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Art and Culture Community Planning and open spaces Shops

In the abstract

10374880_325881937569099_7604015374255954050_nThere are just a few more days to pop into Anthony Webb Estate agents to see the work of a local artist fast developing an international reputation.

Angela Dierks began painting eight years ago, having previously been a writer, and specialises in large abstract canvasses. Having begun with a fascination for the layers of memories and dreams, more recently her work has focused on abstract representations of landscapes.

The exhibition is open for another week at Anthony Webb estate agents, and is part of the Art on the High Street collaboration with the Creative Exchange artists and designers network.

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Art and Culture Community

But is it art? Morrisons challenges our assumptions about shopping for this weekend’s Open Studios

"Air freshener with fish"
“Air freshener with fish”

Many of us will be planning which artists’ workshops and exhibitions we’ll be visiting this weekend as part of the annual Palmers Green and Southgate Open Studios and Art Trail. It promises to be the biggest and best yet – large numbers of shops and businesses are getting involved this year, with shop fronts up and down Green Lanes and beyond already displaying fantastic artwork.

"Identical recipes, after Warhol"
“Identical recipes, after Warhol”

But perhaps the most astounding coup this year has been the unprecedented involvement of Morrisons, whose recent extended performance art piece has challenged Palmers Greener’s ideas about consumerism, what it means to shop, and what products naturally belong where.

Daily overnight relocation of products and reclassifications have given rise to exciting new juxtapositions which raise questions about the sourcing of food, not only in terms of food miles (eg between the bread and canned goods), but also “Where’s the bloody couscous (and is it a foreign food this week)”.  I particularly enjoyed last week’s “Eggs with

"Eggs with luggage"
“Eggs with luggage”

luggage” still life, which left many transfixed.

In another new Morrisons’ piece, the arrangement of wine by the amount that can be got for, say, under a fiver rather than by style or region provocatively challenges our love affair with alcohol and explores issues around how much of the stuff can be loaded in a trolley for minimal expenditure.

In a Banksy-like move  – and nod to the current mores of the art world – no one has yet revealed the name of the artist.

Could it be William Morrison himself?

* Morrisons’ “Is it art?” continues for the forseeable future opposite the railway station. Opening time vary. Check press before setting out

"Under a fiver"
“Under a fiver”

 

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Art and Culture Community Enfield History Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Southgate Uncategorized

An open letter to Enfield Councillors: a little kindness

scan0006Dear Councillors

Last summer I wrote to the Mayor about Southgate Town Hall about Betty Wright (nee Walton) a lady who had written to me via the Palmers Green Jewel in the North website with a unique connection with the Town Hall. She was born there in 1927 and lived there until she married in 1951 – her father was fireman and Mace bearer and she had many happy memories from that time. I believe George Walton may appear in one of the pictures in your Enfield history display upstairs at the Dugdale Centre.

Cllr Cranfield kindly sent my letter on to a number of other colleagues on Enfield Council, saying at the time that she felt that it was a reasonable request. But despite having sent various reminders to the Mayor’s office and others, I have never had any kind of response or acknowledgment.

I fully understand that Enfield has some very serious issues to deal with and this was never going to be a number one priority. However, while press this year and last indicated that Town Hall had been sold, I understand now from the local papers that in fact the sale was only completed very recently indeed.

I had originally requested that you give Palmers Greeners one last opportunity to view their town hall before it goes into private hands. I am no longer asking this, though of course, given Palmers Green Jewel in the North’s emphasis on history and people and valuing the local area, I would love it to happen.

But it seems to me that you or Council staff might still be in a position to use your good offices to grant Betty Wright and her surviving siblings the opportunity to view her old home once more before the work begins in earnest.

It is something she would dearly love to happen. Amidst all the business and complexities and difficulties of Council life, it would be an act of kindness on your part, which I hope you will be in a position to agree to or facilitate.

With kind regards

Sue Beard

Palmers Green Jewel in the North

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Art and Culture Community Film History Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Shops

Terminal vests – the story of Grouts on film

If you have only lived in Palmers Green for a few years, you might have considered Grouts to be a wonder of PG’s past that you would hear about but never see. Til now!

Veteran film maker David ‘Tec’ Evans visited the Palmers Green institution in 1997, and made this amazing 15 minute film, now viewable on YouTube.

Grouts first opened its doors in 1914 on the corner of Green Lanes and Devonshire Road, when the block itself was only two years old. The premises were rented by Alfred Grout from a Miss Lilley for the princely sum of £130 a year.

Over the years Grouts built up a reputation for selling items which couldn’t be found elsewhere. There were 9 branches in all, including another in Palmers Green at 48 the Promenade, opposite St John’s church.

The film shows the shop’s extensive wares – an Aladdin’s Cave of corsets and control pants, towels, handkerchiefs, woolly hats, straw hats, darning wool, tea towels, ribbon, bolts of cloth, housecoats and pinafores.

The last owner was Alfred Grout’s granddaughter Sue Whittemore, who ran the shop with her husband Phil, a former pastry chef. In the film, the proud and entertaining Mrs Whitimore regales viewers with tales of the odd requests she received from customers, including ‘terminal’ (thermal!) vests, and tells of life in the building – her grandfather’s family and most of the staff lived upstairs. The job of a shop assistant in Palmers Green was highly prestigious in Grouts’ heyday, and she recalls stalwarts Miss Warren and Miss Edwards who worked in the shop from a few years after it opened until the 60s and 70s.

