Tag: Tara Joshi

  • Gavin Turk gives cautious welcome to plans for dedicated ‘artist zones’

    Gavin Turk gives cautious welcome to plans for dedicated ‘artist zones’

    Artist Gavin Turk at Hackney WickED. Photograph: Anna Maloney
    Artist Gavin Turk at Hackney WickED. Photograph: Anna Maloney

    Plans to ringfence dedicated zones to offer protection from developers and rising rents have been given a cautious welcome by Hackney Wick artist Gavin Turk.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan’s culture chief Justine Simons is working on proposals to stem the numbers of creatives being priced out of the city through the creation of a “creative enterprise zone”.

    But Turk, who is considered one of the Young British Artists whose work gained notoriety at the Sensation exhibition at the Royal Academy of Art in the mid 1990s, told the London Citizen that there were pros and cons to such schemes.

    He said Simon’s proposals were “all good” but that they “might start to create an unfortunate situation where you say one artist is worth keeping and another isn’t”.

    Turk added: “There is culturally a problem in this country where the arts are seen as a Sunday activity, and accordingly artists are an underclass who aren’t very well paid.”

    He also warned there could be “problems with the idea of government legitimation of art”.

    He said: “When I was doing a residency in Paris back in the late 1980s, the government there were keen to protect artists in certain areas – so in the Bastille you had artists running away from the government’s patronising [of them] because they felt it undermined the creativity of their practice.

    “There’s a massive contradiction there, and it’s a very difficult thing to approach.”

    But the 48-year-old artist praised Ms Simons for taking steps to stop artists being priced out of London.

    “UK culture is quite bad at seeing and respecting art, but the country actually does quite well by its creative cultural production: design, art, advertising, film and music,” he said.

    “So it’s good that she [Simons] has made a call and said ‘let’s go appreciate these artists and make an investment in them’.”

    Turk’s current exhibition at Hackney Wick’s Béton Brut Gallery tackles the subject of gentrification.

    “It’s a story that’s told over and over: artists go to cheap places, they create an energy, and people start to be drawn to these areas, and then property developers see that attraction and excitement and start coming in to build flats,” Turk said.

    “It’s funny, because in a way artists are actually part of the gentrification process. There’s actually an economic value to their cultural capital – artists are financially valuable.

    “Developers should almost be paying them, but how do you do something like that legislatively? Maybe there could be studio spaces on the bottom floor of these expensive flats? But then, I’m not sure artists would be interested.”

    Professor Simon Robertshaw from the University of East London is among those who have given their backing to the idea of protected areas for artists.

    He said: “The way in which London actually supports its artists isn’t great. I think we’ve got to start having protected zones for artists’ rents.

    “My staff who are artists are now moving out of London to Margate or Folkestone or Hastings because that’s what they can afford.”

  • Exhibition reveals rich cultural history of Stamford Hill’s Jewish community

    Exhibition reveals rich cultural history of Stamford Hill’s Jewish community

    Sharing his story: Malcolm Shears. Photograph: Hackney Museum
    Sharing his story: Malcolm Shears. Photograph: Hackney Museum

    A new exhibition charting a crucial period in the history of Stamford Hill’s Jewish community is opening at Hackney Museum this month.

    Sharing Our Stories: Jewish Stamford Hill, 1930s–1950s focuses on the memories of seven members of the Jewish community through film, photography and written stories.

    Topics covered will include migration, first impressions of London and some surprising insights into what everyday life was like in Stamford Hill more than 80 years ago.

    “Things that are now associated with Jewish Stamford Hill were quite unusual back then”, said Niti Acharya, manager at Hackney Museum, speaking to the Hackney Citizen.

    “One of our interviewees told us about how, in the time after the war, it was still considered unusual if you heard someone speaking Yiddish in the area.”

    Tzvi Rabin also provides material for the exhibition. Photograph: Hackney Museum
    Tzvi Rabin also provides material for the exhibition. Photograph: Hackney Museum

    Now home to Europe’s largest concentration of the highly orthodox Haredi Jews, Stamford Hill has changed markedly in the years since.

    “There were different reasons for the community originally settling in the areas”, explained Acharya.

