Thousands gather at Stonehenge

BBC News Online

21st June 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/england/wiltshire/3823379.stm

About 21,000 revellers gathered at Stonehenge in Wiltshire overnight to mark the summer solstice.

The 5,000-year-old World Heritage site was open to the public, following earlier years in which it was closed amid fears of damage to the stones.

Some 150 police were on site this year, and a number of people were arrested for climbing on the stones and other offences, a BBC correspondent said.

Misty skies had obscured the 0458 BST sunrise for about 30 minutes, she said.

Other years have seen battles between police and revellers, including the infamous 1985 encounter, dubbed the Battle of Beanfield.

A violent confrontation between 300 people who wanted to reach the stones and the police saw 12 people hospitalised.

The fire symbolically welcomes the sun for the longest day of the year, part of the seasonal wheel which we as druids and pagans celebrate

King Arthur Pendragon

This year police issued several warnings and said anybody going to the site was liable to be searched.

The constabulary added that traffic on the A303 and A360 next to the site was expected to be very busy during Monday morning.

English Heritage, which looks after the site, also issued strict rules. Those attending were only allowed a small amount of alcohol for personal use.

And only acoustic instruments were allowed.

Inside the ring, thousands packed around groups of drummers and other musicians while some took the opportunity to sprawl on the ancient stones normally beyond public reach.

‘Celebration’

But the focus of the activity was on an impromptu open-air dance next to the famous Heal Stone, the marker for sunrise on summer solstice.

Druid leader “King Arthur Pendragon” presided over the festivities standing amid a ring of flaming torches overshadowed by a pair of giant horns, lit by burning branches.

“King Arthur”, who adopted the name in 1986 to denote his position as “Battle Chieftain of the Council of British Druids”, said the festivities marked the imminent arrival of dawn.

He said: “The fire symbolically welcomes the sun for the longest day of the year, part of the seasonal wheel which we as druids and pagans celebrate.

“It’s not a day in church for us, it’s a celebration, we don’t sit in pews.”

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Stonehenge Summer Solstice 2004 Pictures

A jaunt out to another ‘Managed Access’ at Stonehenge, at the permission [and conditions] of English Heritage.

I had a nice time, met old friends and some wierd and wonderful people, doing wierd and wonderful things. BUT …. it is not as I would have it. The whole policing operation and security policy might seem a little ‘over the top’ for those just wanting to gather for an overnight party. The operations are more intelligable though, if you have had any experience of the free festivals. In the names of health & Safety, and public order, rules and regs are devised, together with the limits of stay, to stiffle any possibility / attempt to re-establish

“The Peoples’ Free Festival of Albion at Stonehenge”

This place has such a history in recent times, that the public demand that there clearly is for a gathering at this time, that has been squashed by force. The police money continues to be spent to resist this idea. Now 20 years since the last proper event there and next year is 20 years since the Battle of the Beanfield http://tash.gn.apc.org/sh_bean.htm

Add it all together and the sum is huge. Other parts of the world hold events like this up to the world. The Kum Mella festival has 15 million participants every four years. The authorities plan for years and turn out in some force, BUT to help those gathering and to help enable the event. This country, well …..

More pictures from this set, on my PhotoBlog at:

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=141373

and on Indymedia at:

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/293800.html

Pictures of last years 2003 events, on various sites at:

UK Indymedia Stonehenge Summer Solstice 2003 Pictures

http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2003/06/273217.html

PhotoBlog 2003 at:

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=4037

and on my webserver:

Stonehenge Solstice 2003 :: http://tash.dns2go.com/xtra/stonehenge2003/index.htm

Also, a reminder to check out some ealier work, describing how we have arrived at this phase, in the story, The story so far .. .. ..

Stonehenge: http://tash.gn.apc.org/stones1.htm

Solstice Ritual: http://tash.gn.apc.org/solst_0.htm

[pdf version] http://tash.gn.apc.org/solstice.pdf

Beanfield: http://tash.gn.apc.org/sh_bean.htm

Operation Solstice: http://tash.gn.apc.org/op_solstice.htm

The Story so far: http://tash.gn.apc.org/history.htm

My Diary: http://tash.gn.apc.org/diary.htm

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Revisiting Britain’s biggest free festival

By Steve Hawkes BBC News Online

21st June 2004

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/entertainment/music/3662921.stm

This Monday sees the 30th anniversary of the biggest free festival in British history.

