ISSUE 99 ISSUE
OCTOBER/ OCTOBER/ NOVEMBER 2012 NOVEMBER 2012
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THE FIRST IN A THREE PART SERIES DOCUMENTING THE CITY OF BRADFORD THROUGH PHOTOGRAPHY: NUDRAT AFZA THE FIRST IN A PULLOUT: THREE PART SERIES To DOCUMENTING THE CITYPhoto OF BRADFORD THROUGH PHOTOGRAPHY: AFZA CENTRE-FOLD ‘Welcome Independent Bradford’ Journal | Anne McNeill (Impressions)NUDRAT | Caroline Hick (Gallery II) ALSO FEATURING: CENTRE PAGE PULLOUT: ‘Welcome To Independent Bradford’ Photo Journal | Anne McNeill | Martin Wainwright
BRADFORD BRADFORD
FOR THE PEOPLE OF FOR THE PEOPLE OF
BY THE PEOPLE OF BRADFORD BY THE PEOPLE OF BRADFORD
“ALL PHOTOGRAPHS ARE MEMENTO MORI. TO TAKE A PHOTOGRAPH IS TO PARTICIPATE IN ANOTHER PERSON’S (OR THING’S) MORTALITY, VULNERABILITY,MUTABILITY. PRECISELY BY SLICING OUT THIS MOMENT AND FREEZING IT, ALL PHOTOGRAPHS TESTIFY TO TIME’S RELENTLESS MELT.” SUSAN SONTAG I’m an Explorer, a social documenter and I like to follow my nose. Round about this time last year I sat in my friend Russell Kremp’s kitchen discussing an idea about starting a magazine that would tie together a lot of what we were doing at the time; rediscovering Bradford’s vibrant arts and culture scene. The thing that excites me is the chance encounter, and the beautiful people who are part of the experience. This is what we have set out to do over the past eight issues, looking to capture some of those moments and offer a platform where people can share their insight and share their stories. This is the first in a three part series documenting Bradford through featured photography. Each issue will seek to capture a mode, a fashion and the heart of the city seen from a particular vantage point. In this issue we are blessed with words from Anne McNiell, director of Impressions Gallery. Her introduction to Bradford as a city of photography contextualises the photographic series we are about to embark on over the coming six months.
Nudrat Afza’s portraits explore intimately the people and the stories that were the life blood of Ken Moore’s salon on Toller Lane. The accompanying interviews were produced by Caroline Hick, curator of an exhibition of Nudrat’s work, called “The Salon”, that is currently showing at the University of Bradford’s Gallery II. The photographs were taken over the space of a year shortly before the Salon closed. We are moving on. ‘Time’s relentless melt’ manifests itself as shops, businesses and meeting places closing, and new ones opening. It is vital to celebrate and document these spaces for ourselves and for the city, not only for prosperity but in examining these pictures we have the opportunity to learn, to see ourselves, and to empathise with the soul of a vibrant city in flux. Issue 8 saw Haigh Simpson edit and produce his last issue. Great praise must be expressed for his immense contribution and belief in the magazine. It is important to reflect on our journey and celebrate the fact that Haigh has found his dream opportunity working as an editor of a family of hyper-local magazines. It is truly remarkable how much we have achieved and it’s time to savour that as we look to the future. We have been contemplating our role in the city and understand that the contribution we have made really has made a difference. We have taken time to develop a route plan that promises... We hope you like the change of perspective. Feedback on our creative direction is always greatly received and we welcome contributions, ideas, and proposals. Get in touch. Enjoy. Mr Johnston
PRODUCER: GUEST EDITOR: DOUGLAS THOMPSON: OPERATIONS: DESIGN: whatsON: PROOF READING: FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY:
CONTRIBUTORS: PHOTOGRAPHY BY:
Mr Johnston Caroline Hick Douglas Thompson Jay Turner Cristina Keleman Mark Porter HowDo?! Working Group Siobhan Zaranko HowDo?! Working Group Media Museum Paul Rees Huw Davies John Kemp Beverley Hodgson Karol Wyszynski Joel Seckleman Peter Kopek Emily Connor Jeremy Godwin After Hours Entertainment Douglas Thompson Anne McNeill Martin Wainwright NUDRAT AFZA
www.brad.ac.uk/gallery “The Salon” exhibition runs until 16th Nov. Gallery II, University of Bradford. OCTOBER/ NOVEMBER 2012
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ISSUE 9
5
OCTOBER/ NOVEMBER 2012
5 BRADFORD: BRITAIN’S CENTRE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY. WHAT’S NOT TO LOVE. By Anne McNeill
8 NUDRAT AFZA; FEATURED ARTIST By Caroline Hick
12 THE KENMORE SALON; ARTISTIC PERSPECTIVE By Nudrat Afza
16 EXCERPT: THE SALON EXHIBITION CATALOGUE By Martin Wainwright
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CENTRE-FOLD PULLOUT: WELCOME TO INDEPENDENT BRADFORD PHOTO JOURNAL If you are an independent photographer and interested in contributing to HowDo?! please get in contact:
photography@howdomagazine.co.uk If you are interested in being involved in future events or have an idea about an event you would like to organise in the city please get in contact:
events@howdomagazine.co.uk
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20 40 YEARS OF IMPRESSIONS GALLERY: A BRIEF HISTORY. By Anne McNeill
