Market Town
Market Town
Market Town
Town
Radar
3 Market Town
Foreword
I moved to Loughborough when I was four. I was oblivious to where
we were or what we were doing but it turns out we lived over the
Nanpantan Road from the university. I went to the grammar school
which didn’t work for me but I was in the same art class as Ivan
Morison, now a public artist. Recently, he published these words on a
billboard on the exterior of Eastside Projects (an artist-run space as
public gallery in Digbeth, Birmingham):
I said bye to Loughborough when I was 18, and the impression I’ve
kept is of this uncute, middle of the Midlands town that’s really
not one but two towns: a university town with a 438 acre campus
(Europe’s largest), and a town town. They don’t see each other. They
don’t belong in the same dream. But beginning means the projects
documented in this book: it means getting lectures in the market
and markets in the campus, it means re-using the disused art
school, it means getting Kathrin Böhm to do anything she wants,
it even means billboards (this time by Europa and Peter Nencini).
These projects/this book might be where the two divergent parts of
the town come together and form new communities. It feels like the
start of something.
6 NICK SL ATER, D IR ECTOR , LU ARTS 7 architectural framework of the town (Can Altay); we wanted to
explore new economies (Ania Bas) and finally we wanted to consider
urban design, place making and the role of the civic university
town of Loughborough programme of seminars extended the debate around the town
centre. This series of thematic conversations involved academic
presentations alongside practical delivery and brought together a
critical mass of local activists and instigators who were interested
Fifty years ago Loughborough town centre was a very different in shaping the future of the town. The conversation was extended
place. It had a cattle market on Mondays, shops closed on further through the design and implementation of a shop space
Wednesday afternoons and the university had just been founded. known as ‘Market Town Corner’ located within the main town
The intervening years have seen rapid change. The trades that shopping centre. During the eight months in which it operated it
occupy the town centre now no longer simply consist of butchers, functioned as a discussion space, a reading room, a workshop,
greengrocers and hardware stores, like many British high streets, a community centre, bringing in new audiences and generating
Loughborough now hosts shops selling mobile phones, e-cigarettes further ideas.
and discounted goods.
The artist’s responses to the brief ranged from the playful to
In response to the changing face of our town centres the the provocative to the practical but they were united in offering
government commissioned Mary Portas to develop the Portas creative responses to an area that is often stymied by more
Review (2011) which developed a future vision for the sustainability formulaic solutions. I hope that the seeds planted by the projects
of our high street. Loughborough was identified as one of the and the ongoing discussions can be further cultivated in order that
twelve English towns chosen to participate in the Portas Pilot, the town can not only survive, but flourish. Creativity combined
a scheme that was intended to test out the recommendations with community spirit can imbue a town with personality and
outlined in the review. individuality, both of which are vital to its future economic success.
Market Town was designed to support this pilot, inviting I would like to thank all the artists who participated in the
architects, designers and artists to respond to the Portas Review programme both in delivering high quality artistic commissions
and deliver a series of initiatives that made visible some of the and through the many workshops that formed part of the
issues as well as engaging the community in a debate about its programme. I would also like to thank all the speakers who
future. It was also born out of a recognition that Loughborough took part in the seminars and the academics who have not only
also had expertise in the future of retail (Dr Cathy Hart) and in contributed to this publication but have been active partners
social design (Dr Carolina Escobar-Tello) and it had two arts throughout the programme.
organisations (Radar and Charnwood Arts) with an interest in
working with artists within specific social contexts.
Loughborough Records
Presents Presence (LRPP)
Can Altay is interested in how the unique characteristics of a
location can produce a particular brand of music, which in turn
develops an identity for the place. For Market Town Altay devised
Loughborough Records Presents Presence (known as LRPP). In
January 2016 he designed a temporary recording studio which
offered local musicians free use of equipment and help of an
engineer. It also functioned as a piece of social sculpture, open
for visitors when it wasn’t functioning as a recording studio.
The studio was open for a month, during which time it brought
together musicians from across the town and highlighted the
talent and range of music that exists locally. The recordings were
recorded by a skilled sound engineer who then made the tracks
available online.