BBC News Online examines how a small gathering of hippies celebrating the summer solstice at Stonehenge evolved into the high point of the British counter-cultural calendar.

Last year, more than 30,000 people gathered at Stonehenge to mark the summer solstice.

But police in Wiltshire and neighbouring Hampshire warned they would not tolerate any unlicensed “mass gatherings” after the midsummer event.

And officers were out in force to thwart any attempts to hold parties.

Andover divisional commander Superintendent Mark Chatterton said: “We are not being killjoys.

“We are all in favour of people having a good time, provided the event is properly licensed to ensure that it is safe for everyone.”

Stonehenge Free Festival was never licensed.

And in 1985 – after being banned by English Heritage – it became so unsafe that no-one actually reached the ancient stone circle.

Phil Russell, the orphaned son of a wealthy landowner, and Jeremy Ratter, who later co-founded the anarcho-punk band Crass, staged the first Stonehenge Free Festival during the summer solstice of 1974.

Five hundred hippies climbed a barbed wire fence erected by the Ministry of Works.

And after the solstice, a hardcore of 30 defied a court injunction to stay – for another six months.

The publicity surrounding their court case ensured the attendance doubled for the solstice the following year.

Mr Ratter later recalled the 1975 festival: “Wood fires, tents and tipis, free food stalls, stages and bands, music and magic… old friends met new, hands touched, bodies entwined, minds expanded and, in one tiny spot on our Earth, love and peace had become a reality.”

But the festival’s co-founder was not there.

Arrested for possession of LSD the previous month, Mr Russell had been committed to a psychiatric hospital.

Released immediately after the 10-day festival, he committed suicide weeks later.

Mr Russell’s ashes were scattered over the stones during the summer solstice of 1976 – by which time, the festival’s attendance had again doubled.

And, fuelled by the myth of martyrdom, the numbers continued to grow at the same rate until 70,000 people attended the 10th annual Stonehenge Free Festival on 21 June 1984.

It remains the biggest free festival in British history.

But the following year, the annual event’s colourful history came to an abrupt end.

And Stonehenge remained closed to the public during the summer solstice for the following 15 years.

On 1 June 1985, 300 would-be festival-goers were arrested – and 12 put in hospital – following a violent confrontation with the police.

Five hundred officers from six different forces dropped 15 tons (15,041kg) of gravel onto a road seven miles (11.27km) from the stones, and used council vehicles to block the path of a 140-vehicle convoy travelling to Stonehenge.

What happened next is hotly disputed.

The police say they were attacked with lumps of wood, stones and petrol bombs.

But those in the convoy say police “ambushed” their peaceful procession of vehicles – methodically smashing windows, beating people on the head with truncheons as they tried to surrender, dragging women along by their hair, and using sledgehammers to damage the interiors of their coaches.

English Heritage had secured a court injunction to prevent 83 named individuals from travelling within a few miles of Stonehenge.

But the Battle of the Beanfield – as it quickly became known – happened outside the jurisdiction of the injunction, and was indicative of a harder line being adopted at the highest level of government against the growing number of hippies spending their summers on the free festival circuit.

Every year since Margaret Thatcher had become prime minister in 1979, the number of “new-age travellers” had doubled – partly because of the growing number of evictions of squatters in London, historian Andy Worthington, the author of Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion, told BBC News Online.

And in 1982, 135 vehicles had left Stonehenge Free Festival and driven to join the Women’s Peace Camp outside the airbase at Greenham Common, where US cruise missiles were housed.

The self-styled Peace Convoy had evaded 2,000 police officers to stage their own Cosmic Counter-Cruise Carnival behind the base, during which sections of the fence were pulled down, Mr Worthington told BBC News Online.

And from that day on the writing was on the wall.

“Thatcher decided to take on the travellers.”

Mrs Thatcher would later tell the Commons she was “only too delighted to do anything we can to make life difficult for hippy convoys”, adding that “if the present law is inadequate we will have to introduce fresh law”.

True to her word, the 1986 Public Order Act made trespass a criminal offence and stated: “Two people proceeding in a given direction can constitute a procession and can be arrested as a threat to civil order”.

This was the final nail in the coffin of the British free festival movement – effectively stopping the “new-age travellers” and festival-goers in their tracks.

“People split all over the place,” festival photographer Alan Lodge told BBC News Online.

“Large numbers went to Europe.”

