Review of the Year 2009 in Sutton

2009 has been quite a remarkable year in the Sutton district with so many new initiatives coming to fruition. Jaume Plensa's Dream sculpture in Sutton Manor has been the big one, of course, but attracting less attention and the inevitable controversies, have been Brickfields woodland, the Sutton Manor Heritage benches and Sutton Smile! events.

Dream has been extremely popular and proved the many cynics, who have criticised and denigrated this externally-funded project, to be completely wrong. It's been a real joy to witness the large numbers of visitors making a beeline to the former Sutton Manor colliery site. All we need now is a visitor centre, the illumination of Dream, disabled access and the installation of the long-promised heritage art trail on the site! Who knows what 2010 will bring, although I don't believe that the marvellous ceremonial opening on May 31st this year, was the end of the Dream story.

St.Helens Council and the ex-miners focus group are once again in negotiation with the Highways Agency, after they'd first stymied proposals to light up Dream back in August 2008. This was on the grounds of the illumination being a possible distraction to drivers on the adjacent M62. Hopefully, a compromise can be struck in the early new year to satisfy all.

An information or visitor centre at Sutton Manor would be great, although these things can be quite expensive. At least the two information boards are back in position, after one located at the base of Dream was vandalised and the other, adjacent to the sculpture, was stolen.

Information board at Dream St.Helens
Information board with the history of Sutton Manor Colliery on one side and the Dream story on
the other - it was stolen in October but has now been replaced (picture taken Dec. 20th, 2009)


As reported in this blog post, a number of superb heritage benches were installed on the Manor in the early summer, made by Wilkinson Welding of Sutton Oak Drive. They'd been designed by Sutton Manor Primary schoolchildren, who'd worked with artist Bernadette Hughes and the Shining Lights Heritage Group. A heritage art trail was all set to follow during the summer but was suddenly postponed. Accusations were then made that the Forestry Commission, who manage the woodland, were refusing to allow its installation because they considered the artwork to be too representative of the site's past.

So I asked the FC for a statement on their position and on November 13th they reaffirmed their commitment to the heritage project but added that the question of responsibility for ongoing maintenance had to be addressed and its precise location agreed, prior to it being installed. The Forestry Commission also said that they were concerned about "rushing into installation" in an unplanned way. I was surprised by this comment, as the artwork was made three years ago and is, I understand, beginning to rack up storage costs.

The FC added that Dream had had such a dramatic impact that they were taking a fresh look at how they manage the whole site, so that they can sustain it as a high quality visitor destination. As they're responsible for much good work in Sutton, there is, I think, no reason to believe otherwise and let's hope that the heritage art trail will be installed on site a.s.a.p.

In November,
Marian White of the Shining Lights Heritage Group received a nomination in 'The Unseen Hero' category in the 2009 St.Helens Tourism and Leisure Awards. During the same month, Sutton Manor primary school, who are attached to the Shining Lights centre, received an International School Award for their sterling efforts. Congratulations to both.

Glass effect bricks in Brickfields' kissing gate entrances are made out of a resin brick format provided by Ibstock brickworks
The glass effect bricks in Brickfields' countryside–style 'kissing' entrance gates are made out of a resin brick format with designs by local children and residents guided by artist Steve Des Landes

Just down the road from the Manor site, the redevelopment and extension of Brickfields woodland was completed in the Spring at a cost of £2.1m, roughly the same as Dream. As least most of the work has been done, as I understand that the landfill operations of Cory Lord St.Helens to the north-west of the site will be integrated into the scheme at some point.

Brickfields has been touted as a new community woodland which is a little misleading, as the main site between Chester Lane, Walkers Lane and Lea Green Road has existed for some years. However, the Forestry Commission have made considerable improvements to it and a new, smaller, woodland has been created on a second site between Chester Lane and Clock Face Road. Whilst walking in the woodland earlier this year, it dawned on me that a loop involving Brickfields, King George V Playing Fields, Sutton Manor Woodland / Dream, Clock Face Colliery Country Park and Sutton Mill Dam had now been created by the new initiative.

street sign outside sutton park, sthelens
All these sites deserve plenty of street signage to direct visitors towards them, although they are largely ignored by the raft of new signs which have appeared in the Sutton district this year. I made reference to this in a blog post on November 28th, which subsequently led to St.Helens Council accusing this website of doctoring a photograph of a sign that was published in the St.Helens Star!

What happened was that
Chris Coffey, of the Star's Coffey Time column, took an interest in the signs saga on behalf of the Community Empowerment Network. So on December 7th, I supplied him with a photograph that I'd taken earlier that day. It was of a sign outside Sutton Park, on the corner of Robins Lane and Marina Avenue, which was somewhat misleading (pictured right). Chris immediately forwarded the picture onto Sutton councillors and published it in his column on December 17th. By then the councillors seem to have swiftly done their job and the error in the sign had already been corrected by council staff.

