Category Archives: Features

Anything and everything

Signs of Life

hogflume When I sat down to write this article it was going to be about blue plaques in Brighton, and especially those in ‘The Whistler’ cachement area but as I researched names and places I came across the story of a Brighton resident, Dave Askwith who, together with Alex Normanton, conceived the idea for the book, ‘Signs of Life’, published in 2005, while commuting from Brighton to London on the 7:34. “It was mundane – my fault for sitting in the same seat, (facing the bin and the emergency fire extinguisher), staring at the same signs every day,” said Askwith, who works, like Normanton, in advertising. “It’s not so much the sign but what it’s associated with; how signs mislead. ‘Quick ticket machines’ are anything but; they’re not quick, they’re a nightmare. Then you see the signs saying ‘good service’ beside Underground lines and everyone knows that it’s woeful at best. Trains that are ‘fast to Brighton’ are nothing of the sort. Signs are funny because they say one thing when we, reading them, know the reality is totally different.”

Askwith started putting signs up – the first aimed to shed light on a mysterious lever on a slam-door train. Others were overtly political, such as the “Polling Station” poster on a bin, which was intended to express Askwith’s anger at the political system. Continue reading Signs of Life

Walking and Running Power

Walking Power 4 October

4 October is a day to walk, share and celebrate someone special. Brighton’s Alzheimer’s Society’s Memory Walk will see families coming together to fight dementia.

The Memory Walk starts at Hove lawns and heads along the seafront, a flat, easy wheelchair and pushchair friendly terrain offers both a 2km and an 8kn route. Memory Walks are a series of walking events held every autumn across the country to raise money to provide support for people living with dementia and fund research into a cure. Expect raffles, face-painting, live music.

www.memorywalk.org.uk/brightonandhove

Running Power 12 October

The 8k Undercliffe Run for Women is a scenic run along the seashore from Saltdean to Brighton and back.

The run is an annual fundraising event to help survivors of domestic abuse in Brighton and Hove and West Sussex. To celebrate RISE’s 20th Anniversary they ask that each entrant commits to raising at least £20. Anyone managing to raise over £150 will receive a free RISE technical running vest after the event.

www.riseuk.org.uk

 

The Animal Dispensary

Continuing the story of life in the Seven Dials by Tony Hill…

As if 100 dogs weren’t enough, we had two cats, both female, Toodles, a purebred Siamese, and Popsy, a tortoise-shell and white. Toodles was brought in to the pet shop as a kitten for treatment.

I’d better explain that in those days anyone could call himself an ‘Animal Practitioner’ and treat sick animals. Most pet shops did this and provided basic care. Dad had three treatments for dogs and cats: worming powder, flea powder and Epsom salts, I believe. He also doctored tomcats and put animals to sleep. Anything more complicated he referred to Mr. Balfour-Jones, an eminent vet who lived not far from the pet shop. He also had a weekend course of treatment for overweight dogs that had lost their appetites. They were locked in the cellar with a bowl of water, a bone and a brick. When they started on the brick they were cured, and returned to their owners, who were invariably delighted by the improvement in their pet’s appetite. Continue reading The Animal Dispensary

Isn’t it Romantic?

Peter Batten has Romantic thoughts…

Do you know that beautiful song from the 1930s? It always reminds me of those years in the 1950s when I was learning to play jazz. There were certain songs that I wanted to be able to play and this song was high on the list. It also reminds me that by the 20th century the word ‘Romantic’ had become meaningless. Anything could be ‘Romantic’: a perfume, a view, a novel, a dinner by candlelight, a song, a picture…

But the word does have one meaning which is very significant. During the 18th century an important change in the culture of Europe and North America began to emerge. Eventually the word ‘Romantic’ began to be used and the new artistic movement was dubbed ‘Romanticism’. By the middle of the 19th century the movement was considered to be dying. Not everyone agreed, but after World War I many critics began to use the term, ‘Modernism’ to describe a new cultural movement which, they felt, had replaced Romanticism. But has the era of Romanticism really passed? In my literature teaching in recent years I have found myself frequently involved in discussions of this question. My belief is that we are still in that era. Continue reading Isn’t it Romantic?

Brighton Toy & Model Museum

Brighton Toy and Model Museum has received £57,900 from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) for an exciting project, ‘Toys in the Community: Valuing Memories of dolls, teddy bears and construction toys’. Involving volunteers from the local community, the 2-year project will collect memories from a range of people and use these to create a website, book and touring exhibition which will visit local venues. It will also run community outreach sessions to enable people to share their memories of toys and handle examples of dolls, teddy bears and construction toys from a range of time periods.

Volunteers involved in the project will be able to learn new skills, including interviewing, photographic and videoing skills. They will also help to curate the touring exhibition. By interviewing people of all ages and backgrounds, the project will help to create links between different members of the local community. Stuart McLeod, Head of Heritage Lottery Fund South East England, said: “Toys from years past stir memories of childhood and community. This project will capture these and in so doing add a new dimension to its fascinating collection.”

Anyone interested in being involved in the project, either as a volunteer or by being interviewed, is welcome to contact the museum on 01273 749494 or by email memories@brightontoymuseum.co.uk