Paradise Forum, Central Birmingham, October 2015 |
As mentioned in a
previous post, I recently made one of my regular trips over to Birmingham,
partly to take in Fiona Banner’s ‘Scroll Down And Keep Scrolling’ exhibition.
The other reason was to catch up with my recent co-exhibitor, Andrew Smith, for a bit of a chinwag.
That’s something
we’d been meaning to do shortly after our ‘Mental Mapping’ exhibition came down in June but, in the event, we’d both been plagued
by various ailments, aches, pains and other distractions over summer, meaning
it was long overdue. Although we’ve
hooked up on numerous occasions over the last 12 months, it occurred to me that
this was the first time we’d been able to just relax over a couple of beers,
with no need to take care of practical arrangements or remain conscious of
lurking deadlines. As it turned out, we
both spent time with Ms. Banner, before retiring to discuss our thoughts about
her work, in addition to a general catch-up and a bit of putting the world to
rights. Very enjoyable it was too.
Paradise Forum, Central Birmingham, October 2015 |
I’ve always
valued having contact with people who aren’t put off when conversation ventures
out into slightly deeper waters, and who can discuss Art, Literature, Cinema,
Music, etc. from a similar, (if not greater), knowledge base than my own. Andrew certainly fits into that category and,
hopefully, it won’t be the last time we can chew the fat in that way. It was encouraging to find that we’re both
starting to reach out tentatively towards new phases of our respective artwork,
so I’ll be interested to see what he’s been working on over the coming
months. I’ve already stated more than
once, the whole experience of collaborating on ‘Mental Mapping’ was a very positive one for me, not least our
jointly produced video ‘Orfeo’, so
who knows? – Maybe we’ll find an opportunity to pool our creative energies
again in the future. ‘Orfeo 2’, anyone? - be like that then!
As it turned out,
I probably didn’t venture more than half a mile from my car all day but, as the
sinking sun put on a particularly fiery late-afternoon light show, I did take a
small detour, returning via Birmingham’s soon-to-be redeveloped Paradise Circus
complex. This is probably one of the most
evocative bits of ‘failed’ Utopian Modernism in the country, and one that I’ve
returned to with fascination over the last few years.
Central Library Building, Paradise Circus, Central Birmingham, October 2015 |
I can’t expect everyone
to revel in the picturesque squalor of its latter years, as I do, and I’m sure
that, for many Brummies, it’s been a perceived blight on the local landscape
for some time. However, many still find
something genuinely audacious in the resolute Brutalist design of the original
project, and in the idealistic vision such developments represented, (at least
in part), in Post-War Britain. Despite
the grime and dereliction that overtook its immediate environs, and apparent
compromises over original build quality, the inverted ziggurat of John Madin’s Central Library building remains one of the most striking bits of high Modernist
architecture ever realised in Britain.
I’ve written
about all this before, both in connection with my own inner-city reveries, and
with John Grindrod’s enjoyable survey of the field, ‘Concretopia’ [1.]. I can’t pretend that I don’t feel my age
somewhat, as more and more of this supposedly discredited architecture is swept
away. That was the world I was born
into, after all, and the social and political assumptions of the age, however outdated,
still colour many of my own attitudes in one way or another [2.]. Of
course, I have to admit that there may also be more than a little dystopian
thrill seeking involved too. All that
self-indulgent, vicarious alienation can be highly enjoyable, at least until
one has to live with it practically, on a daily basis, (as I recently
discovered not long ago). Put even more baldly,
maybe I’m just a sucker for a good ruin.
Library Of Birmingham, October, 2015 |
Anyway, Birmingham has newer,
glossier theatres and libraries now, just a stone’s throw away, although I note
with weary resignation that the new library is already feeling the financial
pinch as the Government seeks to remove public funding from anything genuinely
worth nurturing. Younger generations, or
those drawn only to the city’s temples of retail commerce, may even feel that
such things are an irrelevance altogether, for all I know.
Central Library Building, Central Birmingham, October 2015 |
Either way, I had fully
expected to find demolition work in full swing in Paradise during this
visit. As it turns out, although the
extensive barricading and publicity material relating to future plans indicated
very imminent movement, it was still possible to walk through Paradise Forum,
and even a little way round the side of the complex, in search of a few very
last photographs of it in its complete state.
Even more intriguingly, I was
invited to contribute to an on-line petition opposing the demolition scheme, even
more recently. However, Wikipedia suggests that any such attempts were in vain, and I suspect that events will have moved
on apace the next time I’m over that way.
Paradise Forum, Central Birmingham, October 2015 |
[1.]: John Grindrod, 'Concretopia: A Journey Around The Rebuilding Of Post War Britain', Brecon, Old Street Publishing Ltd., 2013
[2.]: It feels like the more self-consciously future-facing the zeitgeist, the more readily and rapidly it becomes obsolete. Others, more perceptive than I, have explored this idea of a lost future in some depth; notably Mark Fisher in: ‘Ghosts Of My Life: Writings On Depression, Hauntology And Lost Futures’, Winchester Hants, Zero Books, 2014. Vestigial Modernists on the political Left, such as Fisher, suggest that we have replaced utopian futurism with a hypnotised sense of ‘no future’ at all.
[2.]: It feels like the more self-consciously future-facing the zeitgeist, the more readily and rapidly it becomes obsolete. Others, more perceptive than I, have explored this idea of a lost future in some depth; notably Mark Fisher in: ‘Ghosts Of My Life: Writings On Depression, Hauntology And Lost Futures’, Winchester Hants, Zero Books, 2014. Vestigial Modernists on the political Left, such as Fisher, suggest that we have replaced utopian futurism with a hypnotised sense of ‘no future’ at all.
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