24 KEN MOORE IN CONVERSATION WITH CAROLINE HICK Part 1
26 KEN MOORE IN CONVERSATION WITH CAROLINE HICK Part 2
32 VOUCHERS Support your local independents and make use of these fine offers.
33 SECRET BRADFORD Shipley Pool, Roswitha’s Delicatessen, Shed Men: Album launch, Koffie & Cake, Delius Arts Centre, HowDo?! Off-The-Page
34 WHAT’S ON A pick of what is going on in October & November.
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BRADFORD: BRITAIN’S CENTRE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY. WHAT’S NOT TO LOVE. ANNE MCNEILL
WHEN I WAS A WEE GIRL AT THE AGE OF SEVEN, GROWING UP IN GLASGOW, I SAW A PROGRAMME ON TELLY ABOUT TWO YOUNG ENGLISH GIRLS CALLED ELSIE AND FRANCES. THESE TWO YORKSHIRE LASSIES HAD TAKEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF FAIRIES PLAYING AT THE BOTTOM OF THEIR GARDEN. I WAS HOOKED. THAT CHRISTMAS I ASKED SANTA FOR A CAMERA. I MUST HAVE BEEN REALLY GOOD BECAUSE IN MY STOCKING WAS A KODAK INSTAMATIC133X CARTRIDGE FILM CAMERA. I HAVE LOVED PHOTOGRAPHY EVER SINCE. For those who don’t know the story, in 1917 Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths, who lived in Cottingley on the edge of Bradford, took a series of five photographs of fairies dancing and frolicking. Three years later, these photographs became famous when Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the writer of Sherlock Holmes, published them to illustrate an essay he had written for the Christmas edition of The Strand Magazine. In the early 1980s Elsie and Frances admitted that four of the photographs were faked using cardboard cutouts of imps and pixies copied from Victorian children’s books. Yet Frances swore, even on her deathbed, to the veracity of the fifth and final photograph. It is real.
thought-provoking and inspiring. Don’t underestimate the power of the photographic image. Bradford has a rich photographic heritage. The National Media Museum houses the nation’s ‘jewel in thecrown’; the National Photography
Collection. Bradford College alumni embark on successful photography careers. Along with the University they have supported more than ten mid-career photographers through the internationally prestigious Bradford Fellowship. Bradford Museums and Galleries have a wealth of photographic archives, such as Belle Vue...
The photographs are on display at the National Media Museum and I now live in Cottingley, stalking fairies.
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We are surrounded by photography and it informs our lives. It can be dramatic, disquieting, informative, personal, passionate, challenging, Cottingley Fairies -- Courtesy of National Media Museum
...Studios, once situated on thenfashionable Manningham Lane, whose portraits captured the early days of our Asian community. Also the pinsharp evidence of Bradford’s heyday and thriving industries recorded by C.H. Woods and Bradford Heritage Recording Unit, which captures memories of people of all ages, class and ethnicity through family albums and work by commercial photographers. There is an abundance of professional, amateur, and grassroots practitioners. Bradford Grid, a core of photographers and academics, are undertaking an ongoing eclectic survey of the city and its surrounding towns and countryside, along with active photographic societies and camera clubs. Much has changed since Impressions Gallery RSVPed to Bradford Council’s invitation and moved from York to play a part in the cultural renaissance and regeneration of this city. Since then it has built a gallery and shown over thirty artists in twenty-six exhibitions. City Park has been built. The Odeon still stands. Bradford is UNESCO’s world first City of Film. The National Museum of Photography, Film & Television changed its name to National Media Museum and revealed it has the world’s earliest surviving negative. Bradford University set up a new photography degree. Fabric’s temporary art spaces showcase local photographers. We instigated Ways Of Looking, the UK’s newest photography festival, which attracted more than 47,500 visitors into the city last October. People are discovering we are a creative place. It feels like Bradford is on the brink of something new and exciting.
We’ve learnt from the Odeon campaign that vision, grit, determination and wit go a long way. And, you know what, we can work together, we can build a critical mass so that in ten years time Bradford and photography - along with film - will be mentioned in the same breath. A place known worldwide as Britain’s central and cultural hub for photography.
© Paul Reas Paul Reas retrospective showing at Impressions Gallery, April 2013
AUTUMN / WINTER 2012
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FEATURED ARTIST NUDRAT AFZA
AROUND 20 YEARS AGO NUDRAT AFZA WAS GIVEN A CAMERA, A CANON AE1, AND STARTED TAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OF PEOPLE AND PLACES IN HER LOCAL NEIGHBOURHOOD OF MANNINGHAM, IN BRADFORD. SHE STILL USES THIS CAMERA TODAY. This year Nudrat Afza has returned to her immediate neighbourhood in Heaton, to document the last months of a small local hair salon, whose owner has worked there since the 1960s, when he began his apprenticeship at the age of 16. The Salon is a collection of photographs by Nudrat which captures the end of an era and the disappearing world of the salon and its regular clientele.
