something of the chameleon
Emerging Artist: Art, Architecture and Culture
Friday, 12 June 2026
David Hockney (1937-2026)
St Cuthbert's Village II
I now want to skip over the Pennines to Manchester and this BBC documentary, from 1974, about the redevelopment of the city on the 1960s. Erroneously, the notes to this video claim it is the infamous Hulme Crescents; it is actually the Coverdale Estate, nicknamed 'Fort Ardwick' by the disgruntled residents. It was designed by Manchester Corporation Architects Department, in collaboration with Bison Concrete Northern Ltd. It was constructed, like St Cuthbert's Village, using prefabricated concrete slabs - the 'Bison Concrete Wall-frame System'. The estate consisted of flats, maisonettes and houses. As with the other two estates mentioned in this post, its failure was precipitous, and the film presents a churlish council struggling to keep up with the effects of its redevelopment policy, including apportioning blame to its own tenants. 'Fort Ardwick' was finally demolished in 1992
The local MP Gerald Kaufmann said of it,
'The scale of the buildings is often daunting. I have in mind Fort Beswick and Fort Ardwick in my own constituency. The design is frequently all too forbidding. That is why the two estates are called "Forts". "I am on the Fort", constituents tell me. Such developments are often unsightly. The approaches are not attractively landscaped and are often strewn with litter and debris.
'Refuse disposal is too often haphazard and infrequent, and this can lead to the proliferation of insects and vermin which are already fostered by design defects. There was a penetrating article recently in The Guardian pointing this out. The caretaker service often is insufficient to meet the needs, where the service exists at all. Too many developments in my own constituency and that of my hon. Friend have no caretaker service."
'The despair of some tenants can be summed up in a remark made to me by a lady who lives on Coverdale Crescent, more commonly known as "Fort Ardwick", which is now perhaps the best known deck access development in Britain. A few weeks ago, on one of my visits to see the estate, I had a long discussion with a number of the residents. One of them said to me, "If Labour wins the election, it ought to do two things: abolish the House of Lords, and demolish Fort Ardwick."
Thursday, 11 June 2026
Ruskin and St Marks, Venice
Nobody has written so movingly, or powerfully, about architecture as the English critic and polymath John Ruskin (1819-1900). I read this description of the facade of the Basilica of St Mark years ago and it has stuck with me ever since. It is superlative.
And well may they fall back, for beyond those troops of ordered arches there rises a vision out of the earth, and all the great square seems to have opened from it in a kind of awe, that we may see it far away; - a multitude of pillars and white domes, clustered into a long low pyramid of coloured light; a treasure heap, it seems, partly of gold, and partly of opal and mother-of-pearl, hollowed beneath into five great vaulted porches, ceiled with fair mosaic, and beset with sculpture of alabaster, clear a amber and delicate a ivory, - sculpture fantastic and involved, of palm leaves and lilies, and grapes and pomegranates, and birds clinging and fluttering among the branches, all twined together into an endless network of buds and plumes; and in the midst of it, the solemn forms of angels, sceptred, and robed to the feet, and leaning to each other across the gates, their figures indistinct among the gleaming of the golden ground through the leaves beside them, interrupted and dim, like the morning light a it faded back among the branches of Eden, when first its gates were angel-guarded long ago. And round the walls of the porches there are set pillars of variegated stones, jasper, and porphyry, and deep-green serpentine spotted with flakes of snow, and marbles, that half refuse and half yield to the sunshine, Cleopatra-like, 'their bluest veins to kiss' - the shadow, as it steals back from them, revealing line after line of azure undulation, as a receding tide leaves the waved sand; their capitals rich with interwoven tracery, rooted knots of herbage, and drifting leaves of acanthus and vine, and mystical signs, all beginning and ending in the Cross; and above them, in the broad archivolts, continuous chain of language and of life - angels, and the signs of Heaven, and the labours of men, each in its appointed season upon the earth; and above these, another range of glittering pinnacles, mixed with white arches edged with scarlet flowers, - a confusion of delight, amidst which the breasts of the Greek horses are seen blazing in their breath of golden strength, and the St mark's lion, lifted on a blue field covered with stars, until at last, as if in ecstasy, the crests of the arches break into a marble foam, and toss themselves far into the blue sky with flashes and wreaths of sculptured spray, as if the breakers on the Lido shore had been frost-bound before they fell, and the sea-nymphs had inlaid them with coral and amethyst.'
Tuesday, 9 June 2026
St Paul, Plasmarl & St Peter, Newton: Part 2
Monday, 8 June 2026
St Cuthbert's Village I
Apologies, for the version of this article I posted earlier, for some unknown reason an previous draft was published ,and not the finished article. Mea culpa.
I want to go back now to the Tyneside of the early 1970s and one of the locations used in the film 'Get Carter', the Modernist St Cuthbert's Village, Gateshead. (I really can't show you the scene in question, not simply because of any reasons of copyright.) It serves as a prime example of the sort of urban re-development that took in the first three decades after the end of WWII in Britain's major cities, as local and national government tried to solve the housing crisis. It was miles away, figuratively and physically, from the 'New House Book'.
What was produced, however, was a sort of simulacrum, a stand-in for an actual village, like one of those cream substitutes so beloved of food manufacturers Post-War. Grey and hulking. It had neither church nor green, nor school. Facilities were planned but they were late off the starting block and arrived after the residents. There was no traditional urbanism. It was a sort of enclosed community, introverted and not wholly integrated in the warp and weft of the community that surrounded it. A sort of ghetto.
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1987 View of St. Cuthbert's Court and six-storey blocks
The University of Edinburgh Tower Block Project
1987 View of St. Cuthbert's Village
The University of Edinburgh Tower Block Project
However there were problems almost immediately - flats were damp and roofs leaked, and it was difficult to heat the flats. The project limped on for some 25 years, waxing in problems both structural and social, before it was demolished. Its fate matched that of another council estate of the period, the nearby Clasper Village.