    “Back in the 1930s, Stamford Hill was this leafy suburb away from the hustle and bustle of the East End, where a lot of the Jewish community lived. It was almost like moving to the countryside.

    “But there was also a second group who were already based around Dalston and Hackney, and so Stamford Hill was just the logical progression. There were good transport links and it was just a nice area.”

    In stark contrast with the Stamford Hill of 2016, Acharya explained that cheap property prices and lots of available houses were also a big factor in attracting families to the area.

    “After the war a lot of people were leaving Hackney. East Enders were decamping to have a better way of life and there had been a lot of damage to the area during the war – so it was a lot easier to buy in Hackney then.”

    The reasons for the consolidation of Stamford Hill’s very traditional Haredi community have much to with one man: Rabbi Solomon Schonfeld.

    The British rabbi played an instrumental role in kindertransport (the transportation of refugee Jewish children from Nazi Germany to Great Britain), and was head of the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations, an organisation founded in 1926 that aimed to protect Hasidic Judaism.

    “Rabbi Schonfeld was keen on harnessing communal relations and banding together to make Jews fleeing persecution feel welcome”, said Ms Acharya.

    Kindertransport: Children of Polish Jews from the region between Germany and Poland on their arrival in London in February 1939. Photograph: German Federal Archive via Wikimedia Commons
    Kindertransport: Children of Polish Jews from the region between Germany and Poland on their arrival in London in February 1939. Photograph: German Federal Archive via Wikimedia Commons

    One of the seven interviewees was initially brought over to London via kindertransport, and she has recounted her journey to the UK as part of the exhibition.

    Young people from Teen Action, the Hasidic Orthodox community group in Stamford Hill researched, developed and designed the display with the help of Hackney Museum.

    “We’ve been working with Teen Action for a few years, and we were keen to work on this with them”, said Ms Acharya.

    “We aim to help groups explore Hackney’s rich cultural history, and this has been particularly interesting because it’s given the younger generation of the Stamford Hill Jewish community the opportunity to engage with their history.”

    Sharing Our Stories: Jewish Stamford Hill, 1930s–1950s is at Hackney Museum from 13 September –9 January.

  • Floating Cinema comes to Hackney Wick flyover this weekend

    Floating Cinema comes to Hackney Wick flyover this weekend

    Coming soon to a flyover near you: The Floating Cinema. Photograph Floating Cinema
    Coming soon to a flyover near you: Floating Cinema. Photograph: Up Projects

    This weekend (19 – 21 August) will see a Floating Cinema moor underneath the A12 flyover in Hackney Wick.

    The award-winning structure, designed by Duggan Morris Architects, will play host to a three-day festival of open-air film screenings, workshops and talks, all under the theme of ‘World Cities’, considering London’s place in the world.

    Tickets are booking up fast for a variety of documentaries, films, talks and a guided walk through Hackney led by Kit Caless of Hackney-based publisher Influx Press.

    Available screenings include the “documentary meets participatory opera” Public House, about how a pub in Peckham was saved from the hands of property developers and became the first Asset of Community value, and Half Way, a film about a family in Epping forced into homelessness.

    Photograph: Nick Pomeroy
    Daisy May Hudson in documentary Half Way. Photograph: Nick Pomeroy

    The weekend festival will also see DJs, free popcorn from Propercorn, craft beers from local Five Points Brewing Company as well as a series of drop-in events over the course of the weekend.

    For further information on tickets and events, see: http://floatingcinema.info/events/2016/world-cities

  • East London food enterprise commended in ‘New Radicals’ list

    East London food enterprise commended in ‘New Radicals’ list

    A box of DayOld's baked goods. Photograph: DayOld
    A box of DayOld’s baked goods. Photograph: DayOld

    An East London enterprise is helping to tackle the endemic problem of food waste and child hunger in the capital, while serving up high-end baked goods. Founded last year, sustainable food initiative DayOld is London’s first surplus food box scheme.

    One of its co-founders, Abi Ramanan, was recently named one of 2016’s ‘New Radicals’. The list, compiled by charity Nesta in partnership with the Observer, highlights the 50 most radical-thinking, socially-conscious innovators in the UK.

