Visiting the grandstand: first thoughts

As we explored the outside areas of the grandstand for the first time it seemed to me that the location reflected the weather, cold and miserable. The littered fields made me think about how on race days the fields would’ve been littered not with coca cola cans and sweet wrappers but with betting slips- at least this would’ve shown life and purpose, the societal change shows the lack of importance the grandstand now has.

The room that interested me the most was one where I did not see an obvious horse racing connection, instead what I found interesting was the fact that this room was used as an RAF meeting room during the First World War. ‘A large part of the work has to do with researching a place, often an unusual one that is imbued with history or permitted with atmosphere’ (Pearson, 2007, p.7) we took this idea by Pavis and began looking for clues in the room to help us create the correct atmosphere. On the wall we found the words ‘through struggles to the stars’ painted in a foreign language, this along with the large stele pillars and fireplace give the room a very authentic feel adding historical character and meaning to the room, and justifies Ibid’s idea that ‘Layers of the site are revealed through reference to:historical documentation’. (Pearson, 2007, p.8).

As we explored the room my group member laid on the floor and noticed the symmetry on the ceiling with the lights, he felt that it reflected a runway therefore this linked with the Raf history of the room and excited us. This showed an example of Macauley’s idea that,
‘The site may begin to tell its own story’ (Pearson, 2007, p.9)

The largest room in the grandstand however completely lacks in historical culture or even any evidence that only around 50 years ago it was used for a big horse racing event. This room now looks like an average community centre and the space is now used as a children’s play group meeting. ‘Its not just about a place, but the people who normally inhabit and use that place. For it wouldn’t exist without them’ (Pearson,2007,p.8) I find Ibid’s idea extremely ironic as during world war 2 the room was used as a place where the dead bodies were taken, It is interesting to see how very differently the space is being used as I believe there is a striking difference between a striking difference between a room once being filled with death and now being used for young new life.

References: Pearson, M (2010) Site specific performance, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

Exploring the Grandstand

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Upon arriving at the grandstand in Lincoln it is clear that the building does not have the same purpose it did when it was built. There is no clear area where horses could race and instead a main road separates the grandstand and a field filled with horses. The building has almost  been ignored since the function it was created for no longer occurs in Lincoln.

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As this was my first visit to the Lincoln grandstand I was astounded by the difference between the two sides of the building. The front of the grandstand, where the stairs are visible, is dreary and dull. The wooden steps have been left to rot and the paint is clearly cracking. However the back of the building, with its two levels and windows, could be mistaken for a large house or even a small hotel. The brick work looks good considering its age and the building appears to be in good condition; a complete contrast to the front of the building. The second level windows are painted on to make the grandstand look like a normal building. This was done recently suggesting the site is partly maintained but not recently as the litter around the site would suggest.

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The area is very isolated considering it is joint to a busy road, as the houses and shops disappear as you approach the site. It is found opposite a field where horses are allowed to roam; partially giving the public an insight into what the grandstand could have been like when it was used to watch the horse racing.  The only sign that the area is has not been totally abandoned is the car park next to it, and the golf course and stables behind it. The locks on the metal gates preventing access to the stairs makes it harder for the outside of the grandstand to be used to its full potential, further isolating the site.

After exploring the outside of the grandstand it is clear that the building needs a rebirth to bring the public to see the beauty that it has to offer. It is obvious there is potential for it to once again be a site for people to visit in Lincoln.

9 am at Grandstand…

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*Excuse my grammer of English

At 9 am, still cold temperature…

However, this time we had a different targets such as to create some ‘Artistic pieces’.
But I think I should start to talk about some historic background about venue.
It is very hard for me to talk about because it is all luck of my understanding.

It is obvious that Grandstand is basically the venue of people watched some horse racing but in our case we have to (or we need to) feel/to get either emontions and atomosphere. It is not as a nature, human beings, technologies or materials.
By this I mean what we felt from this venue generally is one of a key element I suppose.
When we  walked around Grandstand this time, we were able to find many stuffs and places and I personally became more interest about this place.

For example, in outside, there were golf field at the back. Then we could find some stables (either clean and ruined) at just next to the field. On the other hand, in inside we found some rooms that have got different capacities.

History… yes, everything has history. (especially buildings)
But how about horse racing it self before to thingk of ‘Technology’?

Author James C. Whyte illustrated that;

‘Emigrating, as the first settlers did, from the opposite coast of Gaul, where, in common with all the other barbarian nations of the North and “West of Europe, they must have been much accustomed to the use of horses, it seems natural that, feeling early the want of them in their newly-adopted country, their immediate efforts would be directed to obtain them; and we think it far more probable that they should have brought them over on rafts, from the opposite continent, during the finest days of summer,than that they should have been imported by the Phoenicians, who frequented the island at a very early period, for the purpose of trade.

However this may be, we find on Csesar’s invasion of Great Britain, that the landing of the Roman troops was opposed by immense bodies of horsemen, besides chariots and infantry ; and as the fact is well established by the testimony of many Roman historians, we are bound to take it in preference to what is ‘advanced by Bede, who assigns the year 631, in the reign of Edwin the Great, as the earliest period at which the English began to use saddle horses.’