But rather than putting an end to the politicisation of the Peace Convoy, the Battle of the Beanfield pushed a significant number of free festival veterans further towards the activism of the emerging anti-globalisation and road protest movements.

As Mr Lodge, who was there, succinctly puts it: “If you have been hit around the head with a truncheon, you don’t feel the same as you did before.”

And by driving the free festival scene underground, the Public Order Act inadvertently paved the way for the numerous illegal rave parties that sprung up in increasingly remote locations during the late 1980s.

Today, Stonehenge is again at the centre of a bitterly contested conflict.

A plan to build a 1.3 mile (2.1km) tunnel under the World Heritage Site to reduce traffic congestion has divided opinion.

And with at least 30,000 people expected to converge on Stonehenge again for this summer’s solstice – on Monday 21 June – the stones seem set to continue to arouse passions on both sides of the cultural divide for at least another 30 years.

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An Exhibition of Resistance to BP and Big Oil, London, June 15th-21st 2004

Have been invited to contribute some pictures to this event. I wish them well ……

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/04/289874.html

Vinny van GoGo, 25.04.2004 22:51

To celebrate the beginning of the end of BP’s sponsorship of the National Portrait Award, we (London Rising Tide) invite you to help put together An Exhibition of Resistance to BP and Big Oil, from June 15th-21st 2004.

We are asking you to rub your eyes, wipe away the mirage of ‘sustainable development’ and ‘beyond petroleum’, and create a truer portrait of an oil company in any way you like. It’s time to strip away the greenwash; in fact it’s time to save the whole planet from these robber barons with their bloody oil wars, climate chaos and massive pay hikes. We know there are better worlds out there, and they don’t include profit or fossil fuels…(or an art market, for that matter). It’s our desire to see London ablaze with powerful, passionate, positive and politicised art during the week – on streets, on airwaves, in galleries, in squats, cinemas – you name it. We’ve got a few plans we could do with some help with, but we’d be just as happy to see you and/or your compadres plan and carry out your own events and actions.

Events planned for the week include:

* A parade of true portraits of an oil company on June 21st (the date the National Portrait Award [NPA] winner will be announced) from BP HQ (St. James’ Square, SW1) to the National Portrait Gallery (NPG, St. Martin’s Lane). At the NPG we’ll celebrate our creations and insist that the gallery severs its links with BP and Big Oil. From there we’ll head to our own space for more information and celebration.

* a spontaneous ‘art not oil’ happening in the NPG on June 16th, (NPA private view day).

* greeting visitors to BP-sponsored relay of ‘Faust’ – an opera about a man selling his soul to the devil? Hmm, how appropriate – from the Royal Opera House to Covent Garden Piazza, Canary Wharf, Belfast and, er, Eden Project, 19.6.04

* Your event here – your help’s needed to make these and more amazing acts of resistance to the oil madness take place during the week. No one’s in charge, so if you have a fiendish plan that just might work, get out and make it happen…

Public meeting to meet, plot, eat and create: Sat May 8th, 2pm.

London Rising Tide benefit gig with films, food etc., Tufnell Park occupied social centre, 156-158 Fortess Road, May 13th.

Let’s kick the (oil) corporations out of the galleries, (not to mention museums, opera, planet earth etc…)

Contacts and further information: LRT, part of the Rising Tide UK and international networks, takes creative action to combat the root causes of climate chaos and to help build movements for social & ecological justice.

London Rising Tide: 07969 786770; london@risingtide.org.uk

c/o 62 Fieldgate Street, London E1 1ES

www.londonrisingtide.org.uk (from May 1st)

See also www.burningplanet.net & Rising Tide UK: www.risingtide.org.uk

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Stonehenge 360

Check out the 360 deg. image on the BBC website. An informative little toy.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/wiltshire/360/360_stonehenge_001.shtml

Interesting eh!!

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The Stonehenge Festival

Since it’s coming up to the Summer Solstice, I thought I’d remind you all, what the ‘Peoples’ Free Festival of Albion at Stonehenge’ looked like.

Here is an aerial view.

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Pilgrims’ progress

Guardian Society

http://society.guardian.co.uk/environment/news/0,14129,1239334,00.html

As antiquarian rock star Julian Cope reflects on the significance of ancient megalithic monuments Andy Worthington says attempts to suppress the popularity of the summer solstice at Stonehenge and Avebury are doomed

Wednesday June 16, 2004

As the summer solstice approaches, heritage managers at Britain’s most popular ancient monuments, Stonehenge and its near-neighbour Avebury, will be hoping to avoid confrontation with pagans, travellers and hordes of the young and curious.

