Spitalfields Life

I have been trying without success so far to load an article written by the Gentle Author on the back page of the January issue of The World of Interiors. It describes the many campaigns he’s involved with – not just the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, but Bishopsgate Goosdsyar, Arnold Circus, and now a standardly bad shopping mall off Brick Lane. He is amazing. Then I happened to come across a picture he had posted of Spitalfields Market in 1933 from someone in Russia. If the Secretary of State turns down the planning application for the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, as he surely must, it will be more than anything thanks to the Gentle Author’s tirelessly effective grassroots guerilla campaigning.

I love this characteristically unexpected Christmas image he re-posted:-

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The Art Museum in Modern Times (2)

I’ve published books before, but I don’t remember quite the same sense of heightened anxiety when the first and only copy arrived today, air freighted from China and hand bound in England.

You don’t know quite what to expect: a bit smaller than imagined which means that it looks like a book to read; creamy paper; photographs taken back so that the colour is consistent and they sit neatly in the text. This was all the work of Harry Pearce and Johannes Grimond of Pentagram who fiddled with the detailing at the height of COVID. It was worth it.

What really transformed the book was a grant in April for the illustrations from donors who do not want to be named, but when I look at the book I think most of all with gratitude of them, not to mention the wonderful hard-working picture researcher turned project manager who laboured on it from March to September.

I salute them all !

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Whitechapel

I walked back through Whitechapel. After the desert of Aldgate, it was a relief to find proper streets again:-

And in case you think it’s already gone, the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, which still survives, but only just, and not necessarily for much longer:-

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Aldgate

I wandered round Aldgate to remind myself of what little is left of its old character, round the back of the Whitechapel Art Gallery and in Alie Street nearby:-

Instead of any sense of urban unpredictability, it is all being swept away in favour of Hong Kong:-

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The Still and Star

I was so upset by the design of a new development in Aldgate which has been much in the press in the last week that I went to see the Still and Star, the old pub which is being demolished and reconstructed as a green replica underneath a gigantic and unspeakably hideous new building:-

Unique London Pub Under Threat From Developers | Londonist

Of course, the pub on its own is nothing special: just a lone survival of a Victorian pub down an alleyway opposite the underground station. But it is representative of what is happening everywhere in Aldgate, Spitalfields and Shoreditch: the demolition of what remains of Victorian London and its replacement by big, faceless office blocks, which will probably only have a life of twenty five years, before being replaced by another bigger and more faceless block, thereby abolishing any sense of character at street level, the texture of urban life at a human scale. I’m sure the architect won’t mind, sitting behind a computer screen in a faceless office block; nor will the developer in his house in the country. But I mind at the way the character of the city, and more especially its fringes, is being eaten away and destroyed, desecrating any sense of the past.

This is Little Somerset Street, down which one finds the Still and Star:-

This is what’s left of the pub, now closed:-

And this is the development site with the name of the vandals proudly displayed:-

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Loughborough Bell Foundry is saved

I was very delighted to hear on the Today programme that the Heritage Lottery Fund has given a big grant to save Taylor’s, the other historically very important Bell foundry besides Whitechapel based in Loughborough.

I have known for a long time that the HLF had chosen to concentrate its funding and resources on Loughborough rather than Whitechapel.

I just hope that it helps raise the importance of Bell foundries, their cultural significance, and will enhance determination to save Whitechapel rather than undermine it at this critical juncture in the campaign.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-england-leicestershire-55355374

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Music at Charleston

We have just been listening to a concert by Melvyn Tan from Charleston: such a treat. It seems like a hundred years ago since the early days of lockdown when we listened to him playing on Friday evenings for a small group of friends. Now, it is a fully professional, staged performance, interspersed with readings from Proust and Virginia Woolf by Jack Farthing. He played Fauré, Ravel, Debussy and finally a Chopin Ballade.

Lockdown has been horrible in so many ways, but it has at least made one, or maybe it is only me, more attentive to the deep pleasures of listening to music, even if it is only secondhand.

The concert is available for a week only and you have to pay, but it is in the best possible cause:-

https://charlestontrust.digitickets.co.uk/event-tickets/31921?catID=22880

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Westcombe Cheddar Cheese

We came back from Somerset with some Westcombe Cheddar Cheese, four large chunks of it. We ate some in the evening and it was more unspeakably delicious than you can imagine, so full of the flavour of the fields, as if it had only just been made, which it maybe had. Since I know that independent cheese makers have had a hard time during COVID, I am posting information about it, not least because I have discovered that you can get it by mail order:-

https://westcombedairy.com/cheesestore/westcombe-cheddar-1

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Edmund de Waal

We also stopped off at Roche Court en route to Bruton to see Edmund de Waal’s very beautiful, select, choice groupings of objects of alabaster, porcelain and gold leaf, arranged with such visual attention and precision in groups behind glass in the gallery designed by Stephen Marshall of Munkenbeck and Marshall so that they can be seen and appreciated COVID-free from the garden:-

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Happy Christmas !

I was going to wait till next week to post my Christmas card, but I have noticed that I pay much more attention to cards which come early – or maybe it just the effect of COVID that one particularly appreciates those cards from people one has not seen for a year at least; or what I try not to call retirement. Anyway this is my way of reciprocating and thanking people for their cards and their loyalty to the Blog when news has been thin, particularly as I have been discouraged from commenting on politics, which has occupied so much of everyone’s time and thoughts during the last year.

So Happy Christmas to all my friends and perhaps, most especially, those friends who contributed to the fight to save the Bell Foundry !

2021 could not be worse…..

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