Paperback, colour and black and white illustrations, 84 pages, W240mm x H305mm
An illustrated catalogue to accompany Stuart Whipps' show at Ikon. Includes an essay by Birmingham novelist Catherine O' Flynn.
Ikon presents an exhibition of new works by Birmingham-based artist
Stuart Whipps, a selection of photography and video reflecting on the
changing nature of cultural value.
A new two channel video installation, England and the Octopus, Britain and the Beast (2011),
focuses on the town of Blaenau Ffestiniog in North Wales, a former
quarry town at the geographical centre of Snowdonia National Park. When
the Park’s borders were created in 1951 the grey slate waste tips that
surround Blaenau Ffestiniog prevented its inclusion, a decision made in
part by the eccentric architect of Portmeirion, Clough Williams-Ellis.
Whipps shows new film footage of the town teamed with a Welsh-language
script sourced from texts written or edited by Williams-Ellis.
The major work of this exhibition, Why Contribute to the Spread of Ugliness? (2011),
centres on 487 boxes of archived paperwork from the architectural
practices of John Madin, currently stored in Birmingham Central Library.
A multi-screen slide projection combines three strands of subject
matter: the archival boxes, their contents (printed materials relating
to Madin’s projects and the construction industry between the 1950s and
1970s) and the buildings to which they refer.
John Madin, active in Birmingham for over 30 years, designed many
buildings that defined Birmingham as a modernist city. Several have
since been pulled down or are under threat of demolition. Birmingham
Central Library, the largest civic library in Europe and considered by
some to be a landmark of post-war functionalist architecture in Britain,
is due to be demolished in 2013. Whipps focuses on archival material
relating to Madin’s work on the library, the former Birmingham Post and
Mail printworks and the Queen’s Square shopping centre in West Bromwich,
amongst others.