Since it’s just past May Day, I thought I’d share some of the discussion I’d had at Tate Liverpool concerning Morris Dancers ‘blacking up’. I have to admit I’d seen the practice for years and had always thought that this was a tradition that alludes to the working class, Miners, dockers, dirty occupations … etc. However, I had never realised that some folks were taking offence. I guess it is a similar argument with pub names like the Black’s Head in Ashbourne. I took these photographs outside the Bell Inn in Nottingham, May 2016. Now, you can see from the text below, that The Morris Federation decided in 2020 that they weren’t going to allow it anymore. Some folks however think that an ancient tradition is being eradicated. However, this aspect crept in in the 19th century … However, the Morris tradition date back to the 15th Century. So, it seems, traditions can change. My attitude has also.>>Extract from Radical Landscapes : P/132> Tate LiverpoolDARREN In the early 1970s, Homer Sykes began documenting traditional British folk traditions and annual events. Do Boss Morris relate to these images of these traditional customs, as a contemporary all-female Morris side? Can you talk about the diversity of traditions across rural Britain?LILY These images totally inform how we do things because we’re always looking back on other folk traditions, all the things that make them really English and silly and fun. We incorporate the spirit of them into our own performances and practices but also like to make things uniquely ours too. Most Morris dances relate to a particular town or a county. So for example, we can recognise a dance from Sherborne in Gloucestershire by the way the hankies move or from the stepping patterns and figures.ALEX A specific story or meaning seems to be at the heart of a lot of these folk customs, which is what makes the tradition as a whole so diverse and often eccentric. Each is a very specific activity that’s deeply embedded in the place that they sparked up from.LILY It really evokes that feeling of a spectacle and you can imagine how exciting this would have been for the towns and villages at the time. There’s a real sense of community in these images which we can relate to with Boss Morris as so much of our practice is to connect with people, especially with wider audiences.JEREMY I first came across Homer Sykes’ book Once a Year at my local library. These images are what got me interested in this kind of behaviour and imagery. They are my origin story if you like. It was the strangeness that drew me in as a child, every image is full of mystery. I was into Dr Who, and The Burry Man for example is not a million miles away from what you’re watching on television. It’s a form of science fiction from the past. Also I’m from London and these places and rituals seemed incredibly foreign, if not exotic to me. I met Homer Sykes a few years ago and I was telling him how that book had changed my life and I don’t doubt I was the first person to say this to him.Some of the images in Sykes’ book, which are not in the exhibition, document folk traditions with performers in ‘blackface” which we’ll come to later. How do Boss Morris take folk customs into their own hands, and modify them for modern audiences?LILY We never intended to take a folk tradition and use it as a platform to talk about these things, but over the years we’ve been dancing it has become that. We’ve found ourselves immersed in this incredible tradition and absorb what we can, reacting to it in a way that is relevant to us. We like to have fun with the customs we create and they’re not historical re-enactments.ALEX We’re growing our own set of traditions. We’ve never really had an agenda; the group just took on a life of its own. We’ve essentially clicked into a pagan yearly calendar but we’re not sticking to things too strictly. For example, we dance on the solstices and get up at dawn on May Day every year, but then there’s also our more surreal rituals like eating pickled onion Monster Munch on Halloween. It’s reactive to life at the time. We’re instinctual and organic in the way we grow as a collective and are as happy adapting older traditions as we are inventing new ones. Our yearly calendar is slowly filling up with an array of different traditions that have meaning to us as a group.JEREMY There are problematic issues within the Morris tradition. There was opposition to the ban, think that some blackface was an attempt to disguise or referred to mining and some was an imitation of Black people from seeing or hearing about minstrel shows, so it’s about disentangling this. But if it’s offensive and upsetting people then it has to be addressed. Just because something is a ‘tradition doesn’t make it OK or mean that it can’t be changed or adapted.The point with some of these events is that yes, it is the same every year, its something you can rely on. But often there is huge change within the rituals as participants get old and die and so these