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Archives for March 2012

Joan Walsh-Smith

Marie-Louise Muir | 13:14 UK time, Thursday, 15 March 2012

Joan Walsh-Smith

I did an interview yesterday with an Irish artist, Joan Walsh-Smith. She discovered only a few weeks ago that a public art piece she did for Derry in the 1970s had been demolished. She only realised it was gone when her daughter did a search on Google Maps for it when she was updating her website for her. Joan and her husband Charles, now in their mid 60s,co-created the "City People" art work in 1972. They nowlive in Perth, Australia andare highly-regardedartists there, evenbeing awarded

the highest accolade from the Australian Prime Minister's office for services to art.

"City People" won an Arts Council of Northern Ireland competition in 1972. A new urban park on Foyle Street was chosen as its locationand it made up part of the perimeter wall. In the 1990s Foyle Street Urban Park was demolished to make way for a carpark. I can't getJoni Mitchell's Big Yellow Taxi out of my head.

Now I have only a hazy memory of the park and of the art work.If I'm honest, I didn't even notice the park was gone, and it was only a journalist Sean McLaughlin, writing for the Derry Journal, who broke the story.

I suppose you assume that public art is protected. You would imagine the piece had been carefully dismantled, put into storage or relocated. It's got me thinking about how public art is stewarded after it isput up? Are there contracts now, the rights of the artist respected?

Or does public art have a shelf life?Does it have to cede tonew ventures 20/30 years after it's put up? It changes the whole idea of why public art is commissioned if it is to be arbitrarilyde-commissioned.It alsobegs the question about the worth of one piece of public art over another and the fame of one artist over another. Since I started talking about this on Twitter (@marielouisemuir) and on my facebook page last night, I've had some interesting responses. The FE McWilliam Centre tells me that The Judo Players by FE McWilliam, whichispart of Derry City Council's public art work portfolio, is going to get repaired. It has had a hand missing since vandalism years ago. The council want to get the hand remade to repair the piece.As the gallery said to me on facebook: "I think it does beg the question about the worth of art or rather different artists' work. Do you think if The Judo Players was by a relatively unknown artist the council would be looking to repair it?"

Another comment asks about the Emigration Statues by the late Derry-bornartist Eamon O'Doherty, whose public art work includes the Anna Livia monument aka the Floozie in the Jacuzzi. It wasonce a major installation on Dublin's O'Connell Street until it was relocated to Heuston Station.His public art work "The Emigrants", from 1990, was originally located on Waterloo Place.When Waterloo Place was re-developed, the statues were re-located to down by the quay, locally known as 'behind Sainsburys'.But one comment on my facebook page asksabout the piece when it was on Waterloo Place "there was a statue of a girl reaching into the fountain there; was she part of the Emigration Statues because she has not made it on the move down behind Sainsburys?"

Where is that statue? Or did she just miss the boat?

The irony is that Joan Walsh-Smith still has the original fibreglass moulds of her piece. She says that it would be relatively inexpensive to recast the work. She is willing to ship them across, especially with the UK City of Culture next year. Derry City Council's Town Clerk Sharon O'Connor speaking to me on 鶹ҳ Radio Ulster's Arts Extra last night says it is unlikely to happen. She doesn't want to look back. CIty People won an Art in Context competition in 1972. It's context is over.

So why is there a push to reunite Anthony Gormley's 1987 Sculptures for Derryfor next year? The double-sided Janus figure cruciformswerecommissioned by Declan McGonagle of the Derry City Council-run Orchard Galleryand were put in in three particular locations on the Derry Walls: on the east overlooking the Foyle River, over the Bogside by the remains of the Walker Monument and on the Bastion overlooking the Fountain. Of the three originals, only one remains in Derry, now outside the Millennium Forum. Thereis an apocryphal story that it was actually found in a skip.The othertwo are in the United States. It wouldn't have anything to do with Gormley's status in the art world since Angel of the North that this push is on to bring them "home" so to speak? Or maybe it's because his grandfather is from Derry?

Should City People be re-moulded and rise again in 2013? Or did they just pave paradise and put up a parking lot in time for all the cultural tourists in 2013?

Glenn Patterson's new book

Marie-Louise Muir | 15:27 UK time, Monday, 5 March 2012

Spent today walking the streets of 1831 Belfast with the writer Glenn Patterson.And the city hustled and bustled as noisily as it would have done on a Monday lunchtime 181 years ago,although you didn't have to shout to be heard overbus engines then. More likely nothing more intrusive than a horse-drawn gig or maybe even a sedan chair. I couldn't get over how noisy the city centre was. Between buses, buskers, bypassers,one-sided mobile phone conversations, newspaper vendors, piped music from shops, it was the height of cacophony! But Glenn reckoned that in 1831, aMonday lunchtime in Belfast would have been just as noisy. I didn't want to argue as he has just written a mighty book on that time, including not only sounds, but sights and smells too. You can smell the streets (they don't smell pretty).

Glenn's new book “The Mill for Grinding Old People Young” isa historical love letter to his home town, his many layeredresearch worn lightly, in a way very similar to Joseph O'Connor's “Star of the Sea”. The characters are writ large, against the social, political and economic history.

Gilbert Rice is the central character, introducedfirst as an 85-year-old in 1897, then taking us back tohis teenage self, in 1831, living with his grandfather on what is now Royal Avenue.Westood outside what are now the Clarkes and Zara shops where the house would have been,with Glenn colouring in how the street was mainly residential back then. The young Gilbert then got a jobworking in the Ballast office at the busy City Port, getting drunk, falling in love andgetting exercised about the Donegalls who owned Belfast. There's a beautiful sense of a rite of passage for the young man and for the reader too who is on that journey of discovery with him.

It's almost like we are time travellers, with all our knowledge of what is to happen to Belfast in the future, from the yet to be builtCity Hall to the sinking of the Titanic to two World Wars to civil unrest to powersharing.

Glennsaid that he found the mid 1800s fascinating, 30 odd years after the 1798 uprising,many of the peoplewho took part in that were still around were politicians and business people,in a way, he says, similar to contemporary Northern Ireland.

Off mike, he was still pointing out remnants of the past - alleyways, buildings and streets that map outhow little the city has changed, holding onto its past with pride. It's no coincidence that the publishers of Glenn's book, which he finished writing a year ago, have held off publication to the Titanic centenary. The city is now ready to face the horror of thetragedy of the Titanic,and remember it as it was when it left here. Likewise Glenn's book takes us back in time, to apeople and a place that fed TitanicTown and shapedwhat this place, despite all that has happened, remains.

It's a great read. I'm just sorry that I've finished it.

"The Mill for Grinding Old People Young" by Glenn Patterson is published by Faber on 15th March.

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