Carole Dawber has transformed her box into a glorified representation of the symmetrical three-bay portico that fronts The Atkinson on Lord Street

Southport Heritage Project

group exhibition by SCA members

ArtHouse, Eastbank Street, Southport PR8 1EJ

5th – 16th September 2023

Each autumn thousands of volunteers across England organise events to celebrate our fantastic history and culture.

Running across ten days in September, ‘Heritage Open Days’ remains England’s largest festival of history and culture and offers free access to events and activities across the country when unique venues that are usually closed to the public, unbolt their doors to welcome visitors.

Subsidised by The National Lottery, the Southport Townscape Heritage project and Sefton Council have come together to focus on how art chronicles the legacy and tradition of a place and time by opening up opportunities for artists to visit and record lesser accessible spaces in the town.

As part of this year’s event, Southport Contemporary Arts will be hosting its own unique interpretation of this year’s theme – ‘Creativity Unwrapped’ – with an exclusive presentation by SCA members at their Eastbank Street gallery.

SCA director, Serah Stringer said: 

“The exploration of Southport’s streets with a Heritage project activity coordinator, inspired the SCA artists by pointing out the styles and quirks of the town’s unique architecture and street layout and by delving into Southport’s legacy with maps, old photos and stories. 

“The SCA artists working alongside the Southport Townscape Heritage Project are now looking forward to showing how the finished artwork registers these moments in time, which in turn, will hopefully inspire others to look at Southport’s streets and wonderfully rich heritage more closely. Visitors can certainly expect a visual experience that will challenge, excite and incite the viewer’s curiosity.” 

Allocated an unprepossessing large brown cardboard box earlier in the year, the SCA’s members challenge was to imaginatively re-invent each box using their own skills and abilities inspired by the Southport Townscape Heritage Project aim to regenerate new life into the historic buildings in the town centre and restore Southport’s Victorian seaside heritage for the future.

Carole Dawber has transformed her box into a glorified representation of the symmetrical three-bay portico that fronts The Atkinson on Lord Street

Carole Dawber has transformed her box into a glorified representation of the symmetrical three-bay portico that fronts The Atkinson on Lord Street

Taking inspiration from Southport’s iconic architecture, Carole Dawber has transformed her box into a glorified representation of the symmetrical three-bay portico that fronts The Atkinson on Lord Street. 

In Carole’s reinvention – “Here’s One I Made Earlier” – this Grade II listed building is now festooned with flower-patterned tissue outer walls and houses Carole’s own framed artwork inside: “I wanted to represent two of my most favourite recollections about living in Southport, art shows at The Atkinson and the annual Flower Show”.

Pam Thomas's Southport Shrimpers Yesterday and Today is an honest attempt to convey the importance of the shrimping industry to many local families and communities down the years, and in that way, preserve something of its history and heritage

Pam Thomas’s Southport Shrimpers Yesterday and Today is an honest attempt to convey the importance of the shrimping industry to many local families and communities down the years, and in that way, preserve something of its history and heritage

Pam Thomas’s “Southport Shrimpers Yesterday and Today” is an honest attempt to “convey the importance of the shrimping industry to many local families and communities down the years, and in that way, preserve something of its history and heritage”.

A longstanding distinctive feature on the sands of Southport beaches, early generations, both men and women, used shrimping to supplement their family’s income when the farming of their smallholdings became inadequate.

As Pam explains: “Locally, the method used was known as ‘putting’ or ‘pushing’ and a beam about six feet long was pushed along the sand with one hand, while the other hand held the net. The shrimps were transferred to the basket that the shrimper carried across his shoulders. These baskets, when full, could weigh as much as 80 pounds. In time the process became more mechanised with horse drawn carts and then motorised tractors. In recent years, there has been a decline in the fishing for shrimps, as the rusting tractors and equipment, parked on the beach at Weld Road, bear witness”.

Kate Tidmarsh's Look Up! artwork

Kate Tidmarsh’s Look Up! artwork

Working from her canal side studio in West Lancashire, printmaker Kate Tidmarsh’s “Look Up!” also widens the perspective: “As I walk around Southport, as an artist and a visitor, I look at it through a lens reflecting my passion for layers and patterns. The interplay of light and glass, the many juxtaposed angles and interrupted views are endlessly fascinating to me, and very much highlight the continuity of creativity in this ever-evolving town. Everywhere you look, there are layers of history being exposed, the old living alongside the new, as well as regeneration looking towards the future. My box is a current snapshot in time, from a personal viewpoint, referencing the actual layers of building facades, the past glory, and the potential future”.

Kate Tidmarsh's Look Up! artwork

Kate Tidmarsh’s Look Up! artwork

Creating images through exploration and experimentation, Kate often works from photographic evidence captured on-site: “As a printmaker, I often work from reference photos, and in this instance I brought these more directly into my work, creating a physical layered model of several views while ‘Looking Up’. The big open sky on the seafront is, to me, an important part of visiting Southport and my focus here. Reflections, shadows, and angles work with the glass and sky to create this experience, which I have constructed using photographic prints and mono prints”.

Jenny Curwen's A Celebration of Nature, Culture and Heritage artwork

Jenny Curwen’s A Celebration of Nature, Culture and Heritage artwork

Jenny Curwen’s “A Celebration of Nature, Culture and Heritage” is mini version of the ArtHouse Gallery on Eastbank Street complete with photographic images she took around the town on the recently coordinated ‘Stroll and Snap Southport Heritage Walk’ with Southport Townscape Heritage rep, Sue Latimer said: “My title captures the essence of Southport as a town that has a rich history, a vibrant culture and a stunning natural environment. 

“It also invites the visitors to explore and appreciate the various aspects of Southport, such as its wildlife, its architecture and historical past. 

“In my mini gallery there will be my own spin on the images taken on the walk plus an image my father, Mr R H Curwen, took in the early 1950’s taken at Southport Fair where all the men are in trench coats, the fashion of the day.”

In total there will be 16 transformed boxes to wonder at and this exclusive showing is certainly not one to be missed. The SCA’s response to the challenge will go on display at the ArtHouse, Eastbank Street, Southport from 5th-16thSeptember 2023. The gallery is open Tuesday – Friday 10am-3pm. Saturday 11am-4pm.  

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