The sources of potential conflict are issues of access, ownership and preservation that began over a hundred years ago, when Druid revivalists and crowds of the general public first began to gather at Stonehenge. These issues came to a head in 1985, when the Stonehenge Free Festival, an annual event that had grown from a small gathering in 1974 to become a city-sized alternative state in 1984, was brutally suppressed at the Battle of the Beanfield.

In the wake of the festival’s suppression, a four-mile exclusion zone was set up around Stonehenge every summer solstice. Although the authorities achieved a short-term aim, crippling the traveller scene that was at the heart of the festival, first with violence and then with waves of draconian legislation, the frustrated impulses of the festival community mutated into a new raft of interest groups, all staking their own claims on the monument.

A particularly successful example was the road protest movement, famous for campaigns at Twyford Down, Solsbury Hill and Newbury, which was suffused with the general growth of paganism during these years, with its emphasis on nature and ecology, gender equality, libertarianism and the revived, or invented, festivals of an ancient ritual year.

As the violence of the 1980s gave way to a more conciliatory approach, large crowds began to appear at Avebury for the major pagan festivals, and Stonehenge was finally reopened to the public on the solstice in 2000, although only after the House of Lords judged that the exclusion zone was illegal.

The new access arrangements have been phenomenally successful, with over 30,000 people attending the solstice in 2003, and a workable compromise has clearly been achieved, balancing the demands of all the different interest groups with the concerns of those charged with the conservation of Britain’s ancient heritage. Nevertheless, doubts over the sustainability of these events remain.

Although English Heritage and the police are resolutely upbeat about the success of the new access arrangements at Stonehenge, the National Trust’s property manager, Scott Green, has suggested that “the trust is not convinced that the solstice observance as it is currently celebrated is sustainable in the long-term”.

At Avebury, the fault lines are even more evident. At the solstice in 2003, the local council enraged everyone from pagans to the Campaign to Protect Rural England by painting double yellow lines on all the roadside verges in and around the village, and on the night itself there were widespread complaints about the police’s heavy-handed approach to removing illegally parked vehicles.

Whilst I understand the concerns of those outlined above, I suspect that all attempts to suppress the popularity of the summer solstice are doomed to failure. For better or worse, the solstice has established itself as an alternative national holiday, a potent mixture of spirituality, politics and celebration that is unlikely to diminish in popularity in the near future.

· Andy Worthington is the author of Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion, published on June 21

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Stonehenge Celebration and Subversion

Andy Worthington

This innovative social history looks in detail at how the summer solstice celebrations at Stonehenge have brought together different aspects of British counter-culture to make the monument a ‘living temple’ and an icon of alternative Britain. The history of the celebrants and counter-cultural leaders is interwoven with the viewpoints of the land-owners, custodians and archaeologists who have generally attempted to impose order on the shifting patterns of these modern-day mythologies.

The story of the Stonehenge summer solstice celebrations begins with the Druid revival of the 18th century and the earliest public gatherings of the 19th and early 20th centuries. In the social upheavals of the 1960s and early 70s, these trailblazers were superseded by the Stonehenge Free Festival. This evolved from a small gathering to an anarchic free state the size of a small city, before its brutal suppression at the Battle of the Beanfield in 1985.

In the aftermath of the Beanfield, the author examines how the political and spiritual aspirations of the free festivals evolved into both the rave scene and the road protest movement, and how the prevailing trends in the counter-culture provided a fertile breeding ground for the development of new Druid groups, the growth of paganism in general, and the adoption of other sacred sites, in particular Stonehenge’s gargantuan neighbour at Avebury.

The account is brought up to date with the reopening of Stonehenge on the summer solstice in 2000, the unprecedented crowds drawn by the new access arrangements, and the latest source of conflict, centred on a bitterly-contested road improvement scheme.

“The strange events that swirled around Stonehenge in the last couple of decades the Festival, the Convoy, the annual summer solstice ritual of confrontation between forces of order and of disorder were so bizarre there needs to be record of them. In his wonderful and often funny book, Andy Worthington tells this, the oddest tale ever told about the most famous ancient place of them all.”