Furious town hall bosses compared the photograph in the paper with the actual street sign outside Sutton Park and discovering that they were different, made ridiculous assumptions. Instead of checking with council colleagues as to whether the sign had been corrected, they lambasted the St.Helens Star for publishing a faked picture supplied by this website. Just why they would think that I would do such a thing, beggar's belief! However, the St.Helens Star has stood firm and, at the time of writing, the
online version of the article is being highlighted as an 'Editor's Choice' item on their own website.

sutton smile logo
For me this incident was a low point of the year and quite hurtful but one of the highs has to be Sutton Smile! This is an initiative that brings together Sutton churches, housing associations, St.Helens Council, Police, Fire Brigade, Friends of Sutton Park and local Sutton schools. Their aim is to encourage local folk of all ages to involve themselves in projects, courses and events that they might otherwise not get the opportunity to participate in.

They're certainly coming up with novel ideas. On August 14th, Sutton Smile's Climbing Wall proved very successful and on the 16th & 17th December, their Sutton Village Christmas, also held at the Herbert Street church, led to over 400 people skating on an ice rink. This great community idea also involved the choirs of five local Primary Schools entertaining the crowds plus other activities. Sutton Smile! organisers say there's lots more events planned for 2010, so keep an eye on our events page for news.

Sutton Village Christmas ice rink organised by Sutton Smile!
Photographs of the ice rink as part of Sutton Village Christmas organised by Sutton Smile!
Pictures sourced from
Sutton Smile! website - contact me if you require a photographer credit

Sutton Village Church in Herbert Street appear to be prime movers in this initiative. Hopefully, we'll hear of similar exciting events taking place at other churches in Sutton next year under the Sutton Smile! umbrella. Coffee mornings and rummage sales have their place, of course, but hold little interest for young people. Am I right in thinking that the former independent Methodists are now the only church in Sutton to have a web presence? Since St.Anne & Blessed Dominic's website went offline earlier this year, I think that is an accurate statement and doesn't reflect well on the other Sutton churches who need to move with the times.

sutton oak primary school display at stnicholas flower festival
In saying that, on June 12th I called into St.Nicholas Church on the first day of its Flower Festival / Heritage display and was impressed by the community spirit and sense of pride. It was to commemorate 160 years since the church was founded, and Sherdley Primary, Eaves Lane and Sutton Oak schools had contributed to the vibrant displays.

Finally, this website has hugely expanded over the last twelve months, especially the heritage side. I'm grateful to all who have supplied information and photographs, sent in lovely emails and corrected my errors! Please do keep the emails coming and I've plans for much more content in 2010.

This will include downloads of complete chapters of the late Frank Bamber's marvellous book 'Clog Clatters of Old Sutton'. Frank, who was born in 1910 in Edgeworth Road, wrote this mainly in 1987 and had ten copies bound in 1996, mainly for members of his own family. I've been given permission to make his memoirs more widely available and using an informal style, Frank vividly describes life in pre-war Sutton with some great stories. Expect this to be available in late January along with new pages on Sutton boxers and wrestlers, the Sutton poison gas works in Abbotsfield Road and more biographical pages on notable Suttoners.

An article about Sutton Beauty & Heritage is also set to feature in Chris Coffey's Coffey Time column in the St.Helens Star on January 14th, 2010, so keep an eye out for that. 
Have a good New Year!   
SRW
Relevant links:  Coffey Time;  Sutton Smile Website;  Sutton Village Church Website;  Brickfields Woodland;  Official Dream Website;  Making of DreamSutton Manor Woodland

Gary Conley of the ex-Miners Focus Group is speaking at the World of Glass on Wednesday January 21st, 2010 at 11.30am to 1.30pm about his role in the commissioning of Dream at Sutton Manor. You can read more details here.

Reflections On Making Sutton Manor's Dream Come True

Well it's all over bar the shouting. Dream is now officially open for business and standing proud at the top of the old spoil heap at the former Sutton Manor Colliery site. Let's hope that there isn't too much more shouting though, as there's been quite enough already!

As a neutral observer with just one agenda item, i.e. supporting the beautification of Sutton via this website, the last three years have been quite an eye opener. The vitriol and scorn that's been poured on this project has been horrific, most of it misinformed and it continues online in the St.Helens Star this week. Don't some folk just love to denigrate other people's efforts? Slagging Dream off may provide some cathartic pleasure for some armchair critics but it's hardly constructive and won't do anything to improve Sutton's environment.


dream statue sthelens
Dream sculpture at Sutton Manor is proving to be a popular visitor attraction (pictured 1/6/09)

What has not been helpful is the manner in which this story has been portrayed. If you've read St.Helens Council's media releases for the past couple of years, like I have, you'd have thought that they were the prime movers, with just the occasional mention of ex-Sutton Manor miners' input.

