Bolton Museum

A Poetry of Ourselves

For a year now we have been inviting visitors to the current exhibition in the Worktown Gallery to take part in an activity that evokes the original participatory spirit of Mass Observation.

One of the founders of Mass Observation was a poet and journalist called Charles Madge.  In the first year or two of Mass Observation’s existence, Madge was in charge of the national panel of volunteer writers who would keep diaries of their daily activities and respond to “directives”, where they would be asked to write about particular topics such as the type of objects on their mantelpieces.  Madge described Mass Observation as a form of “popular poetry” which would shed new light on everyday life in late 1930s Britain. 

The exhibition in the Worktown Gallery explores Madge’s early vision for Mass Observation.  While the exhibition has been running the museum has been inviting visitors to complete a card which has the following question on it:

“If you weren’t here, where would you be?” 

Visitors have embraced the activity with enthusiasm, and we have received hundreds of answers.  In October we asked students from the University of Bolton to create new poems based on some of the answers.  The students have risen to the challenge with great invention.  Their poems are presented below. 

‘in a sunny place’

summer changed to autumn
like milk turning snow curdling foamy
and wet in my clothes, shoes, hair
and late october settles on my chest
like an infection
like pumpkin spiced popcorn lung
and early onset arthritis as the feeling
in my fingers goes the same way as
the mid afternoon sun
and the tint in my skin like
twice washed sunny d stains.
and you.

AJ Moroz

‘I shall never know’

My life – a compass missing its needle,
the shell of an atlas with missing pages.
A global positioning system with no power.
I am not living to survive,
I am living to be here, in this moment.
Nothing compares to what I am experiencing here.
I’ll never know where I’d be if I wasn’t here.
I wouldn’t want to know.
I have nowhere to be.
And there is nowhere I want to be.
When our nightmares become dreams,
we will never truly understand where it is
we want to be.

Morgan King

‘At home, knitting’

She is sat alone twisting her yarn colours ensuring it sits in front of the stich marker, she has opted for a mauve which will be infused with periwinkle four rows later. Her needles moving flawlessly, perfect harmony within the round, keeping to an intense rhythm. Her hands are tenuous as if a shriveled sage. The yarn is delicately weaved intricately in and around allowing for each individual fiber to be kept in pattern.

Her mind wanders, this is a luxury that she can afford, her rheumy eyes move in unison to each individual chime of needles clanging. The intricacy of the task at hand she refuses to let phase her, for she has full confidence in her ability.

Another hand-crafted piece is almost completed, there is not a shred of accomplishment gathering in the air. She works her tail through the last row of aligned loops, and begins to pull the garment together, ensuring any openings at the forefront of the dome are sealed. The woman now holds a hat fit for a newborn. She lets out a sole sigh and through her pensive eyes she smiles, as she places down the hat on top of the pile.

She gathers her yarn and begins to once again twist.         

Morgan King

‘in Mexico’

Packing up only the bare essentials:
A jumper, jeans, your beloved blue umbrella.
Squashing them down along with your freshly
excavated ambition to fit it all in a backpack.
You’re walking to Mexico. You’ve decided,
and that’s that.

No admission of missing you will keep you in this raincloud of a town.

Walking all the way to Merseyside
seeking a ship to carry you, or failing that
you’ll part the seas, or failing that
devise wings from your umbrella
and hope the wind catches you.

Your footfalls will find the way as easily as they find the path
from the local back to your house.

Battling the elements, your umbrella
a steadfast shield against forty days and nights of rain.
Your shelter, your companion.
And when your toes touch ground in Mexico,
your umbrella is discarded.
She is useless to you now.

Kate Jones

‘hanging off the ceiling’

hanging off the ceiling
by a string made of iron
my brain? a hungry lion
my conscious? fired

hanging off the ceiling
by a rope that looks like a kaleidoscope
how long can I even cope
before I choke?

hanging off the ceiling
it feels quite revealing
but how do we stop these feelings?
If everything else is deceiving

hanging off the ceiling
my neighbour is barely breathing
his heart stopped beating
must have been the cold he was feeling

hanging off the ceiling
these imagined walls are unappealing
does life even have a meaning?

Penelope Alonso-Ritchie

Major acquisition for Mass Observation collection

A key piece of artwork from the ground-breaking 1930s social experiment, Mass Observation, has been acquired by Bolton Museum.

Entitled simply ‘Bolton’, the artwork was created by Julian Trevelyan in 1937 and depicts a traditional industrial mill scene from the town.