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In this issue HowDo?! is pleased to feature some of the photographs from this collection. If this whets your appetite then get along to Gallery II at the University of Bradford, where the work is being shown from now ‘til 16th November.
We also have an excerpt from the foreword to the exhibition catalogue, by The Guardian’s Martin Wainwright and we hear from salon owner Ken Moore, in conversation with Gallery II curator Caroline Hick, about his life in the salon.
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""# 0HILHARMONIC /RCHESTRA 2AVIKIRAN 0ERFORM IN "RADFORD FOR /NE .IGHT /NLY A hidden gem in Bradford’s urban landscape, Kala Sangam has been quietly building a national and international proďŹ le as a leading south Asian arts company for many years, regularly programming both locally and internationally renowned musicians, dancers and artists from the world of south Asian arts. In March this year, Kala Sangam ofďŹ cially re-launched the beautiful grade II listed St Peter’s House (the old general post ofďŹ ce building in front of Bradford Cathedral on Forster
+ALA 5TSAV !UTUMN 6pm – 9pm (doors 5.30pm) Saturday 13th October Venue: Bingley Arts Centre Tickets: ÂŁ6.50/Under 16s FREE from Bingley Arts Centre Box OfďŹ ce: (01274 567983) or bingleyartscentre.co.uk Kala Sangam presents Kala Utsav (“Art Celebrationâ€? in Sanskrit), a bi-annual performing arts showcase by students, teachers and artists from the Kala Sangam Academy. A lively evening of performances including music, dance, drama and spoken word.
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7pm (doors 6.30pm) Saturday 27th October Venue: Ganges Hall, Kala Sangam Arts Centre Tickets: ÂŁ4-ÂŁ8.50 (limited early bird tickets available) from: grouphug.eventbrite.co.uk
11am – 5pm Saturday 1st December Venue: Kala Sangam Arts Centre & Bradford Cathedral Tickets: FREE but pre-booking is advised: christmascraftivity. eventbrite.co.uk
MYSTERY SKIN dance group presents Group Hug, an evening of promenade performances and subtly interactive experience featuring ďŹ ve exceptional contemporary dance artists. Made up of a set of dances and togetherness actions for both performers and audience, the piece is both a celebration and dismantling of the communal.
Bradford Cathedral & Kala Sangam present a full day of free Christmas crafts and arts workshops, followed by a Christmas ukulele jam in the beautiful setting of Bradford Cathedral. Includes artist/ maker craft fair with a variety of handmade Christmas gifts available for purchase. Artist/ maker stalls available: contact Cassandra on (01274) 303340.
Square) as its home: a new national centre for south Asian arts, heritage and culture, right here in the heart of Bradford. Having been originally based in Leeds, husband and wife co-founder team, Dr Geetha Upadhyaya (current CEO and Artistic Director) and Dr Shripati Upadhyaya, chose to establish Kala Sangam in Bradford as a permanent home. Dr Geetha Upadhyaya said: “Bradford was a natural choice for our new home as the city is an exciting mixing pot of many
different cultures, and Kala Sangam’s mission is “bring people together through the artsâ€?. We wanted to provide the city with a hub for events, where talent could be nurtured and people of all backgrounds could come together and learn about the rich cultural heritage of south Asia and its inuence on modernday Western culture.â€? Global Echoes 2012 is the ďŹ rst ever public performance of specially orchestrated music by Ravikiran, commissioned by Kala Sangam to celebrate the ofďŹ cial launch of the Kala Sangam Arts Centre earlier this year. The music will be performed by Ravikiran (on the Chitravina), members of the BBC Philharmonic, and other renowned musicians from the world of south Asian classical music, including R N Prakash (ghatam and konnokol vocals).
Ravikiran is a world renowned Carnatic musician and composer. A child prodigy, Ravikiran ďŹ rst debuted in Bangalore, at the age of two. He has been playing the 12-stringed Chitravina since the age of 10. The chitravina (a fretless lute, also called a gotuvadyam) is one of the most exquisite of Indian musical instruments. With a history going back to nearly 2000 years, it is one of the oldest instruments in the world.
'LOBAL %CHOES WITH ""# 0HILHARMONIC 2AVIKIRAN 7pm (doors 6.30pm) Saturday 17th November Venue: Ganges Hall, Kala Sangam Arts Centre Tickets: ÂŁ5-ÂŁ12 (limited early bird tickets available) from: globalechoes12.eventbrite.co.uk
Ravikiran and BBC Philharmonic bring together classical Eastern and Western inuences to present this unique concert. The evening’s performances include classical compositions from both parts of the world, and an inspiring and uplifting collaborative programme of new music infusing both Eastern and Western classical styles.
