Tuesday, 8 September 2015

A Head Of Steam 2: 'Weekend At The Asylum' Steampunk Festival 2015'




All Photos, 'Weekend At The Asylum' Steampunk Festival, Lincoln, August 2015


We’re already a week in to the new school term, and the day job is consequently claiming far more of my energy and attention again.  It’s also evident that the weather is just beginning to turn, that the daylight hours are diminishing noticeably, and that autumn will soon be upon us.  Actually, I always find this time of year enjoyably poignant.  There’s a sense of loss as another summer slips away, but also of renewed energy as August‘s blousy torpor is replaced with an urge to start taking care of business once more.  It always feels like one should get a bustle on and make use of what warmth and light remain before the year shuts down for winter.





There’s a certain thrill in those first, slightly chillier early mornings, and an increasingly mellow quality to the light on those sunny days that still remain interspersed amongst the ever-multiplying wet ones.  It was on a particularly fine one, right at the end of the holidays, that I found myself back in my quaint, old hometown of Lincoln recently.  I was there with with my good friend, Suzie, to sample the eccentric delights of the annual ‘Weekend At The Asylum’ Steampunk Festival.




The Steampunk phenomenon, (alternative subculture is, I guess, the best description), isn’t exactly new, so forgive me if you already know far more than I do.  However, despite occasionally infecting certain mainstream strands of Fashion, Cinema, Art & Design or Literature, it seems to have retained much of its status as a kind of parallel, slightly home-made, off-duty reality, peopled largely by cheerful eccentrics.  It is, traditionally, exactly the kind of thing at which the British are, occasionally, rather adept.




For reasons I don’t fully understand, Lincoln has emerged as a serious Steampunk hotspot, and the Festival, now in its seventh year, claims to be the largest event of its kind in the international calendar.  The city’s ancient historical quarter certainly does provide an appropriately atmospheric backdrop to the retro-fixated shenanigans of the steamers, and it felt like high time I found out what all the fuss was about.




There are numerous on-line sources, far more qualified than I to detail what Steampunk actually means.  In fact, like any other mature ‘scene’ of its kind, it appears to have mutated in number of different directions, and probably means various things to different people by now.  However, at its heart lies a deep love of Victorian and Edwardian aesthetics and a desire to reimagine a kind of Science Fiction, or even vaguely post-apocalyptic, future - had technological advance stalled around 1900 and Modernism never occurred.  Key progenitors might include Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Conan Doyle, Lewis Carroll’s ‘Wonderland’ and ‘Looking Glass’ dimensions, chroniclers of Imperialist derring-do, inventors and engineers of the early Industrial Age, and possibly, the archetypically British time-travels of ‘Doctor Who’.





The manifestation of this is that lots of ornate and interesting stuff gets designed and made, from jewelry through to working vehicles of various kinds, (with craftsmanship often at a considerable premium), arcane or humorous, rituals are performed, (competitive tea-drinking and biscuit-dunking, anyone?), but above all, lots and lots of dressing-up is pretty much compulsory.  I suppose it’s a branch of what, these days, gets called Cosplay, - one in which the attendees of a Fantasy convention have run riot through the D’Oyly Carte Opera Company’s Costume and Props. department, or the Science and Imperial War Museums.  It’s also worth noting that, if the Lincoln event is as representative as it claims, the average age of the participants appears to be nearer at least 40 than 20.  I find that as charming as it may seem slightly surprising.





First-hand observation, and a little further research, reveal that there is, at the more extreme fringes, a certain darkness to some of this.  In fact, the various costumes evident in Lincoln’s old streets ranged from relatively straight historical reconstructions, through rapidly assembled Weekenders’ gestures and cheerfully barmy confections, to the highly imaginative, (and often, lovingly assembled), the distinctly bondage-fixated, and the just plain sinister.  Nearly everyone wears goggles of some variety; masks are popular, and full-blown biomechanics not exactly rare.  Weaponry also abounds, (non-functionally, one assumes/hopes).  I’ve no doubt there’s a Steampunk-themed dungeon, full of really serious kit, somewhere, but all the best subcultures have a scary edge, - don’t they?





I’ll confess to a certain admiration for those prepared to go to the really decadent extremes.  There is, I suppose, a possible questionable element to all that Imperial fetishisation, and some of it could appear distinctly fascistic in the wrong hands.  An article on last year's festival in The Independent Newspaper reveals that at least some of the Steamers are well aware of that danger, and prefer to see themselves as free thinkers who reframe Victorian tropes within a more Liberal value system.  Let’s hope that’s true of the majority.




Indeed, the atmosphere appeared mostly to be one of picturesque, good-natured relaxation and generous, mutual appreciation.  Having already endured a slightly arduous plod through Bank Holiday traffic, and an extended quest for somewhere to sit down for lunch, we opted to spend the afternoon just strolling and passively watching the throng pass by.  There was no shortage of sights, although getting a clean, un-obscured photograph often proved difficult amongst the crowds.  As such, we only really scratched the surface of the weekend’s delights.  Had we opted to pay for the wristbands that would have accessed various events and venues, we would, I’m sure discovered a world of even more committed participation and stylised escapism.




I’d be tempted to dip my toe a little deeper on a return visit, and we even casually fantasised about attempting a little dressing up of our own. I’m far from an exhibitionist, but even I’ll concede you could have a lot of fun constructing some of the hardware accessories.  In fact, my surroundings did make me reflect that, once upon a time, attempts at a (very) mild extravagance of dress, was a small part of my Romantic image of myself as an Art student, (my Foundation year took place at Lincoln’s Art College).  In those days, that mostly just meant haunting jumble sales, or the town’s one or two Antique clothes shops in search of something recognisably non-High Street to wear.




It doesn’t feel like too many go in for that kind of thing so much these days and, if that’s the case, it’s a shame.  Surely, any self-respecting Art student could have a lot of fun wearing at least parts of their Festival costume all year round?  When exactly did things become so conformist, I wonder?  About the same time that every vaguely alternative style became just another off-the-peg option in mainstream outlets, rather than representing a creative project, I suppose.  Even what people now call ‘Vintage’ style feels like an industry, - we had to work for it, I tell you!




On reflection, perhaps it’s not so surprising that many of the Steampunks appear well into Middle Age.  Could it be a sign of my generation, (and some even older folks), enjoying one last opportunity to dress up, - with even more artificiality than they once did when being a Hippy, a Glam Rocker, a Punk or a New Romantic actually signified a form of alternative expression?  It was always about tribes, I guess, - but more vividly delineated tribes perhaps.  The Steampunks certainly seem to fit that bill.




Whatever the reasons, it delights me that such eccentricity can still exist in what often feels like an increasingly bland, monolithic culture.  Despite the promise of ever-expanding consumer choice, true divergence often feels like a rare commodity in plain view.  It's comforting to know that some weeds still grow through cracks in the pavement, and that, once a year, they come to full bloom in the town where I grew up.







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