Christopher Chippindale, Reader in Archaeology at Cambridge University and author of Stonehenge Complete

Published by Alternative Albion, an imprint of Heart of Albion Press.

ISBN 1 872883 76 1. June 2004.

415 x 175 mm, 281 + xviii pages, 147 illustrations, paperback £14.95

http://www.hoap.co.uk/alternative.htm#SCAS

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20th anniversary of last Stonehenge Free Festival

A celebration of the 20th anniversary of the last Stonehenge Free Festival is taking place at the Vertigo Arts Centre/491 Club in Leytonstone on Saturday 19 June, featuring a photo exhibition, films and music, and tying in with the publication of Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion, the first full-length counter-cultural history of Stonehenge. Cover image and further information at: http://www.hoap.co.uk/alternative.htm#SCAS

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New police powers to stop raves

BBC News http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/somerset/3808411.stm

Avon and Somerset police are taking advantage of new legislation to help break up illegal gatherings and raves before they happen.

Previously, 100 people had to be gathered in an open space before officers could take action.

The new order gives them powers to break up a crowd of 20 or more people in open or indoor areas.

And anyone who is moved on faces arrest if they try to start up another gathering within 24 hours.

The force is believed to be one of the first in the country to adopt the new legislation under the Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003.

‘Early Action’

Operational planning head, Superintendent Adrian Coombs, said police could now deal with incidents more effectively rather than relying on public order legislation.

“In the past we’ve had a situation where officers realised they could do little until a rave had been going on for some time, meaning serious disruption to both local people and officers.

“Now officers will have the power to take early action to prevent a rave getting off the ground in the first place,” he said.

The new legislation also gives police powers to remove 20 or more people suspected of trespass, which will stop raves in disused warehouses taking place.

and

So, there you have it! yet another turn of the screw. I pointed out the advance of these law changes, earlier on my blog at:

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2003_10_05_tash_lodge_archive.html#106569213958283190

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2003/10/278956.html

An earlier ‘Rant’ about it all at, and further info:

http://tash.gn.apc.org/rant_1.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/sys_opinion.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/law_impl.htm also ….

New toys (and new skills) for the Old Bill

http://partyvibe.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?s=&threadid=1681

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Win Hill, Derbyshire Peak District

After a week of actions on G8 [and Stonehenge stuff next weekend], I thought I would put on my boots and get some exercise and some views. To remind myself, what’s it’s all about!

So anyway, starting out from the Yorkshire Bridge, up the really steep slop that is Win Hill. OS ref SK187852. Got all sweaty. Dithered about for a few pictures and then on to Loose Hill. Dithered again, then stuck NW along the course of the old Roman Road to the guide post at OS ref SK162874 Have come from the other direction here many times, usually starting out from Mam Tor, then along the ridgeway to Loose Hill. A lovely day, and put in about twelve miles up there. Lots to see………

More pictures on my FotoBlog at:

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=133511

Here is a map of the area.

http://www.streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=418660&y=384717&z=3&sv=418660,384717&st=4&mapp=newmap.srf&searchp=newsearch.srf&dn=727

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D-Day remembered in Nottingham

Nottingham commemorated the 60th anniversary of the D-Day Landings with a parade and drum-head service in the Old Market Square and a civic reception at Nottingham’s Council House.

The ceremony, on Sunday June 13 at 3pm, is one week later than the date of the Allied invasion on June 6, 1944, so that veterans and their families could travel to France for European commemorations and also join in the City’s observance.

Veterans from the Allied Invasion lead a march past and a representative of the Notts branch of the Normandy Veterans laid a wreath.

The service was conducted by the Royal British Legion County Chaplain, Rev. Bryan Barrowdale, and the Lord Mayor of Nottingham, Councillor John Hartshorne, read the lesson.

http://www.nottinghamcity.gov.uk/watsnew/bulletin/database/articledetails.asp?ArticleID=3469

More pictures of the event, on my PhotoBlog at:

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=132469

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Nottingham: Another Anti-G8/McDonalds event

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/293277.html

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=131422

This week, Nottingham folks have had a ‘critical mass’ bike ride around the city on Tuesday. On Wednesday, they blockaded the road to the oil installations at Colwick. And to round the whole thing of, people juggled and clowned about outside McDonalds in Clumber Street, Nottingham Centre on Saturday afternoon. Many leaflets about the G8 issues were distributed.