4RIPLE %XHIBITION ,AUNCH 7pm (doors 6.30pm), Thursday 15th November Venue: Foyer, Kala Sangam Arts Centre FREE. Tickets: autumnexhibitions.eventbrite.co.uk Special preview evening for the launch of three exhibitions at Kala Sangam Arts Centre, examining the cultural heritage of south Asia & Asians in Bradford: • Odissi Series by Mr A V Ilango - Over 20 acrylic paintings on canvas by the Indian artist, teacher and founder of Ilango’s Artspace in Chennai. • Cultural Connections exhibition by Oriental Arts capturing the rich cultural traditions of south Asian music & dance in Bradford. • Shalwar Kameez photography exhibition by Womenzone - Shalwar Kameez is a traditional dress worn by women in south & central Asia. This heritage project captures the memories of elderly women who arrived from the Asian subcontinent in the 1950s and worked in the textile industry.
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THE KENMORE SALON NUDRAT AFZA
“I HAVE KNOWN THE KENMORE SALON ON TOLLER LANE SINCE I WAS A TEENAGER GROWING UP IN MANNINGHAM IN THE SIXTIES AND SEVENTIES.” I used to pass it every day on the bus to school and I can remember one day seeing the owner, Ken, standing outside his newly modernised premises. Last year, guessing the owner would be approaching retirement, I decided to find a way to go into the salon as a photographer because I was curious to know what was happening. So I made an appointment for my daughter to have her hair cut there.
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My first impression of the salon inside was that it was a particularly fine example of late modern decor from the seventies and early eighties. I asked the hairdresser if anyone had ever photographed the salon, and when he said no, I asked if I could. He seemed surprised but agreed. I learned that Ken was planning to sell the business when he retired and with his consent, I decided to photograph the last year of the salon.
As the work has progressed, not only have I had the chance to acknowledge the hairdresser’s skill and expertise, I have also got to know most of his clients – more than one hundred of them by now. This body of work has become a record of a particular place and passing era. I feel privileged to have had the opportunity to get to know Ken and his clientele. They have been truly inspirational for me.
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Theatre in the Mill, Gallery II, Music at Bradford University
‘SOME OF THE BOLDEST AND MOST INTERESTING WORK IN THE REGION’
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s o m e thin g dif f e r e n t . e c n e i r e .. Exp
EXCERPT: THE SALON EXHIBITION CATALOGUE MARTIN WAINWRIGHT NORTHERN EDITOR, THE GUARDIAN I KEEP A BOX OF FAVOURITE POSTCARDS AT HOME, TO SEND TO PEOPLE INSTEAD OF USING PLAIN WRITING PAPER OR EMAILS. AMONG THE COLLECTION, WHICH MY WIFE AND I HAVE PICKED UP ON OUR TRAVELS FOR YEARS, IS ONE WHICH WE NEVER SEEM ABLE TO SEND. WE LIKE IT TOO MUCH OURSELVES.
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It is very simple, showing a little British Asian girl leaning against the doorway of a house with the bold number 10. Its title is equally simple – Number Ten - but for me it evokes a whole lifetime of memories and experiences: working on the Telegraph & Argus in the 1970s; living in Southfield Square in Manningham and helping to save it from the bulldozers, along with its many fine doorways like the one on the postcard; and having hundreds of cups of sweet, milky tea with British Asian neighbours while their children, bright
and as full of their futures as the girl in the doorway, darted in and out. This is a lot to bring to a picture which, to other eyes, may be just an anonymous girl in an everyday setting. But that is why I like Nudrat Afza’s work so much. She captures the ordinary world in an unassuming manner, very different from that of better-known and more self-conscious photographers. In other words, she sees the world as we, the passers-by, see it. Then, unsteered and unprodded, we add our own references and reactions ourselves.
40 YEARS OF IMPRESSIONS GALLERY: A (VERY) BRIEF HISTORY. ANNE MCNEILL
‘TO MANY PEOPLE, THE IDEA OF THE ‘GALLERY’ PRESENTS AN IMAGE OF SELECT EXCLUSIVENESS, OF DOLLAR-HAPPY INVESTORS, OF SEEKERS OF THE EASILY AVAILABLE IN CULTURE. WE HOPE VERY MUCH THAT OUR GALLERY GOES SOME OF THE WAY TOWARDS DISPELLING THIS IMAGE, AS WE BELIEVE THE ROLE OF THE GALLERY IS BECOMING THAT OF A CENTRE OF EDUCATION, INFORMATION AND WE HOPE, ENJOYMENT.’ IMPRESSIONS GALLERY REPORT, 1973. Impressions Gallery opened in November 1972, in a room above a shop in the city of York. As one of the first independent photography galleries in Europe we have played a vital role in British photographic culture and have earned a reputation as one of the UK’s leading venues for photography. Amongst the many photographs, old press releases, letterset leaflets and personal letters that sit within our grey archive boxes there is a typed document from 1973 by co-founder Val Williams, in which she writes: ‘The gallery was based on hope, a certain amount of good will, an overdraft, and the conviction that photography must be recognised as an important part of art and everyday life.’