Perhaps as famous as Grouts’ wares was its cash railway, The Gipe. First installed in 1927 it was used until the 1950s, though Sue Whitimore says that a lot of people think that it was in operation for a lot longer, perhaps because the wires and fittings were kept. When the shop closed in 2002, it was believed to have been the oldest cash railway remaining in situ – it was removed and taken to the East Anglia Transport Museum in near Lowestoft.

Highly recommended.

  • Does anyone remember the Whittemores, Miss Warren or Miss Edwards? Perhaps you worked in Grouts yourself? Tell us more…!   

[youtube]http://youtu.be/lJppR4T8Ws4[/youtube]

Categories
Art and Culture Community History Palmers Green Shops

Still hair today: Mr Mann’s artistic English salon

We are getting used to constant change in Palmers Green. Shops come and go. Nail bars and betting shops seem to spring up overnight

But delve further and you will find that there are still a few shops in exactly the same use in 2014 as they were one hundred years ago. We have now lost C A Phillips art shop and picture framers, run by the same family for 94 years until it closed in 2012. But honourable survivors include Seward’s funeral directors and WH Smith, both still in exactly the same premises they were in the early days of Palmers Greens Edwardian expansion and in exactly the same line of business.

Andreas Sallas’s salon at 480 Green Lanes is another survivor. There’s been a hair salon on the same site, opposite St John’s Church, since before the First World War.

Andreas SallasAndreas bought the business in the 1970s and held on to its fixtures and fittings including the original ironwork and bowed windows until the shop was hit by a car some years ago. The driver was uninsured and Andreas’ insurance company refused to pay for restoration but Andreas still keeps the interior simple and classy in keeping with the shop’s old dignity. His 40 years in business means that many of the boys whose hair he first cut in the 70s now bring their own children in.

In the corner of Andreas’s salon there is a picture taken in the 1920s of a man and a boy standing proudly in front of the shop, then called Mann’s, the English Hairdresser. Andreas’ theory is that the unusual stress on English was because of the war – Mann was a common German name, and foreign sounding businesses could be vulnerable in the atmosphere of patriotic fervour.

The picture was presented by Mrs Elizabeth Hodgson, granddaughter of the original owner Frank John Mann, now living in Barnet but with vivid memories of her family’s time in Palmers Green.

“My grandfather, Frank John Mann lived in Hoppers Road and his hairdresser shop, now 480 Green Lanes, was formerly 52 ‘Promenade’ ” remembers Elizabeth.

Mann shop“My grandfather worked almost to his death in 1959/60.  The shop had an interesting frontage with wrought iron – the sign above the door read “Haircutting Shampooing Singeing Shaving Saloon’.”

“The unusual thing about this shop is that it also served as my grandfather’s studio as he was a prolific artist. Customers took in their photos or pictures they wanted turned into a painting, I have 9 of them – 7 on the walls and 2 in the cupboard (they are of me as a young child!).  One is dated 1947 and all are signed “Mann”.

“Frank Mann was married to Florence May and they had two sons (both now deceased) – my father, Leonard Francis (born 1910) and his younger brother Jack.  My father became known as “Bill” and he played rugby (Saracens) and sang in choirs etc., later he held a senior post with the Northmet, which became Eastern Electricity and was based at Northmet House (formerly Arnos Grove in Southgate) for some years – I have memories of Christmas parties there and the impressive staircase.  I have a couple of slides of the work being carried out on the frescoes on the ceilings (I hope they are still there).”

Does anyone have Frank Mann’s pictures still hanging in their house, or remember visiting for a short back and sides? Elizabeth would love to know.

*This  article first appeared in the Palmers Green Life magazine

Categories
Community Enfield Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Shops

Mini-Holland or town centre desert?

pg mini hollandPalmers Green’s local businesses association is up in arms about the potential implications of new ‘mini Holland’ proposals being masterminded by Enfield Council.

Green Lanes Business Association has called a meeting tonight (9 April) at the Vadi restaurant at 6pm to discuss its concerns that the mini Holland proposals, while promoting cycling, would remove parking on Green Lanes, with huge impacts on local business.

The ‘mini Holland’ money was recently awarded to Enfield by the Mayor of London as part of a project to improve facilities for cyclists across the borough. It adds to a rather bewildering combination of plans for the area – what is approved, what is simply being consulted on, and what actually has funding to ever move forward? What about the Triangle, which local residents seem unanimous that they want to keep?

“Parking may disappear along the length of Green Lanes/London Road, from Enfield to south of Palmers Green if the Council gets its way,” says the association in a recent email, alongside a mock-up of what they believe Palmers Green would look like: “Free of parked cars but also free of customers.” Those who do come to Palmers Green would be likely to park on busy residential roads.

The Green Lanes Business Association and the N21 Live Local group are working together to propose revisions to the plans “so that they don’t threaten businesses and residential roads”, and will be sharing their plans at tonight’s meeting.