LOUGHBOROUGH RECORDS
PRESENTS PRESENCE
LRPP li ve
P
R
L
P
Loughborough’s musicians have joined LRPP
to write and record their music. And now
they are going to perfo
f rm it.
fo
Sounds of a small town Yet, notwithstanding this variety, music represents a single binding
element for all of the musicians that recorded with the project.
Each song, in its own way, reflects the local geographical and socio-
economic context in which musical creativity takes place; they
In her seminal work on music making in English towns, Ruth represent authentic musical expressions of lived experiences in
Finnegan suggested that music making is part of the fabric of the town. No track encapsulates this more than ‘Where the Green
English life. Yet, the development and visibility of a local music Man Sleeps’, a track written about Loughborough as part of a
scene in any give place is often determined not by the number collective song-writing workshop. Opening with the line “Listen to
of people involved in musical practice, but by the presence of the echoes of the town”, the track provides a lyrical and emotional
key, locally-focused music infrastructure. Significant in this representation of Loughborough. Through the musical encounter
regard are live music venues, but also important are recording and exchange facilitated by Loughborough Records Presents
studios, record labels, and the music press. In large cities, such Presence, local musicians have offered us a lens into life in this
infrastructure can exist in abundance, and particular cities in small market town.
the UK such as London, Manchester, Liverpool, Bristol and Leeds
are recognised as having vibrant, vernacular music scenes based Listen to the recordings by visiting:
around local music creativity and live performance. www.soundcloud.com/lrppresence
Show Me How
Ania Bas delivered the first commission to take place as part of
the Market Town project, from June to October 2015. Her interest
was centred on the exchange of hands-on skills and the potential
to share knowledge which she observed as not necessarily
commercially sustainable and valued.
This unique space known as Market Town Corner, was widely used
for all kinds of activity; workshops, seminars, film screenings and
public debate. It was also the public-facing ‘shop window’ of the
project, open for anyone to pop in and spend time with the changing
displays that were designed to document the inner workings of the
overall project and the individual commissions as they developed.
Throughout the Market Town project the space was also used as
a way of capturing ideas about the future of the town – visitors
were encouraged to leave comments about issues they felt were
perhaps overlooked in other kinds of public forum. These ideas were
recorded and provided source material for the Loogabaroogian’s
Guide to the Future, a zine that was created by Nathan Jones
and Sam Skinner (Torque Torque) who worked with young people
from the town who took part in workshops as part of 2015’s
Loogabarooga Festival, an annual festival of literature and
illustration that takes place across numerous venues in the town.
Brand News
Kathrin Böhm is working with trade and economy as shared
public realms, and many of her projects create circuits of
collective production and public exchange where every aspect of
a production cycle – from making to branding to reinvesting –
becomes publicly accessible.
For one day in February all displays and products were exchanged
with the results from the Brand News workshops. Dominant
brands disappeared and familiar products became un-recognisable.
Customers couldn’t identify what they wanted by brand alone.
“The result was a shop as a public cultural space where brands were erased for one
day and goods were given an identity by us who use them.” — Kathrin Böhm
The multiple roles of the shop and those who run and use
it were foregrounded. The shop became an experiment, an
exhibition, a collective DIY branding event, and straight forward
relations between user and producer, consumer and trader
were unhinged temporarily.
Town Centre Consumers Experiential touch points engage the consumer’s sensations,
feelings and emotions including the softer, intangible aspects
such as the atmosphere, social interactions with other people,
picking up bargains, using cafes and restaurants, special events
Following the economic crisis of 2008 and subsequent recession, and cultural activities. Our findings showed that the experiential
UK town centres changed visibly as retail stores closed and touch points directly influence the consumers’ desire to stay in
consumer confidence reflected in the declining footfall. The the town centre, increasing their loyalty and sense of belonging
Government response was to commission an independent to the town community and their intention to revisit. Importantly,
review of town centres. In 2011 the Portas Review set out 28 the experiential touch points are what differentiate a town from
recommendations for government action. In a bid to revitalise the competing centres or online shopping.