Seven years ago we relocated to Bradford. Moving cities was a bold and brave move. For two years we worked in partnership with Bradford Council to
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J.G Collins, General Manager at Illingworth Morris PLC, Salts Mill, Saltaire 1984 © Huw Davies from Roads to Wigan Pier 1984
IMPRESSIONS: 645 ARTISTS.
build our bespoke gallery, in Centenary Square’s flagship building. This new space with its urban, almost industrial feel has given us the freedom to show more ambitious large-scale exhibitions. In August 2007 we opened our doors to international acclaim, with Sharpe’s Wood, a photographic series of eerily beautiful woodland, shot on the edge of the city, by Bradford born and bred Liza Dracup. Impressions Gallery is an independent charity which commissions photographers to make new work for exhibitions and books. We bring exhibitions of national and international importance to Bradford that everybody is welcome to come and experience. Our work takes creative and artistic risks. We have always supported new and emerging photographers. Our first exhibition was also Martin Parr’s - now a member of Magnum and arguably Britain’s most well known photographer. In 2003 we commissioned 59 Productions, a fledgling company which has gone on to art direct for Danny Boyle’s inspirational Olympics opening ceremony. In 1990 we were the first gallery to stage an exhibition in response to AIDS. More than 20 years on we are still showing hard-hitting work: in 2010 Bringing the War Home contained powerful photographic responses to recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. We have commissioned new work that explores different standpoints on notions of class, race, gender, identity, and politics. To mark our 40 years we are showcasing an exhibition from October 1984, Roads to Wigan Pier, which takes as its starting point George Orwell’s seminal sociological investigation into the bleak living conditions of the working class in the North of England.
We have a long history of exhibiting woman photographers, such as the late Jo Spence’s 1980s collaborative and pioneering ‘phototherapy’ work, through to Trish Morrissey’s imaginative reworking of family albums. We exhibit artists from culturally diverse backgrounds. Last year’s visual stories by Joy Gregory, one of the most significant artists from the black British photography movement, looked at a combination of aesthetics and assumptions on black feminine beauty. We work with mid-career photographers on solo retrospective shows. Two years ago, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to photography, Anna Fox’s autobiographical and darkly comic Cockroach Diary & other stories exhibition was selected for the internationally prestigious Deutsche Börse Photography Prize. Next spring, it’s the turn of ‘local boy done good’ Buttershawborn Paul Reas. We provide opportunities for local communities to join in. We want people, of all ages and backgrounds, to feel that Impressions is their space. ‘Belief in photography is the most important part of running a photographic gallery’ wrote Val Williams, 1973, and still true now. We have the belief to support artists in meaningful ways and will continue to support photographers based on merit rather than celebrity.
© John Kemp from Roads to Wigan Pier 1984
This is our past, present and future.
BIO
Anne McNeill has been Director of Impressions Gallery since 2000. In the early 80s she studied photography in New York, and began her career in 1984 as a darkroom worker at the radical gallery Camerwork, London. For four years McNeill ran community photography projects in and around Brick Lane, East London. McNeill is editor of numerous books, has over twenty years experience of curating and writing about photography. In 1994 she was founding Director of commissioning agency Photoworks, Brighton and moved to Yorkshire to be Artistic Director of Photo98, the UK Year of Photography. From 1997 to 2003 she was a member of advisory panel for Arts Council England and sits on various UK academic validation committees. Most recently she co-founded Ways of Looking photography festival, 2011 and wants to start taking pictures again.
. 405 EXHIBITIONS. 40 YEARS OLD. 5 YEARS IN BRADFORD.
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KEN MOORE
IN CONVERSATION WITH CAROLINE HICK
A COUPLE OF WEEKS BEFORE KEN MOORE, OWNER OF THE KENMORE SALON, RETIRED, I POPPED IN FOR A VISIT AND A CHAT. THE LADY WHO WAS HAVING HER HAIR DONE AT THE TIME, DORIS SCOTT, MENTIONED THAT SHE’D STARTED COMING TO THE SALON IN 1974. I SETTLED DOWN WITH A CUP OF TEA, MADE MYSELF AT HOME AND WATCHED KEN AT WORK. CH:
So you wouldn’t think about staying open a bit longer?
KM: Oh no. I had another dryer blow up yesterday, I’ve only got three left now, everything’s just wearing out. Everything’s jiggered, if I want to stay on I’ve got to replace it and it’s a bit late in the day for that.
CH: Have you got any plans for what you want to do then?
KM: Well I’m still going to do a little bit of mobile and I’ve a lot of work to do at home and it’ll take some doing sorting this place out and I’m trying to arrange a holiday as well… CH: I bet you’ve not really taken much time off in all this time.