However, if you've watched the generally excellent Big Art TV series which finished its run on C4 last Sunday, you would have heard a different story. Its focus was on the local community i.e. former miners led by
Gary Conley, who battled alongside project curator Laurie Peake of Liverpool Biennial, to make the Dream a reality. I don't recall a mention of council input as it didn't suit the programme makers' purpose.

Reading between the lines, I would venture to suggest that this was a former miners' focus group initiative which received enormous council support, as the logistics of converting the Dream concept into a physical structure must have been enormous. Some of the other towns in Channel 4's Big Art Project didn't receive their local authority's support and consequently their ideas failed to materialise. But I think it was unhelpful for St.Helens Council to have taken so much of the credit, as councils are rarely popular institutions and arts initiatives are inevitably controversial. This combination has probably contributed to much of the anger in Sutton and St.Helens.


tv production crew sthelens dream
A Spanish TV crew making a documentary on Jaume Plensa prepare to interview Gary Conley

Personally, I accept only two forms of criticism of the project as having any possible merit: a) That you don't like the sculpture b) That the government shouldn't be allocating taxpayers funds to arts bodies and other organisations for spending on such projects.

Art is subjective and this is a free country and so it's quite OK to say that you hate it! I doubt that Spanish artist Jaume Plensa will mind all that much. Secondly, it's a fair comment that the government's priorities in allocating funds might be skewed. If you think so, complain. Write to our MPs Shaun Woodward or Dave Watts and complain. Write to Gordon Brown or Alistair Darling, I doubt you'll get very far, but do it! But please don't take it out on the ex-miners' focus group or St.Helens Council. The external funding forDream has come from quite a number of bodies and these have effectively been 'grants' that have been 'won' by the team and which would otherwise have gone elsewhere, probably down south.

taking a photograph of a sign at dream sthelens
If you're offered a government grant for, say, cavity wall insulation you just take the money don't you? I doubt that many people think "This money could be better spent on education or the police" and refuse to accept it.

Some have said that a literal mining monument would have been better. As was shown in Big Art, a miners lamp was Plensa's first offering but was rejected by the ex-miners. They are the representatives of all the Sutton Manor mineworkers who toiled in the dark for 85 years and they've worked hard on this project. They had the courage to reject the lamp and go forDream and I really do think their judgement should be respected. Plus as
Chris Coffey has pointed out in his great new St.Helens Star column Coffey Time, the plinth of the statue that measures 17 metres in diameter is in the shape of a miner's tally which was issued to each miner for safety and pay purposes.

Yes it can only be seen in its full glory for a few seconds from the M62, but the trees - which have grown ferociously since they were planted in 2001 - will be pruned once the bird nesting season is over.

taking a photograph of dream sthelens
Watch the birdie! - it's common to see people posing for family photographs with Dream

Visiting the site on Monday lunchtime this week, I thought it would be nice and quiet with the official opening out of the way but there was loads of activity. As I left I counted 40 people still gathered around the statue. Quite a number of people were having their picture taken against it, like it was the Eiffel Tower! Although some local kids were still on half-term holiday, many seemed to be tourists and I thought I heard an American accent and a TV crew were filming. I'm told that on Monday night it was just as busy. I don't imagine that this interest will be maintained at this rate, but even a fraction of it will still be wonderful.

Out of three police dispersal zones currently in place in the whole of St.Helens that give the police more powers to combat anti-social behaviour, two are in the Sutton Manor district. The area has its problems but the funding for Dream isn't transferable for other uses in Sutton Manor and any attempt to beautify it really should, in my view, be heartily applauded.

entrance to sutton manor woodland with dream statue
The entrance to Sutton Manor Woodland with Dream in the background towering over the trees

Do I have any criticisms? Well, I'm slightly disappointed that the lines on the Dream face, where the 90 separate panels meet, haven't been painted or blurred over in some way. I was under the impression that this was going to be done over the last few weeks. I love the signage on the actual Dream site which inform visitors of the histories of both the site and the project. I do hope the council will get round to installing other signs around the Manor directing visitors. Some facilities would be great too - an ice cream seller on the site would have done a bomb this week! Plans are apparently in the works for a minibus to run up to the Dream site at weekends, so that those with mobility impairments can also enjoy the experience of seeing Dream.

