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Brixton news, rumours and general chat: Spring 2019

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That'll rule out everyone except for established commercial operations then, or those with the connections to partner up with some kind of professional company.

As Pesh says, that type of insurance isn’t expensive to obtain, if anyone was interested in applying but didn’t know how to secure the insurance I’d be more than happy to talk them through the process and point them in the right direction for insurance suppliers.
 
As Pesh says, that type of insurance isn’t expensive to obtain, if anyone was interested in applying but didn’t know how to secure the insurance I’d be more than happy to talk them through the process and point them in the right direction for insurance suppliers.

I have to have PI insurance, I have a limit quite a bit less than £5m and it's not cheap. Maybe it's different if what you are doing is artworks.
 
New artwork in the station

art-brixton-tube-0.jpg


Brixton tube station art: Aliza Nisenbaum paints Underground staff members
 
I’d imagine it’s a collective buying thing. If you join a union like Bectu you get a lot of insurance included in your membership as well
 
Fair enough - I'm surprised it's so cheap. I guess insurers have decided that artist screw-ups don't tend to be expensive - that, or it's hard for anyone to sue them.
One of the issues GPs agonise over in their (NHS) "contracts" appear to be professional indemnity. That and pensions. Clearly doctors do get sued occasionally - cases of brain damage, life-long disability etc over incorrect or too slow treatments.

I suppose there are certain esoteric paints containing lead, arsenic etc. But hard to imagine this being an issue in public art.
 
Au contraire - making art often involves risky things - solvents, scaffolding, aerosols etc - so even though I never heard of the Pi insurance thing it makes sense when you think about it. Large scale open air projects in public space even more vulnerable to accidents.
 
Au contraire - making art often involves risky things - solvents, scaffolding, aerosols etc - so even though I never heard of the Pi insurance thing it makes sense when you think about it. Large scale open air projects in public space even more vulnerable to accidents.
Professional Indemnity doesn't cover that, that is Public Liability. Definitions for artists:

PUBLIC & PRODUCTS LIABILITY
Significant Features & Benefits of Cover

This policy provides cover in respect of legal liability for damages including claimant legal costs for;
· Accidental Injury to any person
· Accidental loss or damage to third party Property happening during the period of insurance in connection with the Business.

PROFESSIONAL INDEMNITY
Significant Features & Benefits of Cover

Provides cover against civil liability claims made against the policyholder and notified to the insurer during the Period of Insurance as a result of any
a) negligent act or negligent omission or breach of duty of care
b) infringement of copyright and other intellectual property rights
c) breach of confidence or misuse of any confidential information
d) defamation
Also covered are the mitigating costs incurred in limiting or preventing such a claim.
 
PI is not about breaking windows with scaffolding or dropping sculptures on people's heads during installation - it's things more like advising people that a certain material will be fine, and then it catching fire and burning down their building, because you didn't check out its fire resistance.

As I understand it, it comes back to what can be reasonably expected of a 'professional' in terms of their knowledge and expertise. If a doctor messes up your medication, then they probably haven't acted professionally and to the standard you would reasonably expect. There might be things that an 'artist' does that can be argued to be outside of their professional scope - and that might include specifying materials and so on, which perhaps would be seen to be down to the fabricator, or even the person commissioning the job, and hence unlikely that you could sue them for negligence. Maybe that's why it's cheap. I dunno, I'm completely just speculating.
 
PI is not about breaking windows with scaffolding or dropping sculptures on people's heads during installation - it's things more like advising people that a certain material will be fine, and then it catching fire and burning down their building, because you didn't check out its fire resistance.

As I understand it, it comes back to what can be reasonably expected of a 'professional' in terms of their knowledge and expertise. If a doctor messes up your medication, then they probably haven't acted professionally and to the standard you would reasonably expect. There might be things that an 'artist' does that can be argued to be outside of their professional scope - and that might include specifying materials and so on, which perhaps would be seen to be down to the fabricator, or even the person commissioning the job, and hence unlikely that you could sue them for negligence. Maybe that's why it's cheap. I dunno, I'm completely just speculating.

In creative industries, PI is largely about ensuring that work doesn’t infringe copyright or lead to defamation claims. Essentially arse covering..
 
I have ways and means ;-) Here you go.

It’s not London’s oldest market - the one at Borough was first mentioned in 1276 and claims to have been in existence since 1014 - but the 150-year-old Brixton Market is certainly one of the best. Over 60 years ago Ian Nairn, the architectural critic, described it as “stalls everywhere, arcades everywhere, diving through buildings and under the railway. Meat, fish, nylons, detergent: an endless convoluted cornucopia”. Although the covered arcades Market Row and Granville Arcade (known now as Brixton Village) have increasingly converted to some excellent street-food cafes and restaurants, Nairn would still recognise the vibrant albeit rather ramshackle market today.