country’s high streets, 27 Portas ‘pilot’ towns were selected to
test out new ideas for regeneration. Notably, the pilots sought to As one of the 27 Portas Pilots, Loughborough, through its
rejuvenate the community hubs traditionally associated with town Business Improvement District (BID) Team and town centre
centres, to expand beyond commercial activity, to become dynamic, partnership has been proactive in driving change in the town
exciting and social places. centre. Working with the Loughborough BID, consumer routes
were mapped across Loughborough town centre. Typically, 60%
Portas and government ministers stated that to prosper in an era of consumers follow habitual routes through the town. These were
of online shopping, town centres must adapt in order to survive. often limited to familiar stores, in a smaller concentrated area.
Core to this was the need to understand the changing ways Heat maps identified the most frequented locations or ‘hot spots’
in which consumers use town centres. Digital technology has and the least visited ‘cold spots’. These findings could then be
revolutionised consumer shopping, affecting consumers’ physical used to introduce physical improvements in signage and the
relationship with town centres. Consumers now interact with a public realm, or marketing interventions to influence consumers
diverse range of services, technologies, leisure activities, events to discover new attractions.
and communities in their high street. Visiting the town centre has
become a wider experience but what constitutes the experience Understanding consumer behaviour identifies the most relevant
and how can towns use this knowledge? factors that add value to the overall town centre experience and
guides how to improve town centre performance, in order to
In an Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded study attract and retain consumer patronage.
partnered by major retailers, Loughborough University investigated
the customer experience across 13 different town centres. Tracking The resilience of Loughborough town centre is indicative of
consumer perceptions and interactions, whether physical or virtual, the need to balance retail, services, community and social uses,
within town centres, created a comprehensive picture of consumer entertainment and cultural activities. Looking forward, it is vital
behaviour within the changing urban landscape. that town centres are shaped to be fit for future consumers’ needs.
The Market Town project has shown that by engaging artists,
Town centre experiences involve consumer journeys, which designers and the community to debate the Loughborough vision,
comprise a series of touch points or ‘memorable interactions’. it has taken the first steps to shaping this new experience.
These include a combination of both functional and experiential
touch points. Functional touch points satisfy the practical tangible
purposes of the visit such as the range of stores, availability of
products, convenience, parking and easy access to the centre.
For consumers to revisit, town centres need to ensure customers
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1 The Generator Building 5 Rendell Primary School Market Day, Public event 12 Loughborough Library
12 Frederick Street Rendell Street, LE11 1LL 6 February 2016 Granby St, LE11 3DZ
Firing the Generator Brand News workshops 7 Fearon Hall Brand News workshops
Public event Rectory Road, LE11 1PL
30 September – 2 October 2016 6 Market Town Corner, Carillon Court 13 Charwnood Museum
Swan St, LE11 3XA Firing the Generator workshop Granby St, LE11 3DZ
2 The Swan in the Rushes 25 – 27 November 2015
Public House Play Loughborough Brand News workshops
21 The Rushes, LE11 5BE Ruth Catlow Brand News workshops
22 August 2015 14 Queen’s Park
Why run a co-op? seminar 8 Market Square Granby St, LE11 3DZ
26 June 2015 Ethical Jewellery & DIY Market Centre Offices
Household Products workshop Perimeter Perambulations
The New Maker Economy seminar 17 September 2015 Brand News workshops Helen Stratford
Andrew Sleigh, Caroline Chapain, 17 October 2015
Hannah Fox, STEALTH.unlimited Map Your Market Market Lectures
15 July 2015 Lara Salinas Public event Loughborough Records Presents
19 September 2015 28 & 29 April 2016 Presence @ Picnic in the Park
Identity, Civic Pride and 25 June 2016
Civic Place seminar How to run a Co-op 9 The Falcon Centre
Europa, Robert Harland, 1 October 2015 27–31 Pinfold Gate, LE11 1BE 15 Outwoods Edge Primary School