So there's more to do and only time will tell whether local businesses such as the Smithy Manor pub or Village News will benefit. But if in a worst case scenario they don't increase their takings and no more visitors go to see it (highly unlikely!), nothing at all will have been lost. So please do stop complaining and start to appreciate other people's efforts to improve your environment!    
SRW

UPDATE 24/6/09
A Dream Photo-Album has been added - click here to view. A Flash Slideshow version is here. Slideshows are now available on all pages where there is a standard photo album. I have configured them to automatically play with a 5 second gap in between each slide. If you hover your mouse on the top half of each image, a caption is revealed. Remove your mouse and the caption will disappear. Hover over the bottom of any image and transport controls will appear enabling you to pause the slideshow.

UPDATE 29/6/09 I should point out that St.Helens Council have now installed some smart signage directing visitors to the Dream site. Some more would be nice, although I expect these signs cost more than people think. Below are the signs at the end of Jubits Lane at its junction with Warrington Road.

dream statue sign

dream statue sign sthelens

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PS Coffey Time by Sutton and St.Helens historian and local arts champion Chris Coffey, is the replacement column in the St.Helens Star for Whalley's World, after the retirement of long-serving journalist Alan Whalley. Click Here to view.

coffey time sthelens star

Making the Big Art 'Dream' a Reality

I had a welcome visit on Saturday from former Sutton Manor Colliery miner Mel Moran, whose a member of the St.Helens Big Art Project Focus Group. During the '80s and early '90s, Mel took sixty photos of the colliery and has kindly given copies to Sutton Beauty. They’ll be appearing on this site during the summer as part of our expansion of Sutton’s history.

(For a taster of Mel's photographs, click on any image below - then point at the full-size picture that appears to reveal the 'Next' / 'Previous' buttons)

A model of the artwork known as ‘
Dream' (pictured above), that will be sited at the top of the old Sutton Manor spoil heap, was unveiled at the World of Glass in St.Helens last Wednesday. Since then there’s been a fair bit of local hostility towards the concept (e.g. postings here). Much of the criticism has, I think, been through misunderstandings of the design and its funding. There's been little appreciation of the hard work that Mel, Gary Conley and the others have put in over the last three years.

Sutton Manor Big Art Project Focus Group
The former mineworkers in the St.Helens Big Art Project Focus Group pictured outside the old Sutton Manor Colliery gates in 2007.

The criticism has been wide-ranging. Many don’t like the design as it doesn’t directly relate to mining and others simply claim that the money could be much better spent elsewhere, even on the new Saints stadium (!). Although St.Helens Council (and Liverpool Biennial) have been providing considerable support, none of the money is sourced from council tax coffers. It’s been hard-won from a wide range of sources including the Arts Council, Forestry Commission, North West Coalfield Communities Regeneration Programme etc.

The focus group are not downhearted by the criticism. In fact Mel said that they were expecting it! The group had visited Gateshead where Antony Gormley’s
Angel of the North was unveiled in 1998 and were regularly told by locals how they’d initially hated the structure but have grown to love it. All art, of course, is subjective and public art is invariably controversial.

sthelens big art project focus group in C4 Three Minute Wonder

Members of the Focus Group in C4's taster '3 Minute Wonder - Watch This Space' (tx 30/08/07) - The Big Art Project TV series starts Nov. 23rd, 2008.

I’m pleased to hear that the team have thought through concerns over vandalism and it won’t be that easy for the mindless ones in Sutton Manor to damage ‘Dream’. The plan is to cast it from concrete with a white, almost luminous, finish and a special anti-vandal coating. The structure, which will depict an elongated face of a nine-year old girl, will be sunk deep underground so there'll be no danger of it collapsing during strong winds. Lights will be positioned around the circular plinth to give the face a somewhat ghostly appearance at night. A spotlight situated in the top of the head will at certain times of the year shine a powerful beam skywards.

Channel 4 Big Art Project in St Helens
The St.Helens Big Art Project team have worked closely with Catalan artist Jaume Plensa, who was commissioned last year to create the design. It was made clear from the outset that they didn’t simply want a mining monument. The group wanted something different which looked forward to the future and not the past. In fact Plensa’s first digital draft last September did incorporate a miner’s lamp but the team felt it looked too much like a lighthouse and so the artist went back to the drawing board.

Mel told me that the 20 metre high structure that's set to tower over the M62 will be made from 26 blocks and each will take a week to construct. Tenders are currently being taken from manufacturers but work can’t begin until the all-important planning permission has been obtained. It will be touch and go whether the artwork can be made and installed in time for the
Channel 4 TV series, although the team have planned for this possibility and do have a contingency in mind. Mel confirmed that the first of the four-part prime-time series, which was originally scheduled for transmission this month, will now be broadcast on Sunday November 23th, 2008 and then on the three following Sundays.

I expect that when the doubters and cynics have watched the series and the 'Dream' becomes a Sutton Manor reality, they will develop a greater understanding of the ethos and thinking behind the art project. I personally can’t wait!  
SW