We are looking for contacts, local community groups, interested individuals, routes into funding, places to exhibit, support, volunteers, publicity and people to network with in order to develop our projects.
Please contact us by emailing milesanddacombe@virginmedia.com.

Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Friday, 5 December 2014

Forward Footing - Test Walk 3 - Urban Desborough Walk



We found Desborough an intriguing place, so much so that we decided to take a second walk there. We were joined by one walker, Bob, who had heard about our walks from the first group we walked with but he hadn't been with us on Walk 1 and it was great to have a local walker with us, who proved to be a mine of information. Our other walkers came from Kettering, Corby and Northampton. We met at the Revive Cafe, a formerly derelict building which now runs as an excellent community cafe.


Our first intervention took place outside Holy Trinity Church which was originally built for a Methodist congregation. Holy Trinity was purchased and re-opened as a Catholic church in 1972. The church seats approximately 120 people. We were fascinated by the engraved memorial bricks and assume that they were part of the fund raising drive for the original construction. This practice continues to this day in many types of public building project. We were also struck by how quickly names can erode and disappear.


Plaque - Any flat, thin piece of metal, clay, ivory, or the like, used for ornament, or for painting pictures upon, as a slab, plate, dish, or the like, hung upon a wall; also, a smaller decoration worn on the person, as a brooch.

 - A piece of flat metal with a writing on it, attached to a building to remind people of a person or an event.


The object of this intervention was to create a personal commemorative statement.

We discussed where the intervention should be installed and whether it should be left or removed.


After trying out a variety of possible locations, Pam suggested that we should install the intervention behind the wall, out of view from the road and only to be seen by people leaving the church door. This seemed an excellent solution and created an intervention that was both public and private.


We  will be uploading a gallery of all the interventions created at a later stage of the project.


Intervention 2 - "Record"

We wanted this walk to be one in which people were encouraged to really engage with the details of the areas they were walking through as we had noticed that the town had an unusual approach to planning its public and domestic spaces. There was evidence of a rural past, an industrial past, a railway,  The Cooperative Society had had a huge role in the development of the town and a visit to Desborough Heritage Centre gives an indication of the many changes that have taken place.


Record - Any instance of a physical medium on which information was put for the purpose of preserving it and making it available for future reference.


Invervention 3 - "Monument"

During our scoping walk we followed our feet into a garden which had furniture and scrap metal stored in various states of renovation and some "come and see me" out-buildings. The owner came out to greet us and told us that the buildings had once been part of a dairy. During our first scoping walk we had spotted an inspirational location, opposite a factory, and thought this would be an ideal site for a sculptural intervention. We told him what we were planning and he very kindly donated elements for our Monument Intervention. 

Whilst creating this intervention with the group, we formed such an unusual site that a local Police Officer stopped to enquire whether there had been an incident and if we required assistance!

Monument - A structure built for commemorative or symbolic reasons, or as a memorial; a commemoration.
-  An important site owned by the community as a whole.
-  An exceptional or proud achievement.


Intervention 4 "Gallery"

Gallery - A building, an institution, or a room for the exhibition of artistic work.
-  A collection; an assortment.

During a walk through an urban area that is in the process of change and decay it is easy to close our eyes and walk past without wondering or observing, we tend to block out what offends our eyes. Our final intervention was created to counteract this and draw attention to an assortment of the features of Desborough...


- before a very welcome stop in Lucy's Tea Rooms after so much exhausting creativity!


Lucy's Tea Rooms offer the now famous Desborough Doorstop sandwich - just the thing after a walk!

Sunday, 28 November 2010

New commissions and a little Coalville history

Carole and I have both got ourselves new commissions!

I will be working on my Myth Maps project at Snibston Colliery in Coalville.  Carole will be working on a project for Leicestershire Museums, which she has called The Held in the Hand Hoard.  I'll let her tell you more about that herself.

I am particularly pleased with my Myth Maps project as it draws together a number of things I have been thinking about, things I have been blogging about here and it links with this project.

Leicester & Swannington rail ticket
A little history...

The colliery at Coalville, as I blogged before (see Preservation and Persistence), includes the wonderful historic railway track.  A line was put down by George and Robert Stephenson for the Leicester to Swannington Railway (L&S), one of the first of England's railways, opened in 1832 to bring coal from pits in west Leicestershire (Whitwick, Ibstock and Bagworth) to Leicester.

The Leicester & Swannington Rail Line
Whitwick Colliery, 1926
George Stephenson was known as the "father of railways", having built the first public railway using steam locomotion (the Stockton and Darlington Railway).  His son, Robert,  worked with his father and developed the famous "Rocket".  Robert was the engineer for the Swannington line and George opened the Snibston colliery the following year.

Midland Railway Station in Coalville, 1889
Sidings at Bardon Hill quarry
So the history of Snibston colliery and the railways are intertwined.  It was the success of the railways to speed up the transportation of coal that enabled the coal industry from west Leicestershire to thrive, which enabled the opening of the pit at Snibston.

Coalville East Station
Thanks to the Coalville Heritage Society website for these pictures.  Also, they have a wonderful sound archive of Coalville dialects, called Covill Tork - click on the link if you want to find out what the following mean (and make sure you have your speakers on!):

Woreeawreet?
Ayoopmissusenthemassteeratom?

Covill Tork 

Monday, 26 July 2010

myth strata

More on Mythogeography...

Having thought about maps as visual representations showing us things that we cannot see, revealing connections and networks, mythogeography introduces the idea that each place is also an interweaving of myths, stories and histories, a network of meanings that cannot be seen but become part of the fabric of the place...


(Public art can be a way of making the meaning of a place visible.)

The threads that link a place to another place (or person connected to that place) are also part of this interweaving, overlaying of networks forming new nexus points, connecting stories, themes, imaginative responses...

These connections all exist in the imagination.  If made physical they might look like rock strata - building up layer upon layer over time to produce a rich fabric of meanings, compacted together to create the place that we now inhabit.


- oh!  and there's another word I must blog about!  I came across something the other day about the word "inhabit", the physical occupation of a space with one's body... I must look that up again, another blog post coming soon!