Finn Williams, Patrick Lacey 21 Redwood Rd, LE11 2LD
30 September 2015 Fruit Routes Exchange Brand News workshops
17 October 2015 Brand News workshops
Digital Citizen seminar 10 The Organ Grinder Public House
Ben Eaton, Guy Douglas Loogabaroogarian’s 4 Wood Gate, LE11 2TY 16 Loughborough College
11 February 2016 Guide to the Future Radmoor Rd, LE11 3BT
20 October 2015 Show Me How workshops
Creative Markets June – August 2015 Brand News workshops
Janet Currie Cheap Thrills! Zero Budget
31 March 2016 Film Festival The Rise of the Local seminar 17 Loughborough University
31 October 2015 Kathrin Böhm, David Boyle, Epinall Way, LE11 3TU
3 Ashby Square News Naomi Diamond
2–4 Ashby Square, LE11 5AA Shouting Quietly: Workshop 26 November 2015 Brand News workshops
for Creatives & Independents
Brand News Installation Pete Mosely The Civic University seminar University Market
Public event, part of Market Day 4 November 2015 Clare Meluish, Darren Smith, 27 April
6 February 2016 Andrew Merritt, Paul Smyth
Loughborough Jewels workshop 20 September 2016 ‘Ough ‘Ough Billboards
4 Charnwood Arts Roberta Bernabei A Moira Street / New King Street
27 Granby St, LE11 3DU 21, 22, 23 & 30 January 2016 11 John Storer House
Ward’s End, LE11 3HA B Belton Road / Derby Road
Brand News workshops Loughborough Records
Presents Presence workshop Brand News workshops C Ratcliffe Road / Meadow Lane
January 2016
38 EURO PA A ND PE TER NENC I N I 39
‘Ough’Ough
Graphic design collective Europa and illustrator Peter Nencini
worked collaboratively on a project they named ‘Ough’Ough.
“Our work in Loughborough has engaged us with thinking about
identity and place and a graphic designer’s role in relation to this.
Much of our time visiting Loughborough has been seeking out the
unusual bits that contribute to the character of the town – the
‘ough’ and the ‘ough’ rather than the ‘L’ and the ‘bor’.”
“A place can never be viewed as a whole. Taking a reading of a place is a useful way by
which we can provoke a conversation about a place. We have worked with a range of
objects that reference stories that we have encountered in the city. The work we have
created is not presented as the new identity for Loughborough, it does not claim to
define the place, but it is a response to Loughborough that explores its identity in an
open ended way.” — Excerpt: The Identify Façade, www.oughough.uk (2016)
40 41
42 43
44 ROBERT H A R L A ND , LECTUR ER I N V I SUA L C OM MUN I C AT I ON 45 to function. At the scale of a town, this may comprise of shop
(G R A PH IC DES IG N) , LOUG H B OROUGH UN I V ER S IT Y fascias, transport infrastructure, clocks, murals, manhole covers,
statues, sports pitch markings and more. But although there may
also be a football pitch, there is unlikely to be a football stadium,
their graphic communication installations. Such objects depend on larger scale infrastructure.
LOUGHBOROUGH
a settlement continuum, as shown here:
Most of us, during the weekend, sensed that it was a remarkable and unusual
occasion. Crucially, it was the first instance in which the discussion about the future
of this building, and the needs of Loughborough’s artistic, cultural and creative
community, took place in (part of) the building itself. It was a live test, “dreaming for
real”, of what this emerging group can become, what they potentially can achieve and
also what nightmares might be still luring on the way ahead.
After all the talks and the physical work on site, one thing stood out: the understanding
that for an endeavour like ‘The Generator’, the financial plan has to emerge from
the ambitions and limitations of its community, rather than from what the building
tries to lure us into. The building is the tool – not the goal. Finally, we can shut down
the temporary generator that we brought in for this weekend, and wait for the real
Generator to take hold here!
Designing happier and With the aim of shaping innovative, commercially viable and
practical sustainable solutions to global social problems, it is
Market Lectures
London-based design collective Something & Son approached
their commission as an opportunity to test their observations
and research into the relationships between the town and the
university. Their work on this project set out to find playful and
imaginative ways of bringing the town’s two most iconic assets,
the university and the market, at least temporarily, together.