When the costermongers first wheeled their barrows into Brixton they wanted to take advantage of the well-to-do customers going in and out of the elegant Brixton stores which included the sophisticated Bon Marché, London’s first purpose-built department store, named (and modelled) on the original Bon Marché in Paris and the first steel-framed building in the country. Brixton at the time was a salubrious place to live and famous for its shopping, for a long time it was known as the ‘Oxford Street of the South’.

By the end of the 19th century, some were already dismissing Brixton as populated by only the ‘servant-keeping middle-classes’. By 1931 even the middle classes were fleeing to London’s outer reaches and it told a story when the boxes at the Brixton Empress Theatre were removed to make way for more cheap seats.

When the large Empress Theatre had opened on Boxing Day in 1898 the Music Hall variety circuit was at its peak. The performers were some of the highest paid and lauded entertainers in the country. ‘I earn more than the Prime Minister,’ said the comedian Little Tich, ‘but I do so much less harm.’ By this time the large houses in Brixton were being broken up into cheap flats and lodgings, often as digs for the variety artists working at the numerous nearby theatres and music halls.

In the summer of 1948, 300 of the Empire Windrush passengers found their way to Brixton. Initially housed in the deep underground shelters on Clapham Common they soon made their way to the nearest Labour Exchange situated on Coldharbour Lane, right next to the Granville Arcade. Soon Brixton, not least because of a few friendly Jamaican landlords, became the hub of the Jamaican community in London. The market quickly adjusted and started selling yams and plantains next to the potatoes and cabbages to the appreciative new Caribbean inhabitants.

In the 1950s and 1960s, however, the comedians, singers, ventriloquists and acrobats still made up much of Brixton's population. One ex-acrobat was Tom Major-Ball who with his family, including his son John the future Prime Minister, lived around the corner from the market on Coldharbour Lane.

Abraham Thomas Ball (Major was a stage name) started appearing in Music Halls and circuses at the end of the 19th century. He was initially as an acrobat and trapeze artist but later became a successful double-act with singer and dancer Kitty Grant who would later become his wife. Known as Drum and Major they were relatively successful performing acrobatics, comic songs and comedy sketches. The year after they met they went on a tour of South America where they accidentally got caught up in a civil war in Uruguay and Major-Ball was forced to enlist in a local militia.

Unfortunately Kitty died after a tragic on-stage accident in 1928 but on her death bed she asked a young dancer called Gwen Coates, who had recently joined their act, to look after Tom. This Gwen did for the next 34 years, giving birth to John Major in March 1943.

Tom Major-Ball's family of five, which also included a white bull terrier called Butch and a pet-budgerigar, moved to Coldharbour Lane in 1955. They lived in just two rooms - the cooker was shared on the landing with another tenant, the toilet was two floors down and there was no bathroom at all. Their landlord was called 'Uncle Tom' and he occupied the ground floor and basement of the house. Unknown to John Major at the time, 'Uncle Tom' was actually his half-brother (his father had had an affair with Mary Moss, the wife of a young musician in 1901). Tom had also been on the stage as a singer and for years appeared with his sister Jill Summers, who later achieved fame as Phyllis Pearce in Coronation Street.

Another singer who worked on the British variety circuit and also a Brixton resident was Don Arden. Arden, father of Sharon Osbourne, lived on Angell Road just off Coldharbour Lane and was married to a former acrobatic dancer called Hope Shaw. Arden was relatively successful impersonating singers such as Enrico Caruso and actors such as Edward G. Robinson and George Raft. In 1955, when the Major-Balls were moving into their two-roomed Brixton flat, Arden was ‘blacked up’ as a regular on the Black and White Minstrel Show - the ‘highlight’ of his performing career.

Don Arden’s landlady was a pianist called Winifred Attwell who by the mid-fifties was undoubtedly one of Britain’s most popular entertainers. Trinidadian-born, her undisguised cheerful personality and well-played honky-tonk ragtime music brightened up many a ‘knees up’ in those pre-rock ‘n’ roll days. When Atwell reached number one in 1954 with ‘Let’s Have Another Party’, she became the first black musician in the UK to sell a million records. At the peak of her popularity her hands were so valuable they were insured for £40,000. The contract included a clause – and how many of us would like to sign a legal document like this – that she must never wash the dishes.

Once a resident of Brixton herself she had by now moved to leafy Hampstead but still owned properties and businesses in the area. In 1956 on the corner of Chaucer Road and Railton Road (a few hundred metres from Brixton Market) she opened what was possibly the first black women’s hairdressers in the country called The Winifred Atwell Salon.

