A two screen video installation by Monica Ross 2003-2008 Friday 26th September 5 - 7pm and Saturday 27th September 11am - 5pm St Michael's with St Lawrence Parish Church, St.Michael's Mount, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2FT.
15 Aug 2013
ISIS Arts is pleased to present two videos by Monica Ross which reflect on current housing conditions through her observations of
St.Lawrence Square, Byker, Newcastle upon Tyne, over a span of 5 years from 2003-2008. Filmed from spring to winter in 2003,
Bykermorning - the view from a deserted utopia: a home movie (21'2003), presents the now vanished perspective of the early morning view from a council flat in St.Lawrence Square alongside Fallen idyll - the end of a perspective: a home movie, (21' 2008), which documents the demolition of the flat and its view in May 2008.
The St Lawrence Square flats were built around a park by the Tyne in the 1890s and modernised as part of the socialist inspired design of Ralph Erskine's Byker Housing Development in the 1970s. By 2003, the Tyneside industries which were the mainstay of Byker's once thriving community were long gone. Many of the St Lawrence flats had fallen into disrepair or dereliction and the Square and its park had come to be considered as a no go area by outsiders.
Byker morning - the view from a deserted utopia: a home movie, frames idyllic views from a window inside the flat to counter this external perception and to belie its 'failure' as social housing. Fallen idyll - the end of a perspective: a home movie, is a fractured, split screen document of the demolition of this former worker's housing on what is now considered to be a desirable riverside site. Showntogether, the videos are a meditation on the passage of time and season and, as one era has become another, the changed value of housing as a means to create private wealth rather than affordable, quality homes for all.