View allAll Photos Tagged ACCESS

Access for individuals with limited mobility including wheelchair users

 

Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK

Icons illustrating a range of options for energy-saving thermal access doors, plenum walls and viewports for HVAC applications. AD Austin O'Brion.

How to configure Access Control Lists (ACLs) on Linux

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

access to depot & photos taken with permission of GSC staff

© Mark r Bowman

I made two visits to this Cathedral because I arrived too late on Monday to gain access to the interior of the church.

 

St Canice's Cathedral, also known as Kilkenny Cathedral, is a cathedral of the Church of Ireland in Kilkenny city, Ireland. It is in the ecclesiastical province of Dublin.Previously the cathedral of the Diocese of Ossory, it is now one of six cathedrals in the United Dioceses of Cashel and Ossory.

 

The present building dates from the 13th century and is the second longest cathedral in Ireland. Beside the cathedral stands a 100 ft 9th-century round tower. St Canice's tower is an example of a well-preserved 9th-century "Celtic Christian" round tower. It is dedicated to St Canice. It is one of only two such medieval round towers in Ireland that can be climbed to the top.

 

Dublin has two cathedrals and both are Church Of Ireland. If you travel around the island of Ireland you will begin to notice that all the ‘interesting’ cathedrals are owned by the Church Of Ireland and this presents a bit of a problem which I will explain below.

 

Last year I visited St. Anne's Cathedral in Belfast and there was a sign at the entrance indicating that contributions were appreciated. However, while in the building an aggressive lady approached me and informed that I as I did not have a ticket I must come back to the desk with her and pay a 6 pounds sterling entrance fee. A few days later I wrote a negative review on TripAdvisor describing the cathedral as a commercial enterprise rather than a house of God and this upset the management at the Cathedral.

 

While in Belfast I visitedsome other churches [RC and Presbyterian] and the experience was completely different.

 

Since then I have visited many churches and I have noticed the pattern in that the Church Of Ireland charge entrance fees while other religions do not. RC churches often request a donation. I object to fixed entrance fees to churches because they exclude people who do not have money. The other issue it is that once a fixed fee is introduced the church in question becomes a commercial museums rather than a place or worship.

 

In the case of St.Canice’s Cathedral the entrance fee is low at four Euro [there is an additional charge for access to the round tower] and I cannot dispute that it is good value for money if you are interested in history both European and local. If you are interested in religion you may be disappointed to discover that the Cathedral’s purpose was to glorify the ruling classes and God is/was somewhat neglected.

I am not sure how it took so long, but I finally signed up for the All Access Ship Tour on our recent cruise. Wow - this was fantastic! Our tour guide was Nemo (from the Shore Excursions team) - and he did a great job. I took the tour on Thursday February 21st at 9am (our first of two days at sea on our way home). Here is the description from the cruise planner: "Get a behind-the-scenes look at what we do to create your best vacation ever. Join your friendly guide for an exclusive narrated tour onboard your ship. Start off in the dining room, where you’ll find out what our crew does to get ready for every meal, plus try to set up a table yourself. Do you know where to place the water glass or soup spoon? Walk through the main galley to see how our delicious dishes are prepared, plus take a look at the provision area to see all of the ingredients we need to have on hand — it’s a lot! Then step inside the engine control room, where we monitor the systems used throughout the ship. You’ll also visit the ship’s vast laundry facilities. See where anything from napkins, table cloths and sheets to beach towels and the laundry you request gets cleaned and folded. Plus, you’ll have a chance to stroll the “I-95,” the long corridor in the crew’s area, named after the longest highway on the U.S. east coast. Finish with a real treat – a visit to the Bridge for a tour of the ship’s command center." On board the Royal Caribbean Grandeur of the Seas for a 9 Night Southeast Coast & Bahamas Cruise (February 14th through the 23rd, 2019). The itinerary include stops in Charleston (SC), Port Canaveral (FL), Freeport (Grand Bahama Island), Nassau (Bahamas) and Miami (FL) before heading back to Baltimore.

 

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Mind's Eye: Art-Making Workshop with Jessica Jones

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

5th Ave at 89th St

New York City

 

Visitors with low vision and blindness experimented with paper and collaborated to make group sculptures. This special workshop was led by Jessica Jones, artist and teacher at the Lavelle School for the Blind and leading figure in Joe Lovett’s groundbreaking film, Going Blind.

