HEIA TAS | Community organisation
HEIA TAS
Reviews
to load big map
22.01.2022 STUDENTS CELEBRATE DAIRY CREATIONS After a fun and flavoursome three months, students from Clarence High School have won $250 for their school and been chosen to have their dairy creation featured in Great Ocean Road’s 2021 calendar. The team from Clarence High School, along with more than 1,030 students from 70 different schools spent the semester whipping up a storm in the kitchen, thanks to the Great Ocean Road Careers made here - Cheese Your Own Creation programme. ... Jack and Dylan created a Decadent White chocolate cheesecake with a citrus twist! See more
22.01.2022 We are so excited! Who's joining us?
20.01.2022 How great is this? A free downloadable booklet of Indigenous plants! Connect with native plants and understand the medicinal, nutritional and technological ...use of plants (such as traps, nets and weapons) developed over many, many millennia by Australia’s First Peoples. Also includes handy list of resource links providing detailed information on how to make garden beds, plant groupings and tips on choosing plants, where to buy them and how to keep your garden healthy. Download the book here: https://bit.ly/3ewfgjV Credit: Indigenous Plant Use By Zena Cumpston Buy your bush foods, bush teas and #kakaduplum here: https://kakaduplumco.com/collections/all-food-and-spices See more
17.01.2022 Hello friends . We've got another free home composting workshop coming up on March 24th, Kingston! . These workshops are one hour of power where composting is ...demystified, questions are answered and people are empowered to have a crack at eliminating organic waste from their homes! . You can book over here: https://goodlifepermaculture.com.au//free-home-composting/ See more
15.01.2022 Register now...
10.01.2022 Last chance to register!
05.01.2022 NOW IN STOCK! Members and bulk-buyers purchase before 11 December to receive the special price https://bit.ly/368uF6c
04.01.2022 Magnificent how this couple transformed depleted farmland into a regenerative farm . They show us how agriculture, biodiversity and natural beauty can go hand-in-hand. Thanks for the video BrightVibes!
02.01.2022 NEW! Autumn E-book now LIVE on our site. Discover #whatsinseasn with these easy and delicious recipes. We're talking salads , cakes and bakes, pasta , and m...ore! // LINK below. Tag @eatwelltasmania in your cooking posts, share your recipes and use #whatsinseason to celebrate our delicious Tasmanian produce. LINK TO E-BOOK: https://www.eatwelltas.org.au//the-whats-in-season-campai/ #Autumn #recipes #whatsinseason #dinnerideas #tasmanianproduce
02.01.2022 Celebrating Sheila Hicks Hicks’s practice isn’t just about creating objects and installations, but about living a life centered around making. She’s unyieldin...g in her ethicsenduring art and meaningful experiences derive from a conscientious, curious, and ongoing engagement with the material world. Hicks likes to surround herself with makers who are interested in handmade things orin culture. For her, the word connotes a sensibility, regardless of education level, that values awareness and honesty. Hicks began her career as a painterand you can see that in her practice. She translates elements of abstraction, color theory, and painterly gesture into thread, where they perhaps originated. Her experimentations with textiles began while she was studying as an undergraduate at Yale under Josef Albers in the mid-1950s. The famed instructor and Bauhaus member taught her about lettering, basic design, structural organization, and color. And when he saw her working with thread, Albers invited Hicks to his home to meet his wife, the prominent artist and textile master Anni. After she’d left the Albers home and was standing by a bus stop Hicks realized that she could unite Anni’s emphasis on structure with Josef’s principles on color, as she developed her own visual language. After finishing her BFA at Yale she went to South America on a Fulbright scholarship. After investigating ancient Andean weaving techniques in Chile, she traveled around the continent, settled in Mexico for a few years and then moved to Paris.
02.01.2022 Alphonse Berge (The Great Drapo), fast dress designer, "You Asked for It", late 1950s Copy: https://youtu.be/ATv_on3XEYQ Source: https://archive.org/details/you_asked_for_it The "Life" Magazine, 19. Aug. 1940: https://books.google.de/books
Related searches
- Young Food Hall
Community group Community organisation
92 Main Street 2594 Young, NSW, Australia
224 likes
- Melbourne Arts Students Society
Non-profit organisation Community organisation College & University Social club
G06 Arts West 3052 Parkville, VIC, Australia
12221 likes