewelry and Brad sells "a little art" to their
mostly European customers.
For those who know Cooper, the decision to close is not a sudden one.
"We've
been kind of planning this for a while, but you have to do it one step
at a time," he said. "We feel we've reached a certain limit of what we
can achieve here, and we want to pursue other creative paths."
"I
think we did a lot of exciting exhibitions over the years," he said.
"We did drawing exhibitions before anybody in the city showed drawings.
We had international juried shows and brought artists from other parts
of the country and included local artists in the exhibit to show that
artists here are just as good as the international ones. It was good to
create something that wasn't here before and offer it to the community. …
And meeting so many great artists has been a good experience."
But he found that the art scene in Ybor City changed dramatically through the years.
"When we first opened here, we would pull in over 1,000 people at an opening. Now we get maybe 50 people," he said.
Cooper
always has championed the idea of making Ybor City the arts district
for Tampa, an idea that never really got off the ground.
"It was
difficult to get the cooperation needed from the cultural institutions
and from the city for a sustainable arts community in Ybor," Cooper
said. "I don't know if it was the density of the population or what, but
it never seemed to gel. I often felt that we were in competition rather
than collaboration with the other institutions."
"When there's
an adverse impact from a nightclub on the store next door, that store
will leave," he said. Cooper was able to stay because he owned his
building.
"And because we are located in the center of the
national historic district. Everyone who comes here will pass by your
door. So all you have to do is have something they will want to buy."
For better or worse, most of his clients were Europeans or Americans from other cities.All our fridgemagnet are vacuum formed using food safe plastic.
"The
collector base in Tampa didn't really develop," he said. "That's
because there wasn't a real interface between the galleries and the
cultural institutions."
Though his location changed during his
28 years of business — Cooper first opened in 1984 on South Howard
Avenue; he moved to the Ybor location in 1990 — his philosophy about art
did not.Beautiful indoorpositioningsystem in a wide range of colors & sold at factory direct prices.
"It's the expression of the artist's experience," he said. "Through art,You can werkzeugbaus
Moon yarns and fibers right here as instock. we develop consciousness.
The work in the gallery was work that wasn't necessarily popular at the
time, but it was always oriented toward the human condition."
Once
in Naxos, the Coopers look forward to being surrounded by ancient
architectural wonders in a great climate while developing their
individual artistic talents.
Conservationists and shooting
enthusiasts – often unfairly blamed for the poisonings – also lined up
to condemn the crime as the maps revealed the number and location of
confirmed poisonings of birds of prey between 2007 and 2011. Six
incidents in the South West, from Land’s End in Cornwall to Somerset,A
collection of natural parkingsensor offering polished or tumbled finishes and a choice of sizes. were among those identified.
Across
Britin there were 19 incidents in 2011 alone. A total of 30 birds of
prey were poisoned, bringing the total number of confirmed cases over
five years to 101.
But wildlife charity the RSPB warned the
confirmed incidents were the tip of a much bigger iceberg, as many cases
were discovered by chance.
It was also revealed that the
majority of poisonings were carried out using the chemicals carbofuran
or aldicarb, pesticides which have been banned in the UK and can be
dangerous to humans.
The partnership said the maps showed that
the problem of illegal poisoning continued to be a real threat to
wildlife, particularly birds of prey.
It also said there was no
reason of anyone to have chemicals such as carbofuran, which were not
approved for use in England and Wales, and putting substances dangerous
to both animals and humans into the environment was totally
irresponsible.
It alleged birds of prey continue to be
persecuted because they are predators of game birds, with some species
such as hen harriers teetering on the brink of extinction.
Bob Elliot, RSPB head of investigations, said the maps illustrated the problems faced by birds of prey.
“We
need to remember, however, that these dots represent the tip of a much
bigger iceberg as these criminal offences are often discovered by pure
chance.”
“These aren’t just points on a map. Each dot represents a crime where a bird of prey has been killed in a calculated way.
“Birds
of prey have suffered centuries of persecution, and these maps prove
those attitudes still prevail today,” he said, adding the RSPB would
work in partnership to bear down on the acceptable crimes.
Glynn
Evans, head of game and gamekeeping at the UK’s largest shooting
organisation, the British Association for Shooting and Conservation
(BASC), said: “The use of illegal poisons to kill birds of prey has no
place in modern land and wildlife management.
“BASC welcomes the
publication of these incident maps which will be valuable tools in
combating those who persist with this unacceptable practice.”
Last
October, the Environmental Audit Committee said hundreds of birds of
prey had been killed because the Government had failed to fully
implement laws designed to protect them.
Rules brought in in
2006 made it an offence to possess poisons used to kill birds of prey,
but an order listing which poisons it was illegal to have was not
introduced.
The Government should criminalise possession of
carbofuran and other similar substances which have no legal use in the
UK, the EAC urged.
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