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In The Picture – Museum of London Docklands

The Fourth Plinth project in Trafalgar Square continues to be a resounding success, enabling the creation and public enjoyment of continually renewing works of art. Last year, the Museum of London Docklands, and the Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust joined forces in a project which took its lead from the Fourth Plinth concept, but addressed a plinth that was closer to home for them.

Outside the Museum of London Docklands on West India Quay in the heart of what is now London’s new financial district, stand a grand 19th century granite plinth upon which is perched a statue of 18th Century sugar trader, Robert Milligan.

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His family were rich plantation owners, and, concerned with commercial losses they were seeing during the import of sugar to a disorganised London dock system, put forward a great deal of money to found the first formal warehouses that would form the heart of the 19th century London Docks. Although he was not known as a slave trader directly, it goes without saying that he and his family made use of the slavery system to provide a workforce on their plantations. As such, asked the Museum of London – regardless of his input to the building of the docks, is he really the right person to be surveying today’s Docklands from his elevated plinth-top position?

Whether you like it or not, in a way its appropriate. He would no doubt approve of the gargantuan edifices that pay tribute to Mammon whose pinnacles cast a shadow over Canary Wharf today. Like Milligan who built his wealth on the back of those in poverty (slaves and dockworkers), the towers of Canary Wharf today are home to the bankers and businesses who lay claim to the lie of continual global economic growth and reward themselves with fat bonuses (6 million to the chairman of Barclays?) even though they have brought the world to its knees in a recession of their making. There are a few less risk-takers in the towers since Lehman Brothers sacrificed itself, but make no mistake, the rest are carrying on regardless.

But back to the project. My contribution, a canvas based on photoshop images collected and collated during the course of artistic development replaces the plinth with twin towers. The first is a two storey high spine in bronze. The second is an architectural needle with two scrolling digital surfaces. The first gives bankers the updates on the current stocks and shares. The second reads a constant scrolling phrase taken directly from an original 1892 ledger for the West India Co, to be found nestling deep in the archive store. It was found in the back pages of the book and documents the fate of workers who have been taken off the payroll. The average age was 37. It reads “DECEASED, DECEASED, DISABLED, DISMISSED, RESIGNED, DECEASED, DISMISSED”, a sobering epitaph for the dockworkers of the day.

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Barts & The London 2nd MS Research Day

Final Pub7577_MS_INV_v1-1On Saturday 26th March 2011 from 10.30 am until 3.30pm, star speakers from the internationally renowned MS research team at Barts will be giving talks and showing films on the research behind the headlines.

The team is headed up by Prof Gavin Giovannoni and the day will be a chance to listen to clinicians and scientists speak and then mingle with them over coffee and lunch to ask any questions you might have.


Last years inaugural event was a great success (see film below), and this year should be even better!

PLEASE COME!


Saturday 26 March 2011, 10.30am-3.30pm

Registration from 9.30-10.30am

Church House Conference Centre Dean’s Yard Westminster London SW1P 3NZ

Entrance is via Great Smith Street. Nearest tube station is St James’s Park on the District Line. RSVP on attached card




THIS WEBSITE IS A “WORK IN PROGRESS”

Please excuse us if you stumble over any untidy bits of the site. We are in the process of tidying it up but have been extremely busy.


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Most recently we  have been working on a grand total of more than 60 short films, which together made up the day of talks, prentations, posters and lectures from Barts inaugural “Research day for MS patients and their Families”. The day was organised by Gavin Giovanonni and his team in the Neurology Department at Barts and the Royal London Hospital.

The lectures took place in the stunning Centre of the Cell building (pictured) which was designed by Will Alsop.

The centre incorporates architectural pods resembling parts of cell structures which hang from the ceiling ; one acts as am outreach learning centre for schools and others as seminar booths.

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The open plan space all overlooks a humungous basement laboratory, so that visitors can peer down and watch real scientists at work. Cleverly, they are protected from noxious fumes by an invisible sheet of air blown gently across the heads of the lab staff which carries any floating nasties off into the abyss.

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The lectures themselves took place in the Perrin Lecture Theatre, named after Sir Michael Willcox Perrin a noted British scientist who created the first practical polythene, directed the first British atomic bomb programme, and managed the Allied intelligence of the Nazi atomic bomb.

As if that lot didn’t keep him busy, he also found time to be chairman of the Bart’s Medical School, a tradition that is carried on by his son, Charles Perrin, who is treasurer of Queen Mary’s to this day.

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Hoxton Rumblings

El-Mysterioso, the digital agency par excellence, have recently moved offices to a lovely air-conditioned retro-cool studio in Hoxton St. The air-conditioning is retro, in that it involves opening the windows, and the floor is bare concrete, which would be extremely cool if it weren’t for the dust clouds emanting from it when you jump up and down. The answer, of course, is no jumping up and down on the bare concrete.

Here, they do good work, in the presence of cool music, and create magnificent web sites and even make new fangled phone applications.


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