 

Photo: Filip Wolak

 

Learn more about Guggenheim Mind's Eye Programs at www.guggenheim.org/mindseye

Rope Access Plumbing. Do you require a cost effective plumbing solution at height, because RIGCOM Access will guarantee to provide you with a quick cost effective height access solution without the need for expensive plant equipment for your plumbing needs. Visit www.rigcomaccess.com

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Ecole Hoteliere

From the session "Scientific Impact and Open Access" at ESOF 2014, Copenhagen.

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Ecole Hoteliere Dekwaneh

 

Plymouth, Devon, England

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Frisco Beach Access project update 10-01-2021

 

Grading work looking south.

Elaine, 22, with her son Erold Rick, 5 months, speaks to Dawn, a nurse and interpreter from Save the Children in a Library in Taclobcan City that now serves as an Evacuation Center for victims of typhoon Hayian. Elaine was separated from her son during the typhoon and thought she'd lost him. But the family's dog, Chubby, had saved the baby. Erold is getting sick more often now that they live in the evacuation center Elaine blames the living conditions. Access to health care in Tacloban is still limited, nearly three months since the typhoon hit. Elaine has had difficulties breastfeeding so Erold is being fed formula milk. The family's house was flattened so they don't have a home anymore, and don't know what to do when they leave the evacuation center.

Embankment in the port of Piriac-sur-Mer, France.

Caspar Herzberg, President, Middle East and Africa, Schneider Electric, United Arab Emirates speaking during the session Universal Energy Access at the World Forum World Economic Forum on Africa 2019. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Greg Beadle

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Ecole Hoteliere Dekwaneh

 

My bathroom joke on the boys backfired when Caleb proclaimed himself the bouncer and restricted my access to the toilet.

Participants at the World Economic Forum on Africa 2015 in Cape Town. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Jakob Polacsek

OVER 95' OF DIRECT OCEANFRONT WITH EXCLUSIVE AND PRIVATE ACCESS TO PRESTIGIOUS HILLSBORO MILE BEACH. FLEXIBLE TERMS AVAILABLE: FOR SEASONAL RENTAL ($ 35,000 PER MONTH/MINIMUM 4 MONTHS) & OR ANNUAL RENTAL FULLY FURNISHED FOR $ 22,000 PER MONTH).THIS PHENOMENAL 3-STORY WITH PRIVATE ELEVATOR HOME IS LOCATED ON FABULOUS LOT ON THE OCEAN AND INTRACOASTAL, JUST NORTH OF THE INLET ON HILLSBORO MILES, WITH PROTECTED DOCKAGE FOR A 40+ FT BOAT. THIS FABULOUS 5 BEDROOMS OCEANFRONT FULLY FURNISHED HOUSE HAS HOSTED MANY CELEBRITIES. FIRST FLOOR FEATURES: PRIVATE HEATED POOL WITH WATERFALL, TWO BEDROOMS ( ONE WITH OCEAN VIEWS AND THE OTHER IS A SUITE WITH POOL VIEWS), TWO BATHROOMS, LAUNDRY ROOM AND PLAYROOM. SECOND FLOOR: OCEANFRONT LIVING ROOM, KITCHEN, TWO OCEANFRONT BEDROOMS ( BEING ONE A SUITE)AND TWO BATHROOMS. THIRD FLOOR: OCEANFRONT MASTER BEDROOM WITH SPACIOUS BALCONY OVERLOOKING THE OCEAN AND TERRACE OVERLOOKING THE INTRACOASTAL & MASTER BATHROOM. CALL NOW FOR YOUR PRIVATE SHOWING!

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Lejos de los tumultos de la ciudad

había un pequeño lugar

dónde pocos entendían

dónde pocos encajaban...

Access Event Services specializes in red carpet arrivals production and promotional searchlight rentals.

 

We offer red carpet, crowd control, velvet ropes, tents, parking coordination, permit services, theatrical drapery, skytracker searchlights, mobile power, HVAC, step and repeats and more.

 

Call today to see how we can help you.