    Funded by the Bromley-by-Bow Beyond Business scheme, DayOld aims to stop waste from artisan bakeries. It does so by collecting leftover pastries and goods donated by the bakeries, and repurposing them, selling them the next day via office pop-ups, treat boxes and event catering.

    Speaking to the Hackney Citizen, Ms Ramanan explained: “I was working for the NGO Sustain, looking at food poverty in London and how to lift people out of it. Even as someone with an understanding of current affairs, I was shocked by the level of food poverty in London, especially amongst children.”

    Ms Ramanan met one of DayOld’s co-founders at a friend’s birthday party, and they got talking about food poverty in the capital before deciding to help tackle the issue. They felt that there was a gap in the market for an enterprise that worked with high-end surplus goods, especially one that turned those goods over onto a secondary market rather than merely redistributing them.

    Bakeries are one of the most wasteful types of food supplier in the UK, with an estimated 24 million bread slices left over each day. The DayOld team aims to deal with this problem by collecting everything from loaves of high-quality bread to brownies and cinnamon rolls, and reselling them the next day at a discount price.

    Profits from the enterprise are then donated to charities that work to address the rising levels of food poverty and child hunger amongst low-income families in East London.

    Boxes of pastries

    DayOld’s main beneficiary is currently the Magic Breakfast programme, a nationwide scheme providing free breakfasts and nutrition advice to schools where 35 per cent of children or more are eligible for free school meals. The programme, founded in Tower Hamlets in response to critical levels of child hunger in local schools, operates in 59 schools across its three target boroughs (six in Hackney, 25 in Newham and 28 in Tower Hamlets).

    Ramanan says DayOld’s eventual aim is to raise enough money to help fund East London holiday hunger schemes, providing food for low-income families who receive free school meals during term-time. “Problems like holiday hunger keep children trapped in poverty”, says Ms Ramanan, who is quick to point out that food poverty is largely down to general poverty, which itself has to be dealt with. “It seems especially important in places like Tower Hamlets where you’ve got such affluence in Canary Wharf and such poverty elsewhere.”

    DayOld is not the only food-based social enterprise with which Ms Ramanan is involved. She has also been commended by New Radicals for her company Papi’s Pickles, which provides fresh South Indian and Sri Lankan food for events, pop-ups and street food markets and employs women who have fled the conflict in Sri Lanka.

    “It’s been an amazing opportunity [to be featured in the ‘New Radicals’ list]”, said Ms Ramanan, “I’m really honoured, and feel as though I haven’t looked back since I started working in this industry.”

  • Rio Cinema set to host the London Feminist Film Festival in August

    Rio Cinema set to host the London Feminist Film Festival in August

    A still from Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model
    A still from Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model

    The organisers of this year’s London Feminist Film Festival (LFFF) aim to provide a space for discussion, organisation and celebration.

    The fourth edition of the festival is opening with a 25th anniversary screening of Pratibha Parmar’s A Place of Rage. Parmar’s award-winning documentary celebrates African American women within the context of the civil rights, black power and feminist movements, all of which the organisers deem important struggles to recall in a time when women’s rights are still under attack.

    The films aren’t all quite so heavy, with some screenings coming from places of laughter such as feature length “pop-u-mentary” Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model, in which a young girl and her aunt attempt to create an alternative pop star who isn’t hyper-sexualised.

    Other notable screenings include the European premiere of documentary feature No Kids for Me, Thanks!, about childless women, and the Shappi Khorsandi-narrated short One Thousand And One Teardrops, about women’s dress codes in Iran.

    Each screening will be followed by a discussion with the filmmakers, providing opportunity to discuss the themes of their work and talk about the challenges of working in the film industry.

    Throughout the festival there will also be panel discussions addressing topical social issues such as the right to abortion, the experiences of refugee women and the representation of the female body in patriarchal society.

    The festival takes place at the Rio Cinema in Dalston from 18 to 21 August, and the full programme can be found on the festival website. If you’re even slightly interested in female empowerment, there’s definitely something at this year’s LFFF for you.

    London Feminist Film Festival
    18-21 August 2016
    Rio Cinema
    107 Kingsland High Street
    E8 2PB