Tragedy at Highfield Avenue : Connecting the dots and remembering Margaret

This week the group of me, Ashleigh and Poppy went again to Lincoln Archives to research about a girl that had died in Lincoln during the war. We had next to no information about this girl at all. I was apprehensive at first, having recently joined the duo to collaborate on this piece and I didn’t know what the archives would even have about a specific death during this time period and if it was significant enough to link it to the Grandstand.

I however was soon to proven extremely wrong. We arrived and was given access to a folder in which we crowded around. Whilst flicking through the various pieces of paper and old new’s articles preserved in the filing one article just spilled every detail we needed to do this. Entitled “Tragedy at Highfield Avenue” it told of an event that occurred on the 11th June 1943 at 25 Highfield Avenue at approximately 5pm. It told of the death of 12 year old Margaret Elaine Marriott after the Lancaster MK III bomber, Code UGS, No.Ed 833 of the 1654 heavy construction unit tipped it’s wing on a telegraph pole on the street and crashed and blew into flames whilst it was on a training flight exercise practicing three engined flight over Lincoln. It hit 22 – 24 Highfield Avenue but caused further damage on the aforementioned road and Dixon Street. Her parent’s were working at their allotment at the time of the accident, And her brothers, aged 3 and 4, were rescued. If that wasn’t specific enough the article also went on to give us further information involving Margaret.

She attended South Park high school, and was reportedly popular with her classmates as the article says her classmates were visibly upset she had died. She was also buried at St. Helen’s Churchyard here in Lincoln, written on her grave was “Theres a friend for little children”. Safe to say we had hit the analytical jackpot. Here we had the tragic tale of a young girl’s life cut short due to a horrific accident. The girl now had a name, a personality, a family, friends and a school. She wasn’t just some nameless enigma we had gotten ourselves excited over. This new information has now became the basis of our performance in respect to her. Our idea is to track her journey from her house to her school then to her grave. We then however plan to bring her to the Grandstand.

Questions rise as to why we would bring her back here in the first place, surely it’s unrelated and serves no purpose to the site?

Well, despite me trying to avoid the macabre aspect of it, the plans for the Grandstand to be turned into a morgue during World War 2. So, hypothetically, if the plans did go through  her body would have been taken here. In the 3 of us chronicling her journey to the Grandstand we want to keep her memory alive, and pay our respects. Our idea’s have come to fruition by using Poppy as a “vessel” in a sense to channel Margaret. Poppy we lay on the floor dressed as a schoolgirl as we highlighter around her body using tape, like a classic crime scene. We aim to incorporate flowers, and possibly white sheets to show the area as a clean space. This will be a durational piece and many different bodies will be shown in our area. We hope to leave a lasting impression with the audience but again it is still in the beta stage of work.

Our trip to the Lincolnshire Life museum helped as we stumbled upon a old children’s rhyme “Polly had a Dolly” that we could use in our piece as well.

In conclusion on this piece of research and work we have a idea, and it’s in the early stages but I believe if we get the video down and edited in the timeframe we intend to our idea can finally come to life.

 

Work’s Cited:

Tragedy at Highfield Avenue courtesy of Lincoln Archives

The Art of Installation

In exploring the Grandstands endless possibilities you stumble across that one idea that sets a chain reaction in your head leading you to concepts you would never have originally thought about. In the event of my chain reaction I stumbled across installments and their importance in contemporary performance as an art form in their own right “INSTALLATION ART is a broad term applied to a range of arts practice which involves the installation or configuration of objects in a space, where the totality of objects and space comprise the artwork.” (Irish Museum of Modern Art, 2012) Through this research you understand that you have to define the space used for the configuration, through looking at maps of the grandstand and using my own experiences of drifting I decided upon what looked to be a decaying set of toilet cubicles.

Located Through the Kitchen

The space appeared to still be used but simply as a convenient storage closet. The paint was coming off of the walls, the toilets would not flush and the was a wild variety of wildlife growing within the space. Yet, all of these flaws I simply took on as quirks, qualities that made the space what it is because after all this process is not about finding the negatives but twisting them and transforming them into positives. Already through my own judgements it could be seen that this acted as a piece of installation art, it showed years of decay “These values concern a desire to activate the viewer – as opposed to the passivity of mass-media consumption – and to induce a critical vigilance towards the environments in which we find ourselves.” (Bishop, 2005) I wanted to take this idea of ‘crucial vigilance’ one step further by presenting all of the decaying environments I saw into this once space.

Therefore, I looked through my own documentation of the grandstand I had created on my first visit and what I saw was consistent decay and objects relevant to the site with items such as the windows being painted on the back rather than being actual windows. With abandoned stables and litter everywhere. I wanted to present this documentation and so created something to show the modern age against the past, through the use of a video.

What use to be

I entitled the video ‘What use to be’ and presented it in the space on the cubicle seat using only the dim natural light of the blocked out skyline windows. I then thought to myself how could I continue this concept of documentation and decay and did this through taken pictures of people as they walked into the space. I wanted to capture the look of shock as they saw the decay that had occurred. Through adding the audio of the start of the Grand national Race I believe it explored the further history of the site and how it use to be used as a race course.

Decay on the Walls

This proved to me to be a huge leap in the understanding of Site Specific performance and that it is not about acting it is about representing the site in a way that is not usually perceived “Site-specific performance… reveals the complex two-way relationship between the person and the physical environment.” (Harrison, 2010) This is the main creation I have made, fusing people with the physical environment with the atmosphere of the space and the documentation showing what may have been missed.

References:

Irish Museum of Modern Art (2012) What Is – Installation Art, Dublin: Irish Museum of Modern Art.

Bishop, C. (2005) But is it Installation Art? Tate Etc, 3 (Spring). [online] London: Tate. Available from http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/articles/it-installation-art [Accessed 5 March 2014].

Harrison, B. (2010) Theatre Style: Site Specific Performance. [online] Scotland: Scottish Arts Council. Available from http://www.scottisharts.org.uk/1/artsinscotland/drama/features/archive/themesitespecifictheatre.aspx [Accessed 5 March 2014].

A Process of Discovery: photographs from our first exploration of the site

Gallery

This gallery contains 16 photos.

Click on the images above for full-resolution versions and Harvard-referenced citations. Further to my previous blog post, entitled “Considering Image: Performativity, Aesthetic and the Documentary Process“, which discussed in some detail some varying theories on the ways in which photography … Continue reading

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.

Post Test 1.5

*Excuse my grammer of English

When I visted the Grandstand for a walk, I felt quite strange.
It is not a bad way at all but something like an atomosphere is completely frozen.
Also I felt some atomospheres of ‘Silence’ and ‘Isolated’ too.

There are able to separate in between main stand and grass field which located in front of the stand.
I am just wandering if these can connect as a piece, it would make double meaning as well.

While I was walking around Grandstand, wind was blow and touched my skin.
That reminds me now is still winter….

26/1/2014
Kent Ochi