KM: Well,
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I went 11 years without a holiday. From 1988 to 1999 I never had a holiday, I worked right through, I just had bank holidays. That was because I had staff who wanted holidays when they wanted them and they didn’t want to work without me being there, so if I closed down and we all had holidays
together, I had them to pay and no money coming in. I couldn’t afford to do it. So once that finished and I had no one working for me, I could just close it down. I wouldn’t get any money but at least I wouldn’t have to pay out.
CH: So when did you start here Ken? KM: I started here November 4th, 1963. I was 16 and I came as an apprentice and I worked for Pauline Shackleton. Then in 1968, she put it up for sale and I bought it. I took over on the 31st of May 1968. If I stayed here ‘til November, I would have been here 49 years.
CH:
That’s fantastic. And how long were you an apprentice for?
KM:
Three years and two years improving, so I hadn’t quite finished when I bought the shop. We chatted about Ken’s school and training:
KM:
I went to a careers evening gathering and he (the teacher) said if you want to leave school, we’ve got jobs
in panel beating and sheet metal work and I said well I don’t want to do that so he (father) says well if you want to leave school you can come and work with me at the bakery. So that’s what I did. I said I wanted to be the first out of that school door when we finished in August and I was virtually the last because the teacher said to me, you can take that cup and saucer back to the staff room before you leave (laughter). And I never got my City and Guilds because I couldn’t get into the day release; there was fifty, maybe a hundred places, something like that and about three hundred of us…
CH: So Ken.
How did you get from the bakers to here? How did you find out about the apprenticeship?
KM:
‘Cos I used to diddle about with some of the staff at the bakery. Dinner time I used to be messing about with their hair and stuff, so I just thought I’d give it a go. I didn’t think I’d do owt about it but then I got this. I used to stay back two nights a week ‘til 9 o clock at night. She (Pauline Shackleton) used to get models in. It wasn’t only me, she used to do a night class. She trained at Brown and Muffs. A Mr Kiltz was there, he was Swiss or something like that. He trained her and then she set up here.
CH: You were lucky enough to get all that Brown, Muffs training, then?
KM: I was, yes. Her husband was a rep for a dairy firm. He worked out of the North East so they decided to move to a place called Bishopsthorpe. CH: So it worked out well for you then. You just completed your apprenticeship. KM: Oh yes... I was twenty one when I took over here. It was all different when I first came in, it wasn’t like this at all. It had two bay windows and in the summer of 1973, I had it all done out and revamped. CH: So you must have been doing really well at that point? KM: Yes and we worked through it, we’d no shop front in (laughing in background) and we never closed down, the wind were blowing, we had an early frost and snow and people were sat under the dryers with car rugs round them and it was hilarious really, with snow blowing in, but you just did in those days, you just kept going. In the seventies we had a lot of bombing didn’t we (IRA bomb scares) and one weekend my shop front got pulled out and everyone was saying round here that Ken’s had been bombed out. We were always having to come out of building...
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KEN MOORE
IN CONVERSATION WITH CAROLINE HICK
‘COSY, WELCOMING, TRADITIONAL, THE SALON IS A WORLD IN WHICH STURDY BUT AGEING, AND THEREFORE GRADUALLY MORE VULNERABLE, BRADFORDIANS FIND FAMILIARITY IN THEIR EVER-CHANGING CITY. EVEN THE WORD ‘SALON’ IS REASSURING, WITH ITS FRENCH PRONUNCIATION ROUNDED AND SOFTENED BY YORKSHIRE VOICES.’ MARTIN WAINWRIGHT, THE SALON EXHIBITION CATALOGUE
WASH & SET
A couple of ladies have come and gone since I settled down for a chat with Ken. In an unusual break in his day, we talked about the future and what the ladies would do now he was retiring. Ken started to talk about the passing of an era and the continuing presence of his ageing clientele.
28
KM: I was frightened that before I could get to retiring age, all my clients would have died but a lot of them are in their 90s and still coming. How could you imagine then that your clientele could live ‘til they were 90? I didn’t think I’d be able to work so long, I’m so fortunate. It must be the Bradford air! I’m used to this type of work - rollers and perming. The generation below now – it’s not that type of work…
CH: How many wash and blow-drys do you have out of all your clients?
