Showing posts with label June Ross. Show all posts
Showing posts with label June Ross. Show all posts

Friday, November 19, 2010

Pictures from an Exhibition


Exhibition Overview:


ONE BROWN BOX:
a storybook exhibition
for children


by Bronwyn Lloyd and Karl Chitham

Objectspace: Nov 6-Dec 18, 2010
[photograph: Matt Blomeley]



The Opening
(Saturday, 6th November):


Bronwyn & Thérèse confer
[photograph: June Ross]

Gingerbread Men
[photograph: Karl Chitham]

Thérèse reads from Not a Box
[photograph: June Ross]

Examining the Books
[photograph: June Ross]




The Cabinet of Curiosities:


Cabinet of Curiosities
[photograph: Matt Blomeley]

The Cabinet
[photograph: June Ross]

Giant's Harp (Karl Chitham)
Face Ache brooches (Warwick Freeman)
[photograph: Karl Chitham]




The Gingerbread House:


The House
[photograph: June Ross]

House & Child
[photograph: June Ross]

Kids in the House
[photograph: June Ross]




The I Spy Cabinet:


I Spy
[photograph: Matt Blomeley]

The Cart (Karl Chitham)
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]

I Spy
[photograph: June Ross]

The Clues (Bronwyn Lloyd)
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]

Bronwyn & Jack guessing clues
[photograph: Karl Chitham]




The 12 Dancing Princesses:


Underground Kingdom & Princesses
[photograph: June Ross]

The Dancing Princesses (Emma Smith)
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]

King's Head (Karl Chitham)
[photograph: Matt Blomeley]

The King's Path (Karl Chitham)
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]

Underground & Overhead
[photograph: June Ross]




A Short History of Fairytales:


Book Display
[photograph: Matt Blomeley]

A Short History of Fairytales
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]

Bay 1: Perrault & His Precursors
[photograph: June Ross]

Bay 2: Classic Collections: Grimm & Andersen
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]

Bay 3: Collectors & Illustrators
[photograph: June Ross]

Bay 4: Theorists & Revisionists
[photograph: June Ross]

Book Display (2)
[photograph: Bronwyn Lloyd]




The Catalogue:


Front Cover

Back Cover

Halftitle

Titlepage




The Museum of True History:


MOTH: New Exhibits
[photograph: Matt Blomeley]

Sunday, April 22, 2007

The Dangers of Depleted Uranium



My mother, Dr. June Ross, writes in to say:

On Sunday, 15th April, on TV1 at 10.00 am, I saw a German documentary called The Doctor, the Depleted Uranium and the Dying Children, made in 2004. It features Dr Siegwart-Horst Gunther and Canadian Tedd Weyman of the Uranium Medical Research Center, who travelled to Iraq to assess uranium contamination; and also some British veterans, who describe their exposure to depleted uranium and the resultant congenital abnormalities in their children.

I had no idea until seeing this how devastating this substance is. It causes the dust and water of the areas where it has been used, and of course any battle debris like damaged tanks, to be highly radioactive. It is shocking to see children playing, and life going on in total ignorance of the dangers, in these areas, with no attempt made to clear it up. The effects are just as bad as Chernobyl, if not worse, but no-one is being warned of any danger.

The military of Western countries are very keen to keep using these weapons because they are so effective, and also provide a use for some of the by-products of nuclear power generation. They deny that the stuff is radioactive or causes problems, shutting their eyes to the overwhelming truth and taking refuge behind carefully designed lying ‘investigations’ which purport to prove that its use is safe. The shells are very heavy and cut through a tank like paper and penetrate through many storeys of reinforced buildings, destroying them completely – no wonder the military will not give them up.

I saw many pictures of horrendously malformed babies, such as are never seen under normal circumstances but are distressingly common in Iraq. Similar effects are found in Kosovo, where NATO used depleted uranium shells. The British veterans were in damaged health themselves, as well as having the effects show up in their children. The denial on the part of governments and military shocked me most of all.




I guess, to me, the point of blogging (or one of the points, at any rate) is that one can use this easy access to the world wide web to promote awareness of such grotesque abuses. Western governments must be aware that this is a scandal on the scale, potentially, of Agent Orange in Vietnam. Once again, it isn't just foreign children who are being affected, but their own service personnel. One can almost hear the rumble of distant lawsuits in the air.

The real damage will have been done by then, though. It appears that this genetic damage can stay in affected populations for generations. "Gulf War Syndrome" (so-called) appears to have been caused by it also. Anyway, check it out for yourselves - this might be a good starting-place - and whatever you do, don't go poking round any recent battlefields in Iraq or Yugoslavia. Landmines are not the only perils we've left behind.