Cambridge
Oxford Loughborough
These sketches, produced as part of Something & Son’s research, demarcate the locations of
university buildings (shaded areas) in relation to each campus host town / city centres (circles).
60 MEL JO R DA N, A RTIST A ND AC A DEMI C , R E A DER I N ART A N D 61 historians that are engaged with the discourses of participatory
THE PUBLIC SPH ER E , ROYA L C OL L EG E O F ART art practices have focused on the dialogical aspect of these
practices (Kester, 2004), the instrumentalisation of participatory
art practices within cultural policy (Bishop, 2012, Hewitt, 2011,
Loughborough: From Market Miles, 2005) and the relational (Bourriaud, 1998).
Town to Market Society 2015 for the renovation of ‘neglected’ streets in the Toxteth area of
Liverpool. Assemble worked on behalf of the Granby Four Streets
community land trust, they admit that the group of empowered
citizens were already well on their way to re-thinking the renewal
During the 1990’s, under New Labour, the roles given to cultural of the place and that the community group foregrounded the need
policy became convergent with other government policies in order to to utilise design and architecture to do this. In 2014, the shortlist
tackle serious deprivation within post-industrial towns and cities. for Artes Mundi Prize, (the £40,000 prize is the largest art award
The concept of art as an economic driver has encouraged the use in the UK) included nine artists four of which work with people
of art within urban regeneration, in visual ‘place-making’ and in in the public domain to produce artworks. Additionally the artist
art biennials, thereby contributing to the re-branding of towns and Jeremy Deller represented Britain at the 55th Venice Biennale 2013.
cities for inward investment as well as making them attractive as Well known for his social interventions, his 2012 Hayward Gallery
tourist destinations. exhibition was entitled Joy of People and demonstrated Deller’s
ability to work with people to do incredible things. Deller won the
In 2011 the UK government commissioned Mary Portas to undertake Turner prize in 2004 in recognition for such works as the Battle
an independent review into the state of the town centre awarding 27 of Orgreave, a re-enctament of the miner’s strike at Orgreave and
towns, (including Loughborough) funding to test out her vision. Acid Brass in which Deller convinced the Williams Fairey brass band
to play acid house music.
‘High streets must be ready to experiment, try new things, take risks and become
destinations again. They need to be spaces and places that people want to be in. High The Market Town project is part of this commitment to
streets of the future must be a hub of the community that local people are proud of understanding art as a social and critical practice, producing
and want to protect.’ — The Portas Review artworks that are generated from and embedded in the collective
fabric of a place. The Market Town programme of commissioning
Radar’s Market Town project utilises the Mary Portas Review as has enabled a group of artists to engage with the physical and
a starting point to establish an arts programme in the public realm. social sites of Loughborough town centre. The artists have
The artists and groups that have contributed to the project are: implemented activity that contributes to the future understanding
STEALTH.unlimited, Something & Son, Can Altay, Kathrin Böhm of how people use and occupy specific types of collective spaces
working with design collective An Endless Supply, Ania Bas and as well as exploring a range of ways of how people ‘make’ and ‘do’
Europa working with illustrator Peter Nencini. All these artists have things together. The artist’s endeavors enable us to reconsider the
experience of engaging with specific communities; their practices function of a market town. By emphasizing the collective ownership
involve responding to the physical shape and context of particular of our cities and towns and concentrating on them as essentially
public spaces, as well as exploring alternative forms of dialogue social places we turn Market Towns into Market Societies.
and exchange.
Mel Jordan Mel is an artist and academic; she works collaboratively with Dave
Beech and Andy Hewiit as the Freee art collective. At the Royal Allan Watson Allan Watson is a Lecturer in Geography and researcher in the
College of Art she is Head of Programme for Contemporary Art Centre for Research in Communication and Culture (CRCC)
Practice and Reader in Art and the Public Sphere. Her research at Loughborough University. His research interests focus
and subsequent artworks present a critical examination into the predominantly on the geographies of music and the musical
degree to which public sphere theory can contribute to an expanded economy, as well as film and media. His research draws together
understanding of art and its publics. both geographical-relational and sociological perspectives on
cultural production, labour and consumption.