(Whyte James C, 1840, pp17-18)

Following this statement, horses are originally came from some serious historical event and it was more harmful thing for both human being and horses. This is I think a little bit interesting because we never get the chance to listen to what horses are thinking of. We are actully quite unique spieces for other animals but if THEY had got a chance to spell it out to us, what might they (would like to) talk to us; is that something thankful or how repulsive we are…?

*Refrence

Whyte James C (1840), HISTORY OF THE BRITISH TURF: FROM THE EARLIEST PERIOD TO THE PRESENT DAY, London: Henry Colburn Publisher, Online: https://ia600306.us.archive.org/16/items/historyofbritish00whyt/historyofbritish00whyt.pdf (accessed on 2nd Feburary 2014)

The Ghosts of Dead Horses

The Grandstand on Carholme Road in Lincoln seems, to me, to be a building lost in time. To many, it remains a symbol of a rich history of equestrian sport within the city, and a reminder of the entertainment of yesteryear, standing proudly as it does on the site of the old racecourse. However, when brought up in conversation, fellow students and long-time Lincoln residents alike are at a loss to either, (a) what the grandstand actually is, (b) where it might be, or (c) why it still remains there today.

My historical knowledge of the grandstand is extremely limited. Unlike Steep Hill, Lincoln Cathedral, Jews’ Court, the Stonebow, West Common, Newport Arch or any of the other major historical symbols which have endured throughout the history of the city, the grandstand appears to be a structure which few know about, and fewer go to the effort of researching. From memory, I know that the grandstand itself was the main seating stand for the old racecourse that once stood on the huge plot of land where West Common, the top of Carholme Road as it becomes the A57, and the Carholme Golf Course now stand. The building bears the royal coat of arms, a statement to the opulence of the original building (and the class of person it was intended to accommodate – the wealthy and influential middle-to-upper classes). In the early 1900s it would have seen regular use, as spectators made themselves comfortable to watch horse racing – the sights and sounds of cheering, jeering gamblers, the morning suits and summer dresses of the wealthy, and the almost drum-like rhythm of hooves on dirt are quickly drawn to mind. However, in more recent times the grandstand itself (to my knowledge a listed building) was left to become worn, tired and weatherbeaten. It has for a while been used as a community centre, using rooms in the back of the grandstand beneath the seats as a venue. However, in line with increased tourism to the area, the grandstand has seen a  revival in terms of a refurbishment project alongside the erection of a huge tourism sign encouraging drivers passing through to “visit Lincoln”, and telling them of upcoming events within the city.

For me, the grandstand is an eerie symbol to a lost, almost forgotten history. I find it interesting to consider the way in which, as a place, the grandstand is almost a ‘dead site’. Castrated of its other vital organs, the only suggestion of the racecourse which once stood there is the grandstand, a sad reminder of history and culture lost to time. Many of the people who would watch races there, and the horses who ran, will now almost certainly be dead, and with them a rich historical record of the grandstand as it was – the races which took place, the big wins and the bigger losses – has all but vanished. The ghosts of dead horses and the old building itself are all that remains. To this extent, the grandstand itself could be seen as ‘dead’ – not only through its lack of use, but also through the fact that without the rest of the course (the other stands, the gambling offices, the turnstiles, the horseboxes and the hurdles) it stands almost entirely devoid of purpose if judged according to the original intention of the structure.

The grandstand can also be a contentious statement which invokes, for me, questions regarding whether or not it is the right of human beings to use animals for sport and entertainment. This is particularly potent in an era when campaign organisations such as the RSPCA and the World Wildlife Fund are pushing the animal rights agenda, and at a time where the euthanasia of horses badly injured during big racing events such as Ascot or the Grand National is within the public consciousness. The grandstand stands in some ways as a symbol to that culture; though those activities do not happen on that site anymore, the site itself is imbued with the memory of that activity, and as performers and audiences in the present day we bring our contemporary understanding of those activities – influenced by wildlife activists, newspapers and the media – to that site. The past and the present combine at the grandstand in a way which could be seen as a controversial statement about the position of such a building and what it stands for within a modern Lincoln.

Lastly, the sheer size and presence of the grandstand leads me to consider class relations, something I’ve already touched upon. That it bears the royal coat of arms is not an accident – the grandstand stands as a symbol of the mores of imperialism. Equine sport as an activity for the wealthy is an established concept – polo and dressage, for instance, are not cheap to partake in – and the grandstand remains a symbol of the privilege of those upper classes, sitting in plush, covered stands opposed to the ‘standing-room-only’ of their subordinates. Within Lincoln, recently a safe seat for the Conservative Party or other right-wing political groups, such as UKIP, the fact that the grandstand is a symbol of wealth and opulence is not one to be ignored. Nor is the fact that the royal coat of arms adorning it symbolises very locally the power of the crown, superior to local folk.

I am excited to learn more about the grandstand as we begin to use the site to inform our performance practices within the module, and am interested to see whether applying any of the history I know of the building or my immediate preconceptions about it lead to interesting performative discoveries within our process.