Bringing back the boom
How community conservation can protect bittern/matuku-hūrepo and wetland habitats
How community conservation can protect bittern/matuku-hūrepo and wetland habitats
Thames Arts, Treasures and Textiles (TATAT) is a group of local artists who have come together to exhibit and sell their unique creations.
Starting on 19 October, the exhibition will be open for sales every Saturday morning, 9 am – 1 pm, in the Grahamstown Hall, in conjunction with the Saturday Thames Market.
Proud to be Local — brought to you by CFM — is our inspirational feature, highlighting home-grown Coromandel Peninsula folks doing wonderful things out in the world.
Kia ora. Coromind is back, shaking things up in the Hauraki-Coromandel! We celebrate art and its benefits every month, despite some who dare to say that the arts aren’t important in society and shouldn’t even be taught in schools. But we know better – they fear the revolutionary power of the arts.
Coromind’s rapid growth tells me we’re doing something right. Our team loves receiving your emails and submissions – they keep our community lively and dynamic.
I paint because it brings me happiness, fulfilment and allows me to share the messages I have for the world in the most authentic way possible. Also, because I don’t know how not to. When I haven’t painted for a while I feel like there’s a big storm cloud brewing behind me full of ideas, adding up and threatening to push me over.
How community conservation can protect bittern/matuku-hūrepo and wetland habitats
Thames Arts, Treasures and Textiles (TATAT) is a group of local artists who have come together to exhibit and sell their unique creations.
Starting on 19 October, the exhibition will be open for sales every Saturday morning, 9 am – 1 pm, in the Grahamstown Hall, in conjunction with the Saturday Thames Market.
Proud to be Local — brought to you by CFM — is our inspirational feature, highlighting home-grown Coromandel Peninsula folks doing wonderful things out in the world.
Kia ora. Coromind is back, shaking things up in the Hauraki-Coromandel! We celebrate art and its benefits every month, despite some who dare to say that the arts aren’t important in society and shouldn’t even be taught in schools. But we know better – they fear the revolutionary power of the arts.
Coromind’s rapid growth tells me we’re doing something right. Our team loves receiving your emails and submissions – they keep our community lively and dynamic.
I paint because it brings me happiness, fulfilment and allows me to share the messages I have for the world in the most authentic way possible. Also, because I don’t know how not to. When I haven’t painted for a while I feel like there’s a big storm cloud brewing behind me full of ideas, adding up and threatening to push me over.