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#suffragettes

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#PublicArt. This is the best term for it, not statues or street art, because the public is involved, so you know you gotta think about the public response - intended and incidental - as well as the artist's intention.

Older public art is particularly interesting because of change. Mostly - but not always - the artist's intentions don't change over time, but the public's reaction certainly does.

#TrafalgarSquare is a good example. It was built 180 years ago or so. Later than you might think, but earlier than I expected. It commemorates a naval battle of the #NapoleonicWars, but it wasn't originally going to - they were going to call it #WilliamIV Square or something. The theme changed from #royalism to #militarism, but that change isn't visible in the statues.

After 1815 and before about 1880, the #BritishEmpire was mainly #India, the #WestIndies, #Ireland, and an archipelago of #navy bases dotted around the world. The #UnitedKingdom was figuring out how to deal with its #democratic deficit, so there were a series of reactionary governments that paradoxically passed #ReformBills to extend the franchise. There were #labour riots, and an #industrial boom, and huge cities - particularly #London, but also #Manchester, #Birmingham, #Liverpool, #Belfast - growing like galloping weeds over the countryside. This was #Dickens 's England. This was the time of #TheMakingOfTheEnglishWorkingClass.

So what did they mean at the time by building Trafalgar Square? It has #propaganda value. Lord #Nelson was a controversial figure in his own time, but I can imagine the Duke of #Wellington trying to link his own political fortunes to a safely-dead hero in the 1830s. The square was built with #parliamentary approval and funding, and with quite a lot of public subscription too - though what a 'public' means in that context isn't obvious. Probably wealthy #industrialists, the #techbros of the age, but I'm guessing.

Since it was built, more - but much smaller - naval commemorations have been added. So its original goals weren't forgotten, but extended - artist intentionality changing over time.

The #Suffragettes used Trafalgar Square extensively for protests. I think we can reasonably link their use of the square to the original political use of the square. It was built in an era of Reform Bills that didn't reform the vote for #women. They could hardly do better than to make their protest clear in a space which modeled the thing they were protesting about - a powerful, militarist, partly-democratic England that didn't include women.

#Labour also used Trafalgar Square for protests. One of my favourite photos is of #KeirHardy - the Keir who the current prime minister is named for - speaking from the base of #NelsonsColumn in 1908. You have to know about it, but Trafalgar Square is a labour monument.

And to this day, Trafalgar Square is a traditional rally point for demonstrations and protests. No important London protest or demo happens without going through Trafalgar Square.

This use of their commemorative art would be totally alien to people who funded its construction. They're more likely to have been the backers of the #PeterlooMassacre.

The square was famously sandbagged during the Second World War, to preserve it from being damaged, and I gather many Londoners at the time considered that to be symbolic of resistance and survival. So the art became invisible to the public, but people were still aware of it.

These days, Trafalgar Square is a landmark of London, in many ways as iconic and the Eiffel Tower in Paris. That might please its builders, but probably wasn't what they expected. It's also a rendezvous point, with its tube station and its buses. A gathering place. It hosts incidental modern art on the famous empty plinth.

Public art is inspirational. This is just Trafalgar Square - all the things I've seen give me the shivers when I think about how much embattled history is locked up in stone and bronze, under which people eat sandwiches, kiss lovers, wave placards, make speeches, and which get periodic paint douses, get stood on, relabeled and reinterpreted, dressed up and eventually pulled down.

Another time I'll write about other public art I've seen. #StPetersburg and #Moscow are rather heavy on such art, but there is so much important stuff to say about it.

Mabel Capper was a Mancunian suffragette who travelled to Bath in November 1911 because Lloyd George came to visit to speak at a discussion on women's suffrage. And women couldn't attend due to “limited space”. Funny that they managed to have 6,000 men attend.

A group of #suffragettes, including Mabel, disrupted the meeting on this day in 1911 by climbing onto the roof and making a huge racket.

This will feature in my upcoming book On This Day in #Somerset!

The concluding part of the two part episode of Origin Story on the British Suffragette’s and other campaigner’s for votes for women is superb. I think it drops on the general podcast feed on Monday. Part 1 available now.

They have taught me a lot about the campaigns that I didn’t know. Including about the much larger Suffragist movement.

podmasters.co.uk/origin-story

PodmastersOrigin Story Podcast | PodmastersWhat are the real stories behind the most misunderstood and abused ideas in politics? From ‘woke’ to ‘centrism’ and beyond, this illuminating pod explores the hidden histories of the concepts you thought you knew.

New @ledbydonkeys video on restrictions of the right to #protest, and uneven applications of #justice, over the last few decades - under both #Tories and #Labour.

"Peaceful protest has long been a part of the democratic process."

"It's time for Labour to remember its roots, and reinstate the right to peaceful protest."

#UKpolitics #Suffragettes #S28 #ExtinctionRebellion #Thatcher #May #Starmer

youtu.be/QCIjFL1thrc

Save the date! The next 19th Century Dress and Textiles Reframed "At Home" online talks will be on Sunday, June 30, "focused on photography and its connections to 19th century fashion".

Programme:
📸 Robyne Calvert: Artists & Photographic Fantasies
📸 Erika Lederman: 'Counterfeit Specimens'. Isabel Agnes Cowper's Needlework Photographs for the South Kensington Museum
📸 Beatrice Behlen: Mrs Broom's photographs of suffragettes

Follow the link for abstracts and registration (free): eventbrite.co.uk/e/at-home-wit

#DressHistory #FashionHistory #TextileHistory #19thCentury #Museum #MaterialCulture #Photography #Needlework #Suffragettes #Histodons @histodons @historikerinnen

EventbriteAt Home with c19th Dress and Textiles Reframed - 30 June 2024 -2.00pm BST19th Century Dress and Textiles Reframed 'At Home' - short talks celebrating the joy of research!

This week, I started writing The Ninety-Three, a murder-mystery set in 1918, during the closing months of the Great War. The narrator is Dr Anna Richards, a sociologist, suffragette and socialite. The story opens in Downing Street with someone hurling a brick through the prime minister’s window…

Continued thread

In 1882, Duke Street became a women's prison when male prisoners were moved to the newly built Barlinnie Prison. It was here that many Scottish suffragettes were imprisoned during their campaign for equal voting rights. When the prison was being demolished, a cast-iron umbrella stand painted in the suffragette colours which was rescued and is now housed in the Glasgow Women's Library in Bridgeton.

Happy Monday! We'll be sharing a weekly photograph of George Lansbury from the archives.

Here is George with his daughter Daisy Postage. As well as working as her father's secretary, Daisy was an activist and was involved in the suffragette movement. She famously dressed up as Sylvia Pankhurst to help the real Sylvia Pankhurst evade capture from the police.

#Lansbury #GeorgeLansbury #history #histodons #archives #photography #London #EastEnd #suffragettes #women @histodons @archivistodon

The arson attack at St Catherines Church, Hatcham in 1914 was one of many perpetrated by a #terroristOrganisation whose aim was to make women equal to men.

🦸‍♀️ The #Suffragettes were instrumental in ensuring that today every woman can vote in democratic elections.

🏳️‍🌈 This is memento for many who are so unspeakably annoyed when, one day a year, a group of adults in rainbow costumes march peacefully through the town squares. #lgbtq #pride

©️ Photo credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images