We start, as so many journeys start, from the seemingly normal terraced streets of Stoke Newington:

DSC00004s 

DSC00006s 

DSC00007s 

A vision of Victorian suburban serenity. But the pretence is impossible to maintain. As we now realise – we've lived in this world for long enough, God knows: we've read all the right books - this is a facade. Reality crowds in on us; demands our attention. For every dream there's a nightmare; for every heaven there's a hell; for every thesis there's an antithesis; for every terraced middle class utopia there's a dark inner-city world of desperation, crime, and dodgy street art. We soon make the inevitable plunge into the seedy graffiti'd urban detritus of back streets in Shoreditch, where anarchist chancers meet the prophets of Blakeian decay (when they're not round at Iain Sinclair's place having a nice cup of tea):

DSC00012s 

DSC00015s

DSC00018s

DSC00019s 

…while right next door, near the financial centres where billions are made and lost in the open-plan institutiionalised greed of the markets, pigs are slaughtered and butchered whole to be eaten by corpulent bankers, fresh from their latest stock-market killing, as the grease dribbles down their chins:

DSC00024s 

…and, outside, the world pretends to a glass and steel dream of normality straight from the drawing boards of corporate architects and city planners:

DSC00026s 

Can we somehow retrieve, via an as-yet undreamed-of synthesis, the dignity and beauty of our urban environment?

DSC00037s 

or must we settle for the occasional patch of an artificial and kitschy jigsaw-puzzle vision of rural arcadia within the surrounding soul-less urban jungle?

DSC00038s 

I don't know. I only ask the questions…..and take the photographs.

[Google map here]

Posted in

5 responses to “That Old Metropolitan Dialectic”

  1. Froward Avatar
    Froward

    The Google map is a brilliant idea, for those of us who don’t know London at all.

    Like

  2. PooterGeek Avatar

    How much longer can this tweed-clad, penny-farthing-riding architectural Terrorist elude The Yard’s finest detectives?
    How much longer will he remain free to thumb his nose at the guardians of our Capital’s Safety and Order by cataloguing and telegraphing his unpunished Felonies via that vast, infernal, network of tubes, The Internet?
    Tune in tomorrow for the next thrilling episode of: “Mick Hartley—Gentleman Graffiti Artist”.

    Like

  3. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    Hmm. The noose tightens…

    Like

  4. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    A little good noose couldn’t hurt, eh?

    Like

  5. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    Bye the bye, “Well done, That Man!”, re the placemarks…:)

    Like

Leave a comment