Tag: Rachael Getzels

  • Creating a safe space with Arch 76

    Bethnal Green
    A painting by one of the participants in the Arch 76 project in Bethnal Green. Photograph by Eleonore de Bonneval

    Down a back road in Bethnal Green, tucked under the smog-stained railway bridge, a grey dingy arch has come to life with colour. Artwork explodes on the walls; knitted blankets, golden prophecy paintings, and jewellery made from old car tyres are crammed into every corner. Inside, 12 women, old and young, talk over each other to show off their art and tell their stories.

    “When I first came here I was so dirty, you could stick me to the walls,” says Tracy, 41. “It saved my life this place. It gave me hope, it gave me love and it gave me friendship. I’d never done anything like this before.” Arch 76 is a charity-based art project that was set up two years ago by Wendy Rolt. The idea was to create a safe space for vulnerable women to gather; away from men; sheltered from the streets where many of them have lived, and far from the drugs and abuse that had made them lose hope.

    In the whitewashed brick room, through a combination of artwork and group chats, many of the women who are battling addiction or mental illness, have found a new focus in painting. Tracy has become deeply entrenched in the religious aspect of the group. Though women from all faiths are welcome, she draws on the short bible passages they read each time they meet, depicting, with massive swirls of gold paint what she’s understood. She points at one of her pictures hung on the wall. “In this story, this person was murdered by his half-brother. A lot of those stories, you see, we can relate to.”

    The art project has become a community staple in Bethnal Green. Although the location is kept quiet for the security of the women, local cafés and cinemas have provided breakfasts and organised film outings. A gallery in Brick Lane helped them put on an exhibition of their work, with the money from sales going straight into their pockets. “It was the first time some of them had made any money themselves,” says Rolt. “ – at least legally.”

    Most of the women who attend come regularly, and they see the group as family – for some it’s the only one they’ve ever had. And for others, it’s the only time they’ve had the chance to have their voice heard, either through group chats or by using the myriad of supplies that burst out of drawers and cabinets. “I don’t think that art is the answer,” says Rolt, who volunteered at a rehab centre before starting the charity. “But it’s a way of being creative, and it really encourages them. Some are more shy, and the group meetings bring out more in them.”

    She adds: “We once read a story about fasting. And it brought out a lot of the women saying they fast – but not out of choice. Until then they’d been too scared to tell people they had run out of food money.” After that, many of the group members brought in extra food to share when they met twice a week.

    “I know we can’t do everything, and that can be hard,” says Rolt. “We have to be really honest. We can’t do their housing, we can’t do their benefits, but we can be there for each other through all of that. It’s what friends are for. We have a lot of birthday parties here. Some of the women have never even had a cake.”

    www.arch76.co.uk

  • Homing is where the heart is

    Pigeon maestro Albert Stratton
    Pigeon maestro Albert Stratton. Photograph: Rachael Getzels


    Albert Stratton has 80 pigeons, 56 medals, and two bird sheds. His garden isn’t much bigger than a bus shelter but over the years he’s bred more than 200 of London’s favourite pests.

    Once neighbours complained and environmental health was called round – they photographed every inch of his roof and concluded that there weren’t an unsafe number of droppings. “No more than you’d expect for underneath the railway arches anyway,” chips in his wife.

    Albert, who is now 84, was once an avid pigeon racer known in clubs up and down London for his sharp eye for a good bird. He lives in the same small, dark-brick house in a cul-de-sac behind the Bethnal Green train lines where he resided during his glory days of playing the sport. “Back then I was a force to be reckoned with!” he exclaims. “All them plaques up there – we boshed them! Cups and everything! We really gave them a run for their money.”

    He waves towards his windowsill which is crammed with shiny dove effigies and bird busts. Instead of family photos there’s a keepsake box with the homing pigeons’ ankle rings. When I ask about his children, Albert pauses for a second. “Kids? Oh yeah. I’ve got one pest at university.” The humour passes him right by.

    But it’s not that funny anymore. Pigeon racing is a dying sport, and with it, go his friends. “When I started in 1983, there were over 20 of us at the club house. Now there’re only three.” He breathes deeply into the muggy air, made thicker still by the lingering whiff of bird feed and sawdust and lets out a sigh. “It’s just Ixy, Smivvy and me… We just had one die. That’s the trouble.”

    During the 1800s, pigeon racing was a flourishing sport. Albert reckons the club-house near Spitalfields Market that Charles Dickens wrote about is the same one he was a member of. “It used to be huge,” he explains. “The Queen is the patron. Her grandfather had lofts out in Sandringham. Mike Tyson does it too you know.” Indeed, the testosterone laced, rough-talking boxer who once bit the ear off an opponent is a devoted ‘pigeon fancier’ – and he’s a hero among racers.

    Albert Stratton is a self-made champion. He’s won scores of titles, but he didn’t learn it from a trainer or his family. “As a kid I found a pigeon that got lost in the flats where we lived. No meat on him at all, he’d flown himself out. My dad ain’t a big one for animals but he’d do nothing to hurt ‘em. Built a little box for him, fed it up, got it right again. But he said it belonged to someone else so we let it go but it never went. It stayed. Just kept coming back, right through my bedroom window, for about two years. That’s what intrigued me.”

    Two years ago Albert had a stroke. He’s lost the use of one leg and gets around with a walking stick. He has one placed below the stairs and one at the back door next to the lofts. “I spend more time with the pigeons now. It gives me something to do.” As he struggles to step down from the loft step, he lets out a frustrated sigh. Under his breath he mutters, “I tell you, what you don’t want is a stroke. It’s completely debilitating.”

    But the pride he takes in his birds hasn’t waned with his strength. “They’re the cleanest animals on the planet!” he proclaims. Ken Livingstone called them ‘flying rats’ and feral birds are well-known carriers of disease. But not kept pigeons. Albert bathes them every other day in a small plastic tray with bath salts – and they love it. The best racing birds fetch thousands. He once paid £500 for a star breed, but he can’t tell his wife.

    Homing pigeons can fly 50mph, and the longest races are 600 miles – up to the tip of Scotland. You do lose birds now and then; hawks are ravaging the skies. Let free by ‘do-gooders’ tuts Albert. Safe in their coops, his well-kept prize pets babble away.

    Albert once lost a five-time winner – he says it was heartbreaking. “But when you’re standing in your garden and a pigeon you expected at half past arrives on the hour, it really makes your heart pound. You think to yourself, woweee, I’ve really got a good one here.” He whistles the ‘woweee’ and you can feel his pride. Albert is an old man now, but he physically straightens up, puffs up his chest and coos with glee. His pigeons do the same.