KM: Probably about 20 odd. I’ve got well over 100 clients. I’ve got a couple of clients who are quite disabled and I’ll go and do a wash and set for them. I’m quite prepared to go early morning and set it and then come back when its dried naturally. I have a lady who’ll be 100 next February and so she doesn’t want to go anywhere else. So I’ll just do it for those few and because of their age, I would imagine their premises will be quite warm – that perhaps within two or three hours it might be dry – so I said, well, look, let’s try it and see how it goes and if it doesn’t work out what have we lost? There’ll never be anything like this once these salons go now, once that
clientele go. I finished work here on the 6th August and I came back on the 20th August and the clients I’ve had in yesterday and today haven’t washed their hair since I last saw them. Now, the clientele that you get today, when they come in to have their hair done, they want to get up tomorrow and wash it, my clients don’t. It has to last ‘til they come again in one or two weeks. That lady that you just saw come to the door? Something to do with a fridge freezer and she might not be coming this afternoon? She says she wants to come because she hasn’t washed it since I washed it four weeks ago… and she just says to me quietly… (whispers)… It feels a bit mucky! (chuckles)
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In a dark, dark street there was a dark, dark social centre, and in the dark, dark social centre there was a dark, dark liquid with ‘Buckfast’ written on the bottle, and drinking that liquid were the attendees of Means To An End 2012! Friday 19th October DISKELMA (Finland) I LIKE BUGS (London) GRAND COLLAPSE (Wales) PERSPEX FLESH (Leeds) Saturday 20th October ANTISECT (UK) HARDA TIDER (Sweden) PUTREFACTION (Ireland) YDIN PERDHE (Finland) SKIPLICKERS (Sheffield) SATURNINE (Italy) CLOCKED OUT (Glasgow) ENDLESS ROPE (Leeds) For full details of this and other 1in12 happenings, visit:
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KOFFIE & CAKE SHED MEN: ALBUM LAUNCH
(music/hiphop) Saturday, 20 October 2012 The Zetland (Huddersfield)
The long awaited Shedmen album “And What?!” was released on Sinoptic Music on the 1st October 2012 and this is the album launch party: ITS FREE IN?!. Full to the brim with Bradford and West Yorkshire’s top hip hop talent and brought to you by Mad Fresh, ft Hashfinger & Chief Wigz: AWESOME DJ & WICKED WORDS. sinopticmusic.com facebook.com/Shedmen
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MANNIGHAM LANE ONE
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GREAT HORTON ROAD (Music, Performance, Art & People) A very freindly venue on great Great Horton Road just up from the Allhambra. Managed by Artworks; It holds classes, live music, cultural events, exhibitions and performances. The last gig we really enjoyed seeing there was an Oriental Arts gig with the Jaipur Brass Band. (We got a free curry from lahore resteraunt and fantastic entertainment from an top brass band.) www.facebook.com/Artworks.at.Delius
? N O S ’ T A WH OCTOBER: PICK of the MONTH. * SAT 20TH Shedmen Album Lanuch 7PM The Zetland HD1 2RD * SAT 20TH TOBA + NO HANDS 8PM Polish Parish Club * SAT 27TH Feast of Flesh Hammer horror 8PM The New Beehive Inn OCTOBER EXHIBITIONS Gallery II Nudrat Afza | The Salon Open until 16/11/12 Richmond Atrium Yan Wang | Leap year Open until 22/2/13 South Square Sophie Elliot/Joan Day Bursary Exhibition Open until 28/10/12 Haworth Ghost Tours Halloween Ghost and Graveyard tours 26 - 28/10/12 BD22 8DF East Riddlesden Hall Halloween Trail and Spooky crafts 27/10/12 - 4/11/12 BD20 5EL FRI - 12TH OCT. Someone come find me, An evening 7:30PM Theatre in the Mill SAT - 13TH OCT. Shipley Alternative Market 10AM - 3PM Kirkgate Centre BD18 3EH YMCA World Challenge day 11AM - 2:30PM Culture Fusion Kala Utsav Art celebration 6PM Kala Sangam Someone come find me, An evening 7:30PM Theatre in the Mill WED - 17TH OCT. Bradford Science Festival 10AM -2:30PM City Park THUR - 18TH OCT. Growing Change Film Showing 7PM Delius Arts and Cultural Centre Delius Celebration - Chetham’s Symphony Orchestra St. Georges Hall FRI - 19TH OCT. A German Play 7:30PM Thinkers theatre@Bradford Cathedral
