Tagged: London

Oct 22

Bus stop public art project gets green light

When I first moved to London and had more time than friends in the vicinity I spent a lot of time riding around on double decker buses just looking at the city. My favourite moments on those journeys were spotting the random things that people at street level couldn’t see. The winning object? An apple-sized ceramic ginger cat head perched on top of a garage on Highbury Grove Road, which watched the traffic with appropriately catlike disdain. Having shared a childhood home with a large number of cat ornaments, I am pretty sure the head was the lid of a teapot.

Ginger Cat Teapot

Ginger Cat Teapot

The flat tops of bus stops also yielded a fascinating array of items (including the Shoreditch meteorites) but rather a lot of single shoes and empty vodka bottles. So while I am very pleased to hear that the Bus.tops project which plans to cover 64 bus stop roofs in LEDs to display digital artworks has got the go-ahead, there’s a little wistful nostalgia mixed in. Regular readers will know I have strong feelings about public art, and I like this idea a lot. It has the potential to brighten the grim journeys made by millions of Londoners every day, while getting art out of the gallery and clawing back some of our shrinking public space before advertisers get hold of it (although I wouldn’t be surprised if they cotton on soon). But I can’t help wondering if any of those bus stops are already decorated with bizarre discarded items, and whether some lonely passenger will miss the mystery. Anyway, here’s their short video introduction on the Bus.tops site. There’s some annoying ‘urban’ jazz, and one of the artists describes bus stops as ‘street furniture’ but don’t let that put you off the whole project.

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Aug 03

London Poverty Profile online

Did anyone else end up in competitive ‘prolier than thou’ conversations at university? The need to establish your authority as as a REAL person who knew about HARDSHIP? I suspect it is probably just an Oxbridge thing, and a stupid and self-indulgent thing at that.

I grew up in Cornwall, which is a much poorer area than most people think, but it’s not exactly the ghetto, let’s face it. But a lot of London-born people I know still have a trace of that rivalry – ‘at *my* school the drug-dealers weren’t waiting at the school gates, they were in the staff room’ etc…

London’s Poverty Profile is a useful resource not for settling those arguments, but for reminding you that while there are certain areas that are clearly deprived, poverty in London nestles right alongside prosperity.  As the poverty indicator page about inequality says:  ”Haringey is London’s most divided borough. Its 19 wards contain four of the richest and five of the poorest wards in London.”

The site is the product of serious research and it’s a fascinating tool for studying patterns of disadvantage, I’m sure it will be useful for nipping outpoormanship conversations in the bud, but also for campaigners who want to make a fairer city.

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