 

Access Event Services

www.redcarpetarrivals.com

800 823 5515

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Old photos of my old Access Virus TI

In Cuba, access to the Internet is highly regulated. Most Cubans don't have access to the World Wide Web (I understand that there is an intranet system that they can access for e-mail communication, but I don't know enough about it to describe it). Tourists, however, can purchase Internet access cards. For about $4.50 I bought this card, which allowed me one hour of time on the web - just enough to send a couple of messages to my husband, post a Facebook update and quickly check a couple of websites. It was well worth the money to me to avoid feeling cut off from the world while I was away. However, $4.50 for me basically represents the cost of a latte at Starbucks; in a land where the average salary is something like $30/month, this would be a prohibitively expensive luxury for most Cubans.

 

One interesting postcript - when I did sign on to the Internet I noticed that the Shift + 2 key did not get me to the @ sign that I needed in order to access my accounts. Fortunately someone at the hotel was able to explain to me that I had to press the Alt key and then 64 in order to get that character (and I just found out that the Alt 64 shortcut also works at home!).

Alec Finlay

 

Monday 4 - Thursday 7 November, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Various Locations

Across Dundee

 

NEoN is bringing the Travelling Gallery to town, Day of Access exhibition will pop up in various locations across the city.

 

Travelling Gallery is delighted to be working with Alec Finlay to support Day of Access, a powerful campaign which encourages estates to open their land to allow access for people affected by disability. By using hill tracks and four-wheel drives, people who have never been able to immerse themselves in wild nature are driven into the heart Scotland’s beautiful wild landscape.

 

The Day of Access campaign passionately believes that everyone should have the opportunity to experience wild nature. Travelling Gallery will act as the campaign bus touring Day of Access across Scotland; presenting information and artworks and allowing a space for discussions. Documentation from the pilot Day of Access, including work by young photographer Sam McDiarmid, will be exhibited in an art installation created by Finlay.

 

The themes of disability, access and ecological remediation are explored in Finlay’s poems and artwork. Pages from books exploring illness, pain, walking and healing, including A View from the Front Line by Maggie Keswick Jencks, are used as paper for thoughtful drawings and commanding words “THERE CAN NEVER BE AN EXCESS OF ACCESS”.

 

Alongside his own work Alec has invited other artists and poets to exhibit including Hannah Devereaux, Alison Lloyd, Ken Cockburn and Mhairi Law; each bringing their own creativity and experience to the project. The work is collaboratively displayed like a scrap book or diary pinned on a garden trellis, alongside other domestic apparatus and soft furnishings, such as blankets, a clothes horse, and hankies.

 

About the Artist:

Alec Finlay (Scotland, 1966) is an internationally-recognised artist and poet whose work crosses over a range of media and forms. Much of Finlay’s work considers how we as a culture, or cultures, relate to landscape and ecology. Through permanent and temporary interventions, integrative web-based projects, and publications, Finlay weaves together generous experiential works, often collaborative, sometimes mapped directly onto the landscape, embedded socially or accessed online. Recently Finlay’s work has focussed on place-awareness and ecopoetics.

 

Tour dates in Dundee:

Monday 4 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Boomerang Community Centre, 10 Kemback St, Dundee DD4 6ET

 

Tuesday 5 November, 10:00am-4:00pm

Morrisons, 1 Afton Way, Dundee,DD4 8BR

 

Wednesday 6 November, 10:00am-4:00pm, please note the gallery will be closed to the public on this day.

Baldragon Academy, 69 Harestane Rd, Dundee DD3 0LF

 

Thursday 7 November, 11:00am-9:00pm

Wellgate Centre Main Entrance on Panmure Street

 

Access for visitors:

A maximum of 20 people can visit at one time

The doors are at the front left-hand side of the vehicle

An inbuilt manual ramp is available to aid access for wheelchair users* and pushchairs

Handrails are available at the doorway and by the short internal gradient at the entrance to the gallery (1:9)

The interior of the gallery is level

* Wheelchairs up to 120cm long and 70cm wide

 

Photography Kathryn Rattray

Rope Access Fan inspections Lane Cove Tunnel for Transfield Services. For more information visit www.rigcomaccess.com/ropeaccess/ogmp/it.html?RopeAccess

Rope Access Stadium Roof Repair and inspection work. For more info go to: www.rigcomaccess.com

Access to Aelia Onboard Shopping on Deck 5.

Openbare Bibliotheek Amsterdam

Annecy lake, France

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