Neighbourhood Wardens and City Centre Street Wardens, [does anyone know the difference?] were on scene shortly, but they went away eventually. No police attended. Apparently you can’t juggle in the street without a licence from the council and also need to have Public Liabily Insurance!! Isn’t it amazing wot you learn on a protest?

Anyway ………

The regular viewer of my work will know of my interest in police surveillance methods.

http://tash.gn.apc.org/surv_10.htm & http://tash.gn.apc.org/watched1.htm

However, this event was extra interesting to me, since this was the first time I’ve seen one of these wardens, photograph people with a small digital and then did me!

I may apply for the piccy under the provisions of the Data Protection Act, ‘Subject Access Request’ section.

Previous events from this week. A good effort Nottingham.

UK Indymedia Nottingham Critical Mass 8june2004

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/292966.html

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=129239

UK Indymedia Nottingham Colwick ‘Oil’ Demonstration – Blockade

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/293040.html

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=129163

Colwick Oil Installation, Nottingham

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=129926

and some earlier protest at:

http://tash.gn.apc.org/gal_rts1.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/gal_rts10.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/gal_action10.htm

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‘Greenwash or Us’ Street Party

Great action at Colwick you lot. We’ll put some pix in the Exhibition…

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/293040.html

Private View, Public Exposure

Meet at BP HQ, 1 St. James’ Square, 4pm, 16th June 2004

This is a call out asking you to join London Rising Tide to celebrate our resistance to the corporate hijacking of the arts by BP and their greenwash friends.

On 16th June at 4pm there will be a Street Party moving from outside BP’s offices in St. James Square (between Green Park and Piccadilly) to the National Portrait Gallery where BP sponsors the National Portrait Award, pulling their sophisticated brand of cultural PR wool over everyone’s eyes.

Whilst BP are busy encouraging British artists and their creative talent, indigenous peoples are having their lands stolen, poisoned and destroyed. All over the world people’s livelihoods and human rights are severely violated as BP, ExxonMobil, Shell and the rest of the industry plunder and mutilate for the sake of oil (like in the disastrous Baku Ceyhan and Sakhalin pipelines). Our environment and our climate are being thrown into chaos whilst the culprits try to blind us with their sunny logos and cultural sponsorship.

We want to tell BP and the NPG that the greenwash is not working. The National Portrait Award holds its Private View and party (for entrants, judges, the media and BP cronies) inside the NPG on the evening of June 16th. Let’s show them a real party, a party of resistance with noise, art and music and make their private party a very public one.

Bring your own art (or somebody else’s)!

It would be great to see the street party alive with our alternative art and show the NPG the true faces of big oil. Bring any medium that symbolises this, painting, photographs, banners, costume, music and dance.

Exhibition of Resistance to Big Oil and the Corporate Sponsorship of ‘the Arts’

Private View, Public Exposure is part of a wider week of events as part of Greenwash Or Us, an Exhibition of Resistance to Big Oil and the Corporate Sponsorship of ‘the Arts’, happening at various reclaimed spaces in central London. There will be week of alternative art depicting the true face of an oil company, films, workshops, music and debate from 14th to 21st June. Venue to be confirmed.

If you’d like to get involved, we’d love your help; if you can send us your art or just want to know more,

please contact: 07969 786770

62 Fieldgate Street, London E1 1ES

http://www.londonrisingtide.org.uk

http://www.risingtide.org.uk

email us at: london@risingtide.org.uk

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Nottingham, Colwick ‘Oil’ Demonstration / Blockade

On June 8th – 10th 2004, the G8 Summit will be staged on Sea Island, 80 miles south of Savannah in the United States. This location has been specifically chosen by the G8 because it is impossible for protestors to access and therefore groups in the United States have put out a call for decentralised actions.

In this spirit of solidarity, the Dissent! Network, a UK-wide anti-capitalist network that operates by the People’s Global Action hallmarks, is calling for local actions and events between 8th-10th June. Through a diversity of tactics Dissent hopes to make people aware of next years G8 summit in the UK and the growing movement, which opposes it. Actions could range from educational films and events, to street parties and targeted direct action against the UK government.

The leaders of the eight richest, industrial countries may hide on mountain-tops and remote islands, they may surround themselves by fences and police, but they cannot hide from the global movement against capitalism. From the War on Iraq to the global economic and ecological meltdown, the policies of the G8 are clearly corrupt. In 2004, Dissent! and others are already building momentum against the G8. In 2005, we will disrupt the G8 meetings in Britain. The days of the G8 are numbered.