By the late Fifties tastes in music were rapidly changing. Don Arden gave up singing and became an agent and manager. He signed Gene Vincent in 1960 (by then a much bigger star in the UK than the US) and then the Nashville Teens. According to Johnny Rogan's book ‘Starmakers & Svengalis’, when group member John Hawken complained about the amount of money they were receiving Arden told him: ‘I have the strength of 10 men in these hands’ and threatened to throw him from an office window. He then managed the Small Faces but after hearing that the impresario Robert Stigwood had discussed with the group about changing managers, Arden came to his office and also threatened to throw him out of the window. Arden would later write in his autobiography, ‘I didn’t want to hurt Stigwood. I just wanted to frighten him and get a laugh out of it’.

The far more mild natured Winifred Atwell had her last top ten hit in 1959. When record sales started to fall in Britain, she spent more and more time in Australia where she was still very popular. In 1961 her hairdressing salon in Railton Road closed down and ten years later Atwell was granted permission to stay in the country that she had begun to love.

In 1981 at about the same time Winifred Atwell was granted full Australian citizenship, a Molotov cocktail was thrown through a window of The George Hotel on the corner of Effra Parade and Railton Road. It was 14 April 1981 and the second night of the infamous Brixton Riots that took place mainly as a reaction to the heavy-handed Metropolitan Police’s ‘Operation Swamp’; in just six days over 1,000 people were stopped and searched and 86 arrested. When the riots were over a small parade of shops just down from the George had also been destroyed - the building that was once the Winifred Atwell Salon had been burnt to the ground. She died just two years later from a heart attack in Sydney on 27 February 1983.

By now John Major had been a Conservative MP for about four years and had recently become a junior whip. It was also when Eddie Grant’s ‘Electric Avenue’ had entered the US charts. Originally released the previous year in the UK the song about the street that was the main part of Brixton Market had been written in response to the riots which he had watched unfurl on television: ‘People felt they were being left behind and there was a potential for violence. The song was intended as a wake-up call’. Grant was later invited back to Brixton in 2016 to open the huge illuminated Electric Avenue sign that now looks down on the street.

The Empress Theatre is long gone - it was demolished in 1992 and replaced by an ‘affordable’ housing development - but Brixton Market is still a lively place and more popular than ever. Many people, worried about excessive gentrification, initially criticised Brixton Village but it gave the old market a new lease of life. The market as a whole is still a bit ramshackle and disorganised but there is, of course, a plan to structure it into something more ordered and regulated. Sixty years ago Ian Nairn feared that a grand plan that was proposed at the time would ruin the market. He hoped that it ‘was so grand that it would be deferred until planners can understand what makes the place tick’. Let’s hope Lambeth Council’s current ‘Brixton Street Market Masterplan and Action Plan’ is also deferred until they realise that most residents and visitors to the market like it just the way it is.
 
I have ways and means ;-) Here you go.


By the end of the 19th century, some were already dismissing Brixton as populated by only the ‘servant-keeping middle-classes’. By 1931 even the middle classes were fleeing to London’s outer reaches and it told a story when the boxes at the Brixton Empress Theatre were removed to make way for more cheap seats.

When the large Empress Theatre had opened on Boxing Day in 1898 the Music Hall variety circuit was at its peak. The performers were some of the highest paid and lauded entertainers in the country. ‘I earn more than the Prime Minister,’ said the comedian Little Tich, ‘but I do so much less harm.’ By this time the large houses in Brixton were being broken up into cheap flats and lodgings, often as digs for the variety artists working at the numerous nearby theatres and music halls.



In 1981 at about the same time Winifred Atwell was granted full Australian citizenship, a Molotov cocktail was thrown through a window of The George Hotel on the corner of Effra Parade and Railton Road. It was 14 April 1981 and the second night of the infamous Brixton Riots that took place mainly as a reaction to the heavy-handed Metropolitan Police’s ‘Operation Swamp’; in just six days over 1,000 people were stopped and searched and 86 arrested. When the riots were over a small parade of shops just down from the George had also been destroyed - the building that was once the Winifred Atwell Salon had been burnt to the ground. She died just two years later from a heart attack in Sydney on 27 February 1983.



s.


A few points..

The George Hotel was burned down by rioters as it was a racist pub.

The George (now Harmony, formerly Mingles), 82 Railton Road, London, SE24 0LD - lost pubs of Lambeth

Brixtons life as an upmarket area was short. The Bohemian element came in the 30s.

Its often been put forward that it was the 70s squatters that helped start gentrification. This is historically nonsense.

For much of its life Brixton was homee to artists and entertainers.

For most of it existence Brixton was affordable place to live.

And the issues that underlay the 81 riots are still present.

See this piece:

A Fatal Stabbing Took Place At This Man's Youth Club - Now He Speaks Out

The views of the long-standing hard working community worker Ira


“People are struggling [and...] yet, right next door, people are building penthouses. The middle class are coming in and gentrifying the area. And [if you’re working class] you get marginalised and you feel marginalised in your everyday life.”

This can have dire consequences, he warned.

“These things add up. And it’s hard not to say you understand why people are desperate.

Id say what Ira says is representative of what I regularly hear.
 
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