Showing posts with label squatting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label squatting. Show all posts

Thursday, July 2, 2015

They’ve Taken our Ghettos: A Punk History of the Woodberry Down Estate

Introductory Essay by Exhibition Organiser [Guest Blog]

Updated with slight edits by the author, September 13 2018


They’ve Taken our Ghettos: A Punk History of the Woodberry Down Estate
My inspiration for organising this exhibition (and the accompanying book of the same name) is seeing the redevelopment of the Woodberry Down Estate in North London. This seems part of an endemic scenario in London, where banal environments are increasingly constructed for the wealthy, forcing out people without means and destroying the physical, social and historic fabric of the city in the process.
"Mobocracy"
(Illustrations supplied by the author)
I photographed the redevelopment that was taking place. Memories of an intense period of my life as a teenage squatter on the estate over twenty years ago flooded back. I remembered a life which, although dystopian at times, was the closest I ever came to unbridled freedom and communality, not to mention a lot of laughs. It felt like a real alternative to the alienating pursuit of money popularised during Thatcher’s decade.
A conversation followed with some of the original squatters on the estate swapping stories and anecdotes. Several of these people are now practicing writers and artists. This exhibition and publication includes their illustrations, prints, comics, collages, photographs and stories. Together they form an alternative, punk narrative of life on the estate.
In the late 80s, many of the flats in Woodberry Down were neglected and left vacant by the council, and were subsequently squatted by a community of young punks. The sharp rise in squatters during this time has well documented links to the contemporaneous increase in homelessness in London, which arose from Thatcherite policies, such as the Right to Buy scheme (introduced in the Housing Act 1980)[1]. For my own part, this was a time when I had no alternate accommodation, no means to secure a deposit in the private sector and was not eligible for social housing.
While my motivation for squatting was initially practical, other reasons manifested themselves as time went on. Squatting meant relinquishing a former identity and creating alternate means of financial, social and practical support. I had casual jobs cleaning and waitressing. Other people took on low paid jobs such as street cleaning where they didn’t have to compromise their look, attitude or lifestyle. Some claimed benefits and then drank their giros away. Others refused to sign on as a point of principle, not because they had a moral objection to it, but because they wanted to live self-sufficiently outside of any social controls. Others still went busking and generally got by on very little money. Generally, refusing the pressurised treadmill of capital accumulation and the necessity to pay extortionate rents provided a chance to experience and enjoy life outside the usual societal parameters.
"Conquest, Colonisation and Social Cleansing"
Now that the extreme ideas being touted in the 80s have been entrenched over several decades, the climate is even harsher for young people without means. The sale of social housing estates by London councils has drastically reduced the net social housing.[2] The Woodberry Down Estate sell-off is not the worst culprit for this, as the number of social renting units will remain the same. However, the new, private sector component has been substantially increased, meaning that the proportion of social housing will be cut from 67% to 41%[3]. This creation of two-tier housing, with new wealthier tenants distinguished from social housing ones, breaks up the community and breeds resentment. The tenants have described being cast aside like ‘social rubbish’.[4]
More generally, excessive rent rises, coupled with housing benefit caps mean that vulnerable tenants are being rehoused out of the capital in places where they have no social or historic link. On the Woodberry Down Estate leaseholders have not been compensated at market value for the forced loss of their homes.[5] The developers meanwhile stand to make a fortune (3 beds are marketed at 1.2 million). London is becoming a lifeless ghetto for the rich - a depository for money from foreign investors.
The destruction of the estate sparked reminiscences about what was being lost. But, while some nostalgia was involved in putting together this exhibition, the intention is not to idealise squatting. Surviving on very little money and living in temporary, usually inadequate, buildings can be hard going. At times alcoholism and drug use infected too many people. But living as part of a wider squatting community also meant that resources were often shared. There was plenty of mutual support. There were squatted vegan cafés and gig venues with crèche facilities.
Some of the tenants on the estate seemed wary or were hostile towards the squatters. They might well have suffered from the seemingly endless parties and disregard shown by some. Then again, tenants sometimes joined in with the partying. I knew squatters who helped tenants to fix things up around their homes, when they’d had no joy with the council, or who did shopping for elderly residents. I knew others who voluntarily cooked and brought food to HIV sufferers who didn’t seem to receive any state or charity support at that time.

Overall, this project aims to avoid promoting stereotypes of squatters as either reckless dossers or romanticised utopians. Instead, the aim has been to put together artistic and written expressions of aspects of an existence that allowed freedom and independence through dissent.

Rebecca Binns, 2015.

They’ve Taken our Ghettos: A Punk History of the Woodberry Down Estate. Exhibition Launch Party, Thurs, 2 Jul, 6-11pm, Free Entry. Bar by Craving Coffee (card/cash), Food by Pink Cactus (cash only). Exhibition Runs 3-26 July
A book of the same name will be available to buy via Active Distribution http://www.activedistributionshop.org/ from early July.

