Tag: Robin Hood Gardens

  • Snap happy for Photomonth – UK’s largest photography festival returns

    Snap happy for Photomonth – UK’s largest photography festival returns

    Thames Estuary. Photograph: Simon Fowler
    The Thames Estuary. Photograph: Simon Fowler. Part of After London at Cass Bank Gallery

    As an area famously teeming with artists East London has always been an eminently suitable location for Photomonth. In October the UK’s largest photography festival returns, with some 100 galleries and art spaces opening their doors for free exhibitions, workshops and talks covering a colossal range of topics, from the Battle of Cable Street to homelessness and the refugee crisis. Here is our – by no means exhaustive – guide to the festivities ahead.

    From Children of Vision series by Alina Kisina. Part of The Disinherited exhibition
    From Children of Vision series by Alina Kisina. Part of The Disinherited at The Print Space gallery

    The Disinherited

    Photomonth launches with The Disinherited, featuring specially commissioned work by three photographers. For her series Children of Vision, Alina Kisina took portraits of pupils at a special art school in Kiev for the blind and partially sighted to illustrate how creativity can transform lives. Heather McDonough’s Leave to Remain series is inspired by a period she spent volunteering in French refugee camps and her encounters not only with the people there but also with objects left lying spent and discarded. Big Red is Ed Thompson’s visual essay on homelessness, inspired by the story of a man who turned his back on London life in favour of a nomadic existence in his Big Red van.

    Until 17 October, The Print Space Gallery, 74 Kingsland Road, E2 8DL
    theprintspace.co.uk

    Photographer Karen Harvey, set to feature in Girl Town. Photograph: Karen Harvey
    Photographer Karen Harvey, set to feature in Girl Town at St Margaret’s House. Photograph: Karen Harvey

    Girl Town

    Celebrating the “culture of the female” in the 21st century, Girl Club is an exhibition anyone – professional or amateur – can submit work for, using the hashtag #girltownPM on Instagram. Talks, including one on photojournalist Jane Bown, as well as film screenings are also in the offing over the course of the month.

    6 October – 1 November, St Margaret’s House, 21 Old Ford Road, Bethnal Green, E2 9PL
    stmargaretshouse.org.uk

    The Battle of Cable Street. Photograph: Tower Hamlets History Library
    ‘They Shall Not Pass’: East Londoners at the Battle of Cable Street in October 1936. Photograph: Tower Hamlets History Library

    80th Anniversary of the Battle of Cable Street

    On 4 October 1936 East Londoners came together to stop Oswald Mosley and his fascist ‘Blackshirts’ from marching through Cable Street in Stepney, then a predominantly Jewish area. 80 years on and the Cable Street Group is to hold an exhibition of photographs of the Battle of Cable Street, alongside other memorabilia and events to remember this important moment in East End history.

    Until 18 October, Idea Store Watney Street, 260 Commercial Road, E1 2FB
    ideastore.co.uk

    An image from Dalston Carnival, which features in Dalston Street Show. Photograph: Tom Ferrie
    An image from Dalston Carnival, which features in Dalston Street Show. Photograph: Tom Ferrie

    Dalston Street Show

    Images of the many faces of Dalston – its people, streets and buildings – will adorn shop windows, restaurants, bars, cafés and Dalston venues this month. Featuring an array work by local photographers such as Dougie Wallace, the Dalston Street Show opens on 14 October in Dalston Square with an event that will see a giant inflatable screen display images from the show with a musical accompaniment from Band Off the Wall.

    14 October–14 November, Kingsland High Street, Dalston Lane, Dalston Square, Ashwin Street, Ridley Road, Bradbury Street, Gillett Square

    An image from After London. Photograph: David George
    Thames Estuary, from After London exhibition at Cass Bank Gallery. Photograph: David George

    After London

    Essex-based artist Simon Fowler has created an intimate portrait of the Thames Estuary in an exhibition that coincides with the publication of Estuary: Out from London to the Sea by East London writer Rachel Lichtenstein. Another strand of the exhibition is Estuary English by David George, whose own photographic exploration of the Thames Estuary focuses on the region’s gothic associations.

    Until 15 October, Cass Bank Gallery, 59-63 Whitechapel High Street, E1 7PF
    londonmet.ac.uk/thecass

    Best of the rest

    Territorial – 20 October–20 November, Bank Space Gallery, The Cass, 59-63 Whitechapel High Street
    Showcasing the work of six contemporary photographic practitioners whose work is concerned with concepts of human geography, identity and territory.

    Domestic Disorder – Until 5 November, Idea Store Canary Wharf
    Images by Sian Bonnell that challenge ideas of the ordered domestic life.

    Uncertain States – 4 November – 27 November, Mile End Arts Pavilion, Grove Road
    Fifty artists present a selection of contemporary and thought provoking photography in annual exhibition.

    The Transaction – Until 13 October, Canvas Café, 42 Hanbury Street
    Exhibition about people in India who work in public spaces. Artist Kathryn Geels tasked herself with one job: to get them to smile for the camera.

    Lived Brutalism: Portraits at Robin Hood Gardens – 3 October–21 October, St Matthias Community Centre, 113 Poplar High Street
    Photographs recording the lives of residents at Robin Hood Gardens the ‘streets in the sky’ development currently facing demolition.

  • Elite architects rally round to save Robin Hood Gardens

    Robin Hood Gardens 620
    Robin Hood Gardens

    Britain’s architectural elite are going head-to-head with Tower Hamlets Council over the planned demolition of a Brutalist-era housing estate.

    The 213-apartment Robin Hood Gardens is set to be set to be razed to the ground to make room for a £500 million redevelopment.

    The dilapidated site in Poplar has a ‘stigma’ attached to it according to some residents.

    But high-profile members of the architectural community, led by Lord Richard Rogers and the Twentieth Century Society, have launched a last-ditch effort to stop the redevelopment which will see the end of Robin Hood Gardens.

    Architects including Robert Venturi, Toyo Ito and Zaha Hadid have rallied round in support of the campaign. Completed in 1972, Robin Hood Gardens was designed around the concept of ‘streets in the sky’ by controversial New Brutalism pioneers Alison and Peter Smithson.

    Centre Pompidou architect Lord Rogers has written to 300 members of the design world asking them to lobby heritage minister Tracey Crouch to give the site listed status, a bid English Heritage rejected in 2009.

    Rogers wrote: “In my opinion, it is the most important social housing development from the post-war era in Britain.

    “Two sculptural slabs of affordable housing create a calm and stress-free place amidst the ongoing modernisation of the London cityscape.”

    Lord Rogers told BBC’s Today programme that he would “absolutely” live on Robin Hood Gardens himself, and has blamed the council for the neglecting the building.

    In 2009, the site was given immunity from heritage listing for five years, a decision the Twentieth Century Society has called “unsound” in a recent report.

    This immunity expired this year, and Tower Hamlets Council has approved demolition and a £500 million redevelopment by Swan Housing Association, which promises 1,575 homes, and a new mosque and community centre.

    The vast concrete blocks have been criticised for a range of flaws in design and maintenance alike.

    Residents have complained of awkward layouts, asbestos and leaky ceilings.

    But Rogers and some residents insist that neglect by council is at fault for the poor upkeep of Robin Hood Gardens.

    Resident Ruman Chowdury, 42, told the Telegraph: “The council just doesn’t maintain the building. The whole area is neglected.”

    The council has said its consultation concluded 80 per cent support for the redevelopment.

    A council spokesperson said: “Redevelopment was the overwhelming preference of the local community.”