Peter Nencini Peter Nencini has worked across print and television with Svenska
Tecknare, New York Times, BBC, Channel 4, and Théâtre National Matt Weston Matt Weston is part of Spacemakers, a utopian regeneration
de Toulouse. Recent commissions for Eastside Projects Birmingham, agency that tries to get inside the machinery of regeneration,
Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst Leipzig, Walker Art Center and use it for good instead of evil. www.spacemakers.info
Minneapolis and Wallpaper* / Salone del Mobile Milan have resulted
in architectural models, prostheses for furniture, pedagogical
apparatus, props for performance – narrative forms that oscillate
Market Town was a Radar Show Me How
project, comprising six Ania Bas would like to Creative workshops October
commissions, designed to acknowledge: 1, 2016: Jemma Bagley, Sarah
explore and examine the future Green, Dan Fiddis, Emma J
of Loughborough. Radar aims Workshops led by: Crafty Sew Lannie and Kevin Ryan
to bring together artists and & So, Sarah Green AKA Super
academics to identify areas of Crochet Girl, Joanne Keog, Peter Drawings: Paul Gent
shared research and develop Leadbeater, Mariana Rubino,
contemporary art commissions Hannah Smith, David Towers, Performances: Circus Hub
alongside different forms of Emma Ward, James Woodcock Nottingham, Mark Elliott, Chris
critical debate. Conway, Beth Morris and Anna
Why to run a co-op? and my Charlotte
This project would not have How to run a co-op?
been possible without Sophie Footprint co-op, The Star & Dreaming for Real workshop
Evingar, Sally Hodgson, Suzanne Shadow Cinema, The Bristol participants October 2, 2016: Led
Hoogers, Sophie Louise Hyde Cable, CASE (Co-operative and by Kevin Ryan with Jill Vincent,
and Jo Mardell (former Radar), Social Enterprise) Deana Wildgoose, Ana Džokić,
Kate Self (Producer, Radar) and Atta Kwami, Pamela Clarkson,
Niki Russell (LRPP Presents). Firing the Generator Chris Traill, Jackie Edwards,
STEALTH.unlimited would Nick Slater, Marc Neelen, James
And our partners: Michael Bird, like to acknowledge: Chantry, Faizan Qureshi, Upesh
Head of Markets, Fairs and Town Mistry, Bill Brookman, David
Centre Operations and team, Concept and spatial design: Pagett-Wright
Jonathan Hale, BID Project STEALTH.unlimited (Ana Džokić
Manager, Love Loughborough and Marc Neelen) Special thanks to: Kevin Ryan
and team, Kevin Ryan and team and Frances Ryan for their
at Charnwood Arts and Sylvia Event programme: Kevin Ryan, hospitality, as well as Pamela
Wright, Head of Leisure & Catherine Rogers and Megal Clarkson and Atta Kwami for
Culture, Charnwood Council. Powell (CIC “The Generator, their care
Loughborough”) in collaboration
For any enquiries please contact: with Nick Slater
[email protected]
www.arts.lboro.ac.uk/radar Construction: Erik Jutten,
radar.loughborough Ana Džokić and Marc Neelen,
Lboro_Uni_Arts with generous help of Pamela
Clarkson, Atta Kwami, Mike
Radar Kroll, Kevin Ryan, Natalie
Nick Slater, Kate Self, Chabaud, Ashok Mistry, James
Rachel Morris Chantry, Kole Redmile, Mike
Millward, Bill Brookman,
Design Madeleine Coburn, Frances
Mark El-khatib Ryan, Faizan Qureshi and
others. Part of the market
Print structure by Something & Son
Rope Press for the Market Town program
has been used in the spatial
p.8 – 9: Loughborough, set-up.
Market Place, c. 1965.
© The Francis Frith Collection Workshop November 2015 with:
Borut Šeparović
Can Altay
Ania Bas
Kathrin Böhm and An Endless Supply
Europa and Peter Nencini
Something & Son
STEALTH.unlimited