[1] https://www.dur.ac.uk/news/newsitem/?itemno=20097
[3] http://www.tmponline.org/2012/06/28/woodberry-down-in-hackney-how-regeneration-is-tearing-up-another-east-london-community/
[4] See http://ovoodocorvo.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/the-truth-about-gentrification.html
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/may/18/-sp-truth-about-gentrification-how-woodberry-down-became-woodberry-park





Monday, June 22, 2015

Events coming up at the Mayday Rooms in London

** Production of Possibilities

Friday June 26th, 12-7pm. Reading Room

Occupation Culture

MayDay Rooms activation with Stevphen Shukaitis, Alan W. Moore and others.

How has squatting contributed to the production of art and culture? During times where the cost of rent and living rises well beyond the ability of cultural workers to support themselves in the metropolis, squatting has played an important role in making possible the continued existence of autonomous art and culture.

Come and join us for this day long event that will seek together to bring materials and experiences of how occupations and squatting have contributed to the production of autonomous culture. From social centres to free schools, temporary galleries to combined studios and living spaces, we invite people to bring along materials from your projects that explore these questions and connections. We will be joined by historian and activist Alan W. Moore, who has been working on setting up and documenting these spaces and practices for almost forty years. We will start with an informal lunch and sharing of food, spending the afternoon working through and discussing materials that are brought and then in the early evening Alan will present his new book on the subject Occupation Culture: Art & Squatting in the City from Below and the recent anthology Making Room: Cultural Production in Occupied Spaces.
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=601753061d&e=f1db704b13
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Thursday June 23rd, 7-10pm. Canteen
The Cultural Discussion Group (Invite only)

The Cultural Discussion Group has been meeting fortnightly since late 2014. The group developed out of two related convictions. The first is that the last decade of capitalist ‘development’ in London has been aided and abetted at every stage by contemporary art, including by contemporary art that claims for itself some kind of radical social ‘conscience’...
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=5ff53292aa&e=f1db704b13

•••••••••
Wednesday July 1st, 6-9pm. Screening Room
Under the Moon (5)

We are planning to spend the session looking through some materials about Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp (1982-2000) - ​join us for an experiment in collective research; to  rummage through the boxes held at May Day Rooms, to read, talk and collate words, images and symbols. The first collective text to emerge from the camp framed the purpose of occupation as both a specific protest against nuclear power, but also as a broader project which aimed to develop the capacity of women to resist...
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=6b6c9ad1f5&e=f1db704b13

•••••••••

Thursday 2nd -  Thursday 9th July, 10am - 6pm, MDR Reading Room
Schooling and Culture Residency


Schooling and Culture was a collaboratively produced journal published during the 70s and 80s between a group of radical left educationalists and young working class school students in London. MayDay Rooms currently houses a collection of the journals and this week long programme seeks to further socialise this archive. Since December 2014, convened by Russell Newell, a group of educators/artists/organisers and some of the original contributors have been meeting at MDR to discuss the potential of reactivating the journal, what it would look like 
http://maydayrooms.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=071d5870fc99278166c35f19e&id=198c50fd9a&e=f1db704b13

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MayDay Rooms
88 Fleet Street
London,  EC4Y 1DH
United Kingdom
Tel: 020 3691 5230

www.maydayrooms.org

Monday, August 11, 2014

STOP PRESS: the famous Central London squat history walk

a reprise ... featuring edited highlights of the walk, including

• housing saved by squatting from developers
• buildings that housed hundreds of people and would otherwise have been left
to rot
• protest squats from 1946 to date...
and...?

This version of the walk has been hastily cobbled together because someone
at BBC World Service expressed interest and will be recording it (to be cut
down to a mere couple of soundbites of course). She also wants to talk to
current squatters, in their homes, in case there are any sensible current
squatters willing to talk to media (the two rarely go together).

Tuesday August 12th

meet 6pm in Tolmers Square
(off North Gower Street NW1)

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Squatting History: Exhibition 9th-16th September 2013


A Week-long exhibition just started...
Check out their website for lots of interesting archive posters etc.:

http://www.madepossiblebysquatting.co.uk

Made Possible by Squatting
9th-16th September 2013
15, Dock Street, London, E1 8JN
Exhibition// Archive// Workshops

London has 72,457 empty homes.
Rent is Too High.

As the Housing Crisis deepens we see:

• government policies of Cuts to Housing Benefit
• Bedroom Tax introduced
• regeneration that equals unaffordable 'Affordable' Housing

Made Possible by Squatting presents an archive of histories and stories of how Londoners have met their needs and desires through squatting the empty buildings which fill our city.

With over 30 stories from Crossroads Women’s Centre, to Islington Housing Co-op, Ramparts, and Clifton Mansions these histories will be traced through a series of film, illustration, photos, archive posters, workshops, and more!

The exhibition itself aims to be part of this tradition - but it happens in the context of repression. With the squatting of residential buildings already outlawed last year, and the further ban on commercial squats looming on the horizon, there has never been a more necessary time to celebrate squatting histories.

<<< when Housing is a Luxury, Squatting is a Necessity
Better to Squat than let Homes Rot>>>

Opening Hours 11am-10pm (see website for workshop timetable)

Nearest Tube: Tower Hill, Aldgate, Aldgate East

http://www.madepossiblebysquatting.co.uk
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@mpbsquatting