events inevitably become about the passing of time in the most fundamental way within an apparently unchanging event.LILY We are in total agreement with you there, we decided early on we stood against it. It’s a small part of the Morris tradition that have worn blackface in the past and when The Morris Federation decided in 2020 that they weren’t going to allow it, we fully supported and welcomed that change.ALEX We feel strongly that the use of full black face paint should be taken off the streets and feel it’s long overdue. There were some who were upset saying that it was killing tradition whereas we think of it as the other way around.JEREMY It would kill the whole movement effectively couldn’t it?ALEX Exactly and when you research it, the link between Morris dancing and blackface is tenuous. There’s this panic that an ancient tradition is being eradicated when in reality it’s a fairly new thing when you consider Morris started in the fifteenth century and blackface only became common in the mid nineteenth century. We feel strongly that it’s an aspect that should change and people should be proud of why they changed it rather than have this death grip on a tiny aspect of the tradition.JEREMY As traditions go, 170 years isn’t that long in terms of folk culture. That’s a recent tradition, so you can argue you could change it again. It’s good that there is an appetite forchange and we’re bringing up contemporary discussions around identity and race to broaden its appeal. Where does the inspiration for the Boss Morris outfits come from?ALEX It’s got to excite us and we take inspiration from all over, whether it’s the early iconography depicting Morris dancers costume or drag makeup. Our aesthetic has been born out of the fact that we’re all creatives and it’s been really interesting to work collaboratively on the kit.LILY It’s collaborative and organic. We bring ideas from our own personal interests and folk crafts play an important role. There are basket weavers, jewellers, knitters and crocheters among us. We take inspiration from anything really, we’re not prescribed in what we look at but there’s certainly an aesthetic that represents us. We like to weave in things that represent Stroud, the town where we live. Stroud was well known for its manufacture of cloth, like the famous ‘Stroudwater Scarlet’ used for soldier’s uniforms and they’d weave and dye the fabric red, leaving it to dry on the surrounding hills. We had a design with a river running down and red cloth representing the uniforms. We overlaid drawings of our dance moves on top. There are small details drawing connections from Stroud and its landscapes. We made ponchos that were cut out of luminous yellow tennis ball fabric donated from a Stroud textile company that has made snooker baize and tennis ball fabric for years.JEREMY When you first turned up at these events, what was the response from more traditional sides or people that have been doing it for a long time?ALEX When a new Morris side springs up; there is concern that it’s just a gimmick. We were so far out, people did think ‘oh this is a bit over the top’ and ‘they’re just doing it for the costumes’. There was a prickly reaction from some people but I can totally understand that. There are loads of Morris sides in Stroud and most were absolutely lovely and really excited and encouraging. You’ve got to prove yourself and show people that you’re genuinely interested in the dancing because it would upset people if you’re not doing your double steps right or waggling your hankies out of time.
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Tash on YouTube
- Pro-Palestinian Protest, Nottingham 19 October 2024
- Tour of Britain Cycling Competition, Stage 4, through Hucknall. Friday 6th Sept
- Nottingham Carnival 2024 [180x edit]
- Green Festival Show @Broadway Gallery, Exhibition Walkthrough
- Green Festival, Broadway Gallery Edit. 60mins
- Nadia Whittome MP Speech at Gay Pride, Nottingham
- Birmingham Airport Monorail
- Landing at Birmingham. Returning from Porto. RyanAir Boeing 737-800
- Taking off from Porto, returning to Birmingham. RyanAir Boeing 737-800
- Catholic Parade at Matosinhos on Sunday, Porto
- On the Metro crossing the Rio Douro, Porto, Portugal
- Friday Night Bar at Casa Da Música, Porto
- Having a chill at beachfront café, Porto
- Coast road from Foz to Matosinhos, Porto, Portugal 2
- Coast road from Foz to Matosinhos, Porto, Portugal 1
Mullet official non-binary haircut
Contact sheet of portraits of American photographer and journalist Dennis Stock as he holds a camera and looks through the viewfinder, 1951.
(📷 Andreas Feininger/LIFE Picture Collection)
#LIFEMagazine #AndreasFeininger #Photography #DennisStock #Iconic #Archival #1950sCrashed car left for weeks now listed as 'landmark'
So wonderful to be featured in @guardian gallery today as part of the @The_RPS Awards
You can see some work from Through Our Lens and Age of Wonder @BiBresearch as part of my work with young people.
