Google  


Saturday, 2 June 2007

Rathmore Benches


The corner of Troughton and Rathmore Roads, SE7

Who needs to go to Barcelona when you have Charlton on your doorstep? If you're not expecting anything more than some rather sweet Victorian terraces when you're walking along Troughton and Rathmore roads, the first time you see the (still) fabulous Rathmore benches is one of those wonderful experiences that Life gives out for free every so often.
In a style strongly reminiscent of Gaudi's dazzling Park Guell, this extraordinary structure of concrete benches wrapping its way around an old (1901, if memory serves...) chapel (now Rathmore Youth Centre) winds like a length of colourful satin ribbon gently undulating and forming two long, continuous benches for the Youth of Charlton to enjoy. All along it, in minute detail, are mosaic images - people, flowers, sun rays, crashing waves, boats, motorbikes, cornfields - and what looks suspiciously like a detonator of some sort.
Maybe this is a darker vision than it at first appears. This was made by the excellent Greenwich Mural Workshop (You know the drill, 'more about them another day') in the heady days of the 1980s when there was the money around to do that kind of thing. There is some doubt about exactly when it was executed - The Public Monument and Sculpture Association, thinks 1989, but I have found evidence of a publication about it as far back as 1983 (it's by Greenwich Mural Workshop themselves and just 12 pages long, so I guess it could be a proposal. I am sure one of you long term residents - Inspector Sands, perhaps, can tell me the date?) but this is a period when CND and the Greenham Women were still very much at the forefront of the news. A time when even Tony Blair was still against nuclear weapons. In other words, more politically volatile times.
Sadly the colourful mural that accompanied the project and which may have explained more about the meaning of the remaining benches has been painted over - in battleship grey, of all colours. A more miserable, dampening colour would have been difficult to find, but could have rather symbolic subtext if my theory is correct. I have no idea whether my fancies about these benches having political resonance are anything more than mere whim, but if it is, it might explain the grey paint and general condition of the work...
If you've never seen these remarkable constructions, my advice would be to see them for the very first time by night. The sodium streetlamps are far kinder to them than the harsh sunlight which shows just how badly they have worn. By night, they are a magical sight, the colours a little subdued by the lighting, but the general view much more akin, I suspect, to how they were originally conceived.
The money just isn't around these days to look after exciting sculptures in backstreets in Charlton. The Public Monument and Sculpture Association has recorded them as being "At Risk" - and they're absolutely right. They are. Flakes and tiles of mosaic are missing almost everywhere you look, and in places the wire mesh that forms the foundations shows through. Even the little flowerbeds carefully integrated into the design are looking distinctly bare. But it is not too late to save this wonderful piece of late 20th Century art. If the will is there, then they can be preserved, perhaps even by their original creators. Listing would even be an option. Sadly I don't think that grey paint is coming off any time soon...

Labels: , , , ,

11 Comments:

Blogger Knit Nurse said...

Wow! I've never seen these before. I think I will take a spin up there on the bike to have a look - like you say, not what you expect to see in the backstreets of Charlton, and hence all the better for it!

03 June 2007 16:01  
Blogger The Greenwich Phantom said...

Let me know what you think. They are clearly not what they once were (but could be again) but are still an extraordinary sight.

04 June 2007 08:30  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

think they are c.1982 by Peter Simmons, commissioned by Irena McParland.

04 June 2007 09:19  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

sorry PAUL Simmons, not Pete

04 June 2007 09:25  
Blogger The Greenwich Phantom said...

Well done to both of them for such vision. I love them. Paul or Irena - if you're out there, am I right about the political undertones?

Thanks Mr/Ms Anon...

04 June 2007 09:37  
Blogger Inspector Sands said...

Funnily enough, I was in Barcelona when you posted this...

Erm, I can't shed any light on the dates, and I reckon the mural was painted over in the very early 1990s. It used to have a 180 bus going to Sydenham on it.

There's also the huge mural in Floyd Road which must have been there for 30 years, and further afield there's the terrible one next to Riverside House in Woolwich, which could only have been sanctioned by a left-wing council in the 80s.

06 June 2007 15:22  
Blogger The Greenwich Phantom said...

Cheers Inspector. How was Barcelona?

06 June 2007 15:27  
Blogger Inspector Sands said...

Barcelona was aces, ta (more on it here), just dealing with the comedown of being back home and back to work!

06 June 2007 17:52  
Blogger The Greenwich Phantom said...

So YOU'RE Last Bus Home...

It all falls into place. Sounds wild. BTW - I'm so with you on the red Bull Air race - I have friends who are into that kind of thing staying so they can go to both days, so I felt obliged to buy a ticket. Sadly, I too don't come under the auspcies of "community group," whatever that might be.

07 June 2007 11:03  
Blogger slim said...

The Benches and mural were produced by Greenwich Mural Workshop with the local community.
And yes GMW are still going strong

05 July 2007 10:10  
Anonymous Steve said...

They where created by the GMW in the early 80's as part of a summer project involving young people from the youth centre.

Irena was the Centre's first full time youth worker and was married to Ed McParland (Ex Local Councillor, Ferrier ward). Sadly Irena has passed away.

The Mural's was repaired by GMW in the mid 90's.

With regard to the grey paint it was used in the late 90's to cover graffiti and I suspect that the paint was either donated or cheap. It wouldn't have been about political undertones as the centre is run/owned by a voluntary management committee and not the local authority. Hence, why the building is still in need of funds to replace the windows and repaint the outside.

If I recall the mural was not on the RYC building but instead on the side of the house on the woolwich road/rathmore road junction.

07 July 2008 13:12  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home