In solidarity with the States protest movements, in the UK there will be protests and events against the G8.

This was Nottingham’s contribution to these matters, by taking direct action to blocade the Oil Terminal at Colwick. After erecting the tripod, there were a few instances of threats of violence, by lorry drivers and others, inconvenienced by the blockade. But all turned out well, People volunterily lifted the road block at 12.30.

To get involved contact Dissent!: http://www.dissent.org.uk

More on my Foto-blog at

http://tashcamuk.fotopages.com/?entry=129163

and Indymedia at:

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/293040.html

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Critical Mass : Nottingham

Critical Mass. meet at 4.30pm Market Square

A few folks cylced in Nottingham today, in support of environmental matters. To draw attention to an awareness of the madness of global capitalism. http://www.dissent.org.uk

The G8 meeting is happening now, on an island, so we protest, were we can.

I took these few piccys, before they cycled out of view, and I lost ’em!

more on Indymedia at:

http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2004/06/292966.html

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UK Hippy Forum

http://uk-hippy.com

This chap has just started up his boards. Pay a visit and drop in ….

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Arm implant gives clubbers access all areas

Oh no!! I think if this catches on, and I really hope it doesn’t, corporate Glastonbury and the like, will find it very useful. It will keep out the riff-raff eh?

Patrick Barkham

Saturday May 22, 2004

The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1222291,00.html

You stroll past the queue outside and walk straight into the club slowing down to flash your arm past an electronic scanner. At the bar you claim your vodka tonic by flexing your triceps at the bar staff and even the door to the chillout room opens automatically when you approach.

It may not be for the squeamish but clubbers who want to dodge queues and get VIP treatment every night at a Spanish nightclub can have a microchip implanted in their left arm.

The chip, a radio frequency identification device the size of a grain of rice, gives members instant access to the VIP lounge at the Baja Beach Club, a popular haunt for British revellers. Injected into the upper left arm, it also allows them to reserve tables or pay for drinks by flexing their triceps in front of an electronic reader. The scheme is the brainchild of Conrad Chase, an American entrepreneur who owns the 3,000-capacity club in Barcelona.

The glass chip is injected by a licensed nurse at the club in a simple operation that costs £83. The chipped clubber is then given a 100 credit to spend at the bar.

Mr Chase said the operation reflected the club’s “philosophy of originality”.

“The club will know who you are and what your credit balance is,” he said.

He said the chip was anonymous and the information on it could not be accessed without a unique ID number.

But civil liberties groups sounded a warning. “Why would anyone want to have a minor surgical operation to get a drink more quickly?” said Barry Hugill of Liberty.

“If you are happy to be surgically implanted you must be aware of the dangers – you may be able to get served more quickly but it could also mean someone could stalk or monitor you.”

Mr Chase said only a handful of clubbers had so far decided to have the implant, and the club does not allow the operation to be performed in the early hours – which is the only time most pluck up the courage to have done.

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Epson Video Projector EMP-8300

Have just been to the Contemporary Arts Degree Show.

http://www.performanceandliveart.com &

http://www.ntu.ac.uk/ntsad

The Performance at The Powerhouse, Victoria Studios, Nottingham Trent University.

The work of a student Jess Sutton used this kit, and I asked her to see it in action.

Here is some of the info I found out about it.

http://www.epson.co.uk/product/imaging/projector/emp8300

Spec:

http://www.epson.co.uk/product/imaging/projector/emp8300/spec.htm

and the brochure PDF at:

http://www.epson.co.uk/contact/brochure/Projector/EMP-8300.pdf

and their press release at:

http://www.epson.co.uk/press/release/mar03.htm#8300

Earlier info on my blog at about the use of this kit:

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2004_05_16_tash_lodge_archive.html#108512997140737617

&

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2004_05_09_tash_lodge_archive.html#108444155396719285

I want one !!!!!!

I still use Kodak Carousels for my ‘still photography’ work.

http://tash.gn.apc.org/slides.htm

http://tash.gn.apc.org/kit_materials.htm

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More on video projection: Frank Abbott NTU

http://www.creativecollaborations.blogspot.com

frank.abbott@ntu.ac.uk

Video Projection on buildings on the Canal Waterside, Nottingham

http://tash_lodge.blogspot.com/2004_05_09_tash_lodge_archive.html#108444155396719285

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