@bradford2025
Young working-class people being ‘blocked’ from creative industries, study finds
We go to a short break, where I went live on instagram to update people over there on what's happening at the #spycops inquiry. Joined by Patrick from @veggiesnottm
Here’s a video produced by “Led by Donkeys” out of the U.K. that puts down the timeline of how Musk used X to get Donald Trump elected. I would save it because I don’t think it will be up for long.
Here’s the statement from @TheBPPA backing press photographer Joel Goodman @pixel8foto in his fight against a production order by @syptweet, forcing him to hand over his images.
The press are not police evidence gatherers. #pressfreedomThis should be front page news. Mutual Aid between free individuals - ✊
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Recent Posts
- The undercover copper who spied on Keir Starmer and seduced the activist the young Leftie lawyer was representing. 25 October 2024
- Today in policing history: #spycop Bob Lambert sets fire to Debenhams Store, Harrow, 1987. 15 October 2024
- The Battle of Cable Street 4 October 2024
- Castlemorton Picture : Guardian online 28 September 2024
- Castlemorton picture in the Guardian again today 28 September 2024
- Photography Turns 200 Years Old Today 17 September 2024
- “That’s the new law. The one where you can lose everything” – The section 60 police powers to evict Traveller roadside camps – two years on 13 September 2024
- BBC Report : Free ‘grassroots’ festival returns to Nottingham 7 September 2024
- Tour of Britain Cycling Competition, Stage 4, through Hucknall 6 September 2024
- Nottingham celebrates opening of Green Heart – a brand-new space for community and nature in heart of the city 4 September 2024
- Nottingham Green Festival Report on NottsTV 3 September 2024
- Tash at the Broadway Gallery Exhibition 29 August 2024
- Green Festival Show @Broadway Gallery, Exhibition Walkthrough 28 August 2024
- Broadway Listing : Introducing the Nottingham Green Festival and its history 23 August 2024
- Broadway Gallery Exhibition : A show introducing the Nottingham Green Festival and its history 22 August 2024
- Green Festival, Broadway Gallery Edit. 60mins 22 August 2024
- Nottingham Carnival 2024 [180x edit] 21 August 2024
- Report : Under the Rainbow | Documents and Artefacts from Five Decades of LGBTQ+ Struggle and Liberation 18 August 2024
- Under the Rainbow : Documents and Artefacts From Five Decades of LGBTQ+ Struggle and Liberation 25 July 2024
- Facebook Pix : Mission to Porto, Portugal 25 July 2024
An ongoing diary of stuff, allsorts, and things wot happen ……
I am a photographer with a special interest to document the lives of travelling people and those attending Festivals, Stonehenge etc, what the press often describe as ‘New Age Travellers’ and many social concerns.
With my photography, I have tried to say something of the wide variety of people engaged in ‘Alternatives’, and youths’ many sub-cultures and to present a more positive view.
I have photographed many free and commercial events and have, in recent years, extended my work to include dance parties (’rave culture’), gay-rights events, environmental direct actions, and protest against the Criminal Justice Act and more recently, issues surrounding the Global Capitalism.
Further, police surveillance has recently become a very important subject for me!
In recognition of this work, received a ‘Winston’ from Privacy International, at the 1998 ‘Big Brother’ Awards. The citation reads: “Alan Lodge is a photographer who has spent more than a decade raising awareness of front-line police surveillance activities, particularly the endemic practice of photographing demonstrators and activists”.
I am based in Nottingham, UK.
Quotes & Thoughts
“Cowardice asks the question, ‘Is it safe?’ Expediency asks the question, ‘Is it politic?’ Vanity asks the question, ‘Is it popular?’ But, conscience asks the question, ‘Is it right?’
And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but one must take it because one’s conscience tells one that it is right.”
Martin Luther King Jr.“In Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance.
In Switzerland they had brotherly love – they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock!!”
Harry Lime [Orsen Wells] The Third Man 1949“Civilization will not attain to its perfection, until the last stone from the last church, falls on the last priest.”
Emile Zola“….I have an important message to deliver to all the cute people all over the world.
If you’re out there and you’re not cute, maybe you’re beautiful, I just want to tell you somethin’- there’s more of us ugly mother-fuckers than you are, hey-y, so watch out now…”
Frank Zappa