Trevelyan was part of a larger team of observers, who descended on Bolton to document the everyday lives of people at work, play and on holiday.

Their observations were depicted in photographs, sketches, paintings and collages, and Bolton became known as Worktown.

The Worktown collection is owned by the Bolton Council’s Library and Museum Services and includes more than 1,000 photographs and pieces of art by observers Humphrey Jennings, Humphrey Spender and Julian Trevelyan.

The opportunity to purchase Trevelyan’s piece ‘Bolton’ arose when it went to auction at Sotheby’s in November.

It was acquired for £20,000 thanks to funding from the Arts Council/V&A Purchase Grant Fund, the Art Fund and The Friends of Bolton Museum.

The collage shows the mills and chimneys of Bolton rising up into a bright blue sky. The fields and hills of the West Pennine Moors can be glimpsed in the background.

If examined more closely, the artwork reveals a hidden political message in the newspaper and magazine cuttings, reflective of the Spanish civil war of the time and the rise of fascism across Europe.

Bolton Council’s Cabinet Member for Culture, Youth and Sport, Cllr John Byrne, said: “The Worktown collection of photographs and paintings by Mass Observation artists is of national importance, offering a detailed picture of what life was like in Bolton in the 1930s.

“The museum welcomes any opportunity to add new work to the collection, which has been built up over thirty years, and we are grateful to our funders for their contributions to enable us to buy this important collage. Worktown is always very well received by our visitors and I’m sure people will study ‘Bolton’ with interest.”

Stephen Deuchar. Art Fund director, said: “We are so pleased that Bolton Museum were able to secure this collage, with its strong local connection, at auction. It is an apt addition to their widely-admired collection of work by Julian Trevelyan and other Mass Observation artists.”

Trevelyan had an unusual approach to his art. Carrying a suitcase of scraps and magazines, scissors, glue, watercolours and Indian ink he would make his way to his chosen spot.

Once there, he would battle the elements to create his latest collage – usually gathering quite a crowd as he captured the mood of industrial Bolton.

‘Bolton’ will go on display in the museum’s Making Landscape exhibition, which is situated in the lower ground floor of the Le Mans Crescent building.

Recording Leisure Lives Conference, 31st March 2015

The seventh annual Recording Leisure Lives conference will be held at the Mass Observation Archive at the University of Sussex. The theme will be “Places and Spaces of Leisure in 20th Century Britain”.

Keynote speakers will include Caitriona Beaumont of London South Bank University, author of “Housewives and Citizens: Domesticity and the Women’s Movement in England, 1928-1954” and Jeremy Burchardt of University of Reading, Chair of the Interwar Research Group.

Paper Proposals

There is an open stream on any aspect of leisure in 20th Century Britain.

Proposals can be submitted to r.snape@bolton.ac.uk by January 16th 2015.

Cost

Includes lunch and refreshments

  • £45 – full
  • £25 – students and non-waged

Further details

Please visit the Worktown Conferences page

Free Photography Workshop

wGander Poster Full

Gander, Photo Book Workshop, 2-5pm, 31 August

Join Robert Parkinson of Preston is my Paris to make your own photo book about Bolton. The workshop will include a short tour of Bolton to collect photographs which you will use to make a book about how you see the town. This event is free and suitable for anyone over the age of 18 with an interest in photography. All materials will be provided including cameras (although you are welcome to bring your own). Places are limited and can be booked by emailing worktownobservation@gmail.com

Worktown Observation Centre

Worktown Observation Poster 2

‘The Observers are the cameras with which we are trying to photograph contemporary life’

We would like to invite photographers, writers and artists of all types to participate in a unique project inspired by Mass Observation.  The Worktown Observation Centre will be open in Bolton 26 July to 2 August, in an empty shop space in Bolton town centre.  We will create a collaborative visual archive of everyday life in the town during the event. This new archive will have both a physical and digital form (www.worktownobservation.co.uk). We aim to create an event which encourages spontaneous participation.

Possible methods of observation include photography, drawing, video, audio, found ephemera, collage….. Proposed projects already include a giant camouflaged camera obscura, collecting oral histories, forensic analysis of people’s gait and observational drawing. We value individual ways of seeing.

Background Information

In 1937 Mass Observation began a unique study of Bolton. The Worktown project brought together photographers, artists and writers to create a new way of seeing everyday life. Visual artefacts created during the project are held in the Worktown Archive (www.boltonworktown.co.uk) at Bolton Museum, and include photographs by Humphrey Spender, collages by Julian Trevelyan and artist Graham Bell’s sketchbook. Mass Observation developed innovative methods for collecting information and tried to capture a multitude of viewpoints and voices. In particular Humphrey Spender’s documentary photographs and Humphrey Jennings’ subsequent short film Spare Time have had an important influence on the development of British visual culture.