Means to an End DIY Punk/HardCore festival 7PM 1in12 Club My Darling Clementine 8PM Caroline St Social Club Topic Folk Club Jon Harrison 8:30PM Bradford Irish Club SAT - 20TH OCT. Routes and Culture 12PM - 4:30PM Gumption centre Eid Baazar & Pamering day 2PM - 5PM Manningham Mills BD9 5BD A German Play, Matenae 2PM Thinkers Theatre@Bradford Cathedral Means to an End DIY Punk/HardCore festival 7PM 1in12 club UFO CLUB 60’S Psychedelic 8PM Polish Parish Club The Ford Valley Wrangelers 8PM The Brewery Tap Idle BD10 9QE SUBDUB DUB/ROOTS 10PM VOX LS11 5NF SUN - 21ST OCT. Means to an End DIY Punk/HardCore festival 7PM Warf Chambers LS2 7EQ MON - 22ND OCT. Black History Month 7:30PM Theatre in the Mill TUES - 23TH OCT. Jam night launch Monthly Jam night 7:30PM Factory St Studios BD4 9NW FRI - 26TH OCT. Oscar Mike -The situation room 7:30PM Theatre in the Mill Topic Folk Club Otra 8:30PM Bradford Irish Club SAT - 27TH OCT. Coraline Film showing 6:30PM City Park Group Hug: An evening of Contemporary Dance 7PM Kala Sangam MON - 29TH OCT. The Almost Well Tuned Piano 7PM Delius Arts and Cultural Centre WED - 31TH OCT. The Plaza’s Halloween Special - A Nightmare Before Christmas The Plaza BD7 3JT
NOVEMBER: PICK of the MONTH. * FRI 2ND Rusty Hat and Rockers & Rollers 9PM The New Beehive Inn * SAT 3RD Word Life Harry Baker and David J 7:30PM Theatre in the Mill
* FRI 9TH Kulu Psytrance 10PM The Mill
NOVEMBER EXHIBITIONS National Media Museum Bradford Annimation Festival 13 - 17/11/12 South Square Stephen Marshall | The Ocean is Dark Until I Held it in my Hands Open until 2/12/12 Delius Arts and Cultural Centre | Also Available Sober 19 - 30/11/12 Christmas Makers Market 10/11/12 - 22/12/12 Hand Made in Bradford Haworth Christmas Market 17/11/12 - 18/11/12 Haworth Bradford Christmas Market 29/11/12 - 2/12/12 Bradford city centre THUR - 1ST NOV. T J Brannan reading his debut ‘Origin’ 7PM Saltaire Bookshop FRI - 2ND NOV. Delius - Song of Summer 7PM Bradford Cathedral Topic Folk Club Jamming session 8:30PM Bradfordx Irish Club BOSH! The Off Me Nut Records Halloween Takeover! 9PM Shipley social club SAT - 3RD NOV. Bingley Bonfire 6:30PM Myrtle Park Bradford Unleashed Black Rock Records 7PM The New Beehive Inn Rebel Soul feat. Bugalu Foundation 9PM The Wardrobe LS9 8AH The Tomb Luna Vegas and Steve and the Raise 8PM 1in12 Club
SUN - 4TH NOV. Gregory Alan Isakov 8PM Caroline St Social Club MON - 5TH NOV. Bonfire Extravaganza & Fireworks Display 6PMThe 6 Acres BD4 0RZ Halloween Facy dress party 7PM The Black Swan TUES - 6TH NOV. Beacon’s AGM & Open Forum 6PM Delius Art and Cultural centre Glorious Music night Live music/open mic 7:30PM Factory St Studios Mark Thomas: Bravo Figaro! The Studio BD7 1AJ FRI - 9TH NOV. Topic Folk Club Jon Palmer + Friends 8:30PM Bradford Irish Club SAT - 10TH NOV. Eid Milan Party 2PM - 5PM Manningham Mills BD9 5BD Ska/Soul Bands 8PM The New Beehive Inn THUR - 15TH NOV. Jay Howard + poets reading from ‘Get me Out of Here’ 7PM Saltaire Bookshop Instant Dissidance-Caramel Dance, Sculpture, Cookery 7:30PM Theatre in the Mill FRI - 16TH NOV. Topic Folk Club Voicemale 8:30PM Bradford Irish Club SAT - 17TH NOV. Bradford Christmas Lights Switch on 12PM Centenary Sq Yorkshire CND Peace and Craft Fair 10AM - 4PM Victoria Hall Saltaire Talk to Angels 9PM Delius Lived Next Door SUN - 18TH NOV. Kreg Viesselman 8PM Caroline St Social Club FRI - 23TH NOV. Oh Susanna 8PM Caroline St Social Club Topic Folk Club Barry Smith + Friends 8:30PM Bradford Irish Club
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Paul Foot: Kenny Larch is Dead The Studio BD7 1AJ SAT - 24TH NOV. Bradford Cider Festival 2PM The Black Swan Lemmona Galleria Art by the Mint Tuna Collective 6PM The Sparro Moor Folk Presents The Long Hill Ramblers 7PM Echange Arts Centre BD21 2JZ Panache Reunion 9PM The New Beehive Inn FRI - 30TH NOV. TOBA + NO HANDS 8PM Polish Parish Club Topic Folk Club Eddie Lawler 8:30PM Bradford Irish Club BOSH! Nicky Blackmarket! 9PM Shipley social club
TUES - 4TH DEC. Drawing Club Exhibition Launch Delius Art’s and Cultural Centre THUR - 6TH DEC. Paul Sutherland Reading from ‘Dreamcatchers’ 7PM Saltaire Bookshop TUES - 11TH DEC. Cultural Forum Winter Ball 6:30PM Delius Art’s and Cultural Centre
Weekly Events.
Monday: Rhythm and Blues The New Inn BD13 3JX Beehive Poets 8:30PM The New Beehive Inn Tuesday: Drawing Club 6:30PM Delius Arts and Cultural centre Wednesday: Soul Jam Open Mic 7PM Treehouse Cafe Sunday: Jam Night 7PM Bradford Irish Club Live Jazz 8PM City Vaults
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