Citizen Sculptor
by Patrick O’Hare
AS
of last December, the northern French city
of
The resting place for Hunter’s
Lille also elected
How then did an industrial past come to be
embodied in the figure of a young girl? “Well
the French were keen on commissioning a joyful
image,” Hunter explained. “If the work should
evoke something of the past, it should especially
carry a feeling of optimism, related to the
future of Fives.”
“The bold red has obvious political connotations
but also brings to mind industrial red paint,”
he noted. The map signifies, as well as the
Internationale, the fact that
The work itself is made of bronze, and is
supported by a large plinth, perhaps as
But as a Scot charged with interpreting the
radical past of a foreign town, how did Hunter
navigate the dangers of misinterpretation?
And with dealing with culture on the other
side of the channel, given how seriously the
French take the area? A finely tuned sensitivity
to local sentiments was certainly necessary
but Hunter also notes that, ultimately, the
artist must follow their instinct and maintain
their vision and their integrity.
Thankfully, and despite an often-complex relationship
with
On afterthought, perhaps the
As for the radicalism, it is interesting to
note that Hunter also sculpted a bust, in
a similar anti-establishment red, of Jimmy
Reid, the
Despite these high profile works, perhaps
those Voice readers whose idea of a cultural
evening means switching over to BBC2 (...Ok,
that really means me), would be more familiar
with Hunter’s Citizen Firefighter, the monument
to celebrate Glasgow’s fire service which
holds pride of place outside Central Station.
I’m probably not the only one who has admired
the almost cartoon-like style which is particular
to Hunter’s work but the lack of detail is
far from accidental: it has neither gender
nor race and is even masked, leaving the figure
at the same time universal and open to interpretation.
Hunter noted that having the figure without
a plinth, at head-height and essentially unprotected
is effectively an act of trust in the public.
So be warned Voice readers and remember to
clean the grease from your chips and cheese
off your hands before you go fingering this
particular city centre feature.
Those culture vultures out there would do
well to look out for Hunter’s next big exhibition,
A Shout in the Street which will be exhibited
in the Tramway,
It will certainly have a strong environmental
component, leading us to question the colossal
waste which characterizes capitalist society
and which Hunter describes as being “increasingly
seen as one of our biggest vices” (note to
Alongside the sculptures, Hunter will also
be exhibiting several political prints, featuring
quotes from the likes of Marx, Voltaire and
Yeats, often combined to form a single phrase
and placed against a coloured background.
Things fall apart (Yeats), for example, explores
the theme of the apocalyptic obsession which
seems to be recurrent in our history, while
Everlasting Agitation, taken from The Communist
Manifesto, relates to Marx’s idea that, as
Hunter puts it, “nothing is unchanging except
change itself”.
The sculptor believes the grand old book of
communism to be “full of poetic language”
and he picked out another gem of a quote:
“all that it solid melts into air”, which
is also the title of a book, on modernization
and modernism, by Marxist philosopher Marshall
Berman which inspired many of Hunter’s prints.
What advice would the politically-engaged
sculptor proffer on how the SSP should handle
culture should we ever get into power (no
harm in dreaming surely)?
We would make a good start by adopting a more
committed attitude to cultural expenditure,
moving away from our puritanical, Calvinist
roots and learning a bit from our Gallic neighbours,
whom Hunter characterizes as having a much
more “indulgent” attitude to culture.
A prominent statue commemorating Red Clydeside
anyone?
The
Wild Brunch
Keef Tomkinson
Keef casts his eye across life’s more leisurely pursuits in order to put a wee bit of CULTure into our lives.
PENSIONS.
Controversial subject. Just last week the
striking Grangemouth workers brought the issue
home to the whole nation and forced the question,
‘What’s the story with jerry cans?’You know,who
gave them that name? Aguy called Jerry?
I do not have a pension except for the state
one I pay in to with each paycheque. I do
not consider my earnings enough to have the
luxury of pension. Rent, food and living are
a greater priority for me and many others
my age. It’s a shame as these workers are
at the vanguard of keeping the idea of real
pensions alive.
I have a plan B, just in case, for the time
I choose to retire, and no doubt the Gordon
Browns of the future will make sure that is
a long way into my 80s. It is a simple plan
but researched using nothing but the Murdoch
Press.
On the day before my retirement I will commit
a serious, maybe even a heinous crime. Nothing
sexual or against kids but something that
will put me behind bars and into a life of
free meals, heating, self improvement courses
and a plasma TV in my bedroom. The Sun says
so anyway.
Maybe if my current work offered a more appealing
package I would change my criminal ways before
they begin, but it’s unlikely the penny pinchers
of ***** will do that. But they are not unusual.
Any decent pension scheme is being closed
down.
Except, that is, for one organisation. One
organisation that offers a fully funded final
salary scheme to all workers with an incentive-driven
increase included. In fact, Al Qaeda’s pension
scheme for suicide bombers is the most competitive
on the market.
Its one hundred percent update and almost
zero percent payouts make it a win-win for
employee and employer alike. But it’s not
just the high flyers in the suicide department
who get the benefits, I hear all employees
get a very competitive package on being hired.
Even the lowly clerical assistants, human
resource administrators and financial clerks
get a starting package of private medical
care (dentist and optician included), travel
expenses for instances of fleeing, childcare
places at local madrassas, a mobile phone
(detonator optional) and corporate diary (containing
the obligatory map of the London Underground).
Only suicide bombers get a company car or
truck.
Reports have it that although the majority
of the funding for this comes from Oscar The
Bin Laden, additional funds come from both
However, both the Wall Street Journal and
Financial Times report that the credit crunch
is hitting Al Qaeda. Cash flow is at an all
time low given many loss-making ventures across
the globe as well as the war with the Great
Satan. The share price is at its lowest point
since 12 September 2001.
Given these pressures, Al Qaeda is considering
floating itself on the stock exchange for
an injection of cash. In order to attract
the right investment, gun belts are being
tightened and much of the workers’ package
is being trimmed down. How? Well a number
of western companies are considering tendering
bids for the rights to the contract to run
Al Qaeda’s administrative apparatus.
Dick Cheney’s Halliburton are in the running
but numerous British outsourcing agents like
Capita are also looking to see how they can
offer Al Qaeda a smoother and more efficient
organisation. Of course all of this means
one thing. While Oscar The Bin Laden will
remain a wealthy man, the cutbacks will be
aimed at those people who make Al Qaeda tick.
A squeeze of wages, pension provisions and
of course redundancies will be the order of
the day.
The SSP will be there on the picket lines
making sure our copy of the Al Qaeda’s Voice
is distributed. Victory to the working men
and...other men of Al Qaeda Plc.