The Worktown Observation Centre will occupy an empty shop on Knowsley St, Bolton. One side of the double fronted space is hosting a changing daily exhibition from invited community photographers and artists including Liam Curtin, Robert Parkinson (Preston is my Paris) and Mark Page (Museum of Takeaway Menu Art). The other side of the shop will be dedicated to creating a visual archive of life in Bolton’s public spaces. There is space here to display contributions from other artists and the public, which will also be digitised and added to the online archive. We are also running a photograph competition for the public with a set theme each day during the event. Submitted photographs will be displayed in the shop and on the online archive (www.worktownobservation.co.uk ).The winner of the competition will be announced on Saturday 2 August and will receive a £50 prize.

How to get involved

Visit the centre (Unit X7, Knowsley Street, Bolton) during the event or the online archive (www.worktownobservation.co.uk ). If you want to ask any questions then please email worktownobservation@gmail.com. We are also running some events which are free but require booking.

Worktown Pub Tour, 7-9pm, 31 August

A tour of pubs featured in Mass Observation’s classic book The Pub and the People. Join researchers from The University of Bolton to find out the secret history of the town’s pubs recorded in the Worktown Archive. This event is free and suitable for anyone over the age of 18. Places are limited and can be booked by emailing worktownobservation@gmail.com

Gander, Photo Book Workshop, 2-5pm, 31 August

Join Robert Parkinson of Preston is my Paris to make your own photo book about Bolton. The workshop will include a short tour of Bolton to collect photographs which you will use to make a book about how you see the town. This event is free and suitable for anyone over the age of 18 with an interest in photography. All materials will be provided including cameras (although you are welcome to bring your own). Places are limited and can be booked by emailing worktownobservation@gmail.com

Pub Tour

PUB TOUR POSTER

A guided tour round some of the Bolton pubs featured in Mass Observation’s Worktown study and the book ‘The Pub and the People’. The tour is free but places are limited- please book by emailing worktownobservation@gmail.com.

The Worktown Observation Centre will be observing Bolton 26 July to 2 August. www.worktownobservation.co.uk

Worktown to Cottonopolis

1993.83.17.19

Join a special Worktown inspired event being put on for the Manchester Histories Festival.

A day long workshop based upon the Mass Observation archive of everyday working-class life in Bolton in the late nineteen-thirties. Explore the working and social lives of a Lancashire cotton town.

Learn about Bolton Museum’s Humphrey Spender’s Worktown Collection and his contribution to social documentary  photography.

Join us and the award winning cartoonist Tony Husband(Private Eye, the Times) and become a Mass Observer for a day. At 11.30 we will travel from Worktown (Bolton) to Cottonopolis (Manchester) by train, bus or car. Participants will be encouraged to document their journey by taking photographs, making notes and tweeting and will also be asked to observe in particular happiness, hats and shopping.

The tickets for the event are free  but participants must pay for their own travel.

Please book your place by emailing Bethan Atkins atB.Atkins@bolton.ac.uk  Children must be accompanied by an adult

Spender at the Photographers’ Gallery, London

photographers-gallery-graunThere is a nice write up in the Observer about the new Mass Observation: This Is Your Photo exhibition taking place at the Photographers’ Gallery in London.

It has been curated by Russell Roberts, Reader of Photography at The University Of South Wales.

“The Mass Observation Archive marks a fascinating historical project but still remains an important living resource. Its photographic contents offer ways to consider the development of new forms of realism in Britain to study everyday life in parallel with its extensive written element.”

The exhibition runs from the 2nd of August to the 29th September 2013 ( admission free ).

Become an Observer

12thMay2014Would you like to become an observer? The Mass Observation Archive are asking for volunteers to keep a day diary on 12th May 2013.

In 1937 Mass Observation called for people from all parts of the UK to record everything they did from when they woke up in the morning to when they went to sleep at night on 12th May. This was the day of George VI’s Coronation. The resulting diaries provide a wonderful glimpse into the everyday lives of people across Britain, and have become an invaluable resource for those researching countless aspects of the era.

The Mass Observation Archive is repeating this call on 12th May 2013. The resulting diaries will be stored in the Archive alongside the 1937 documents. May 12th 2013 is likely to be quite an ordinary day, but for those researching, the ‘ordinary’ can often provide extraordinary results.

You can find out how to take part here