The Edinburgh Reporter March 2023

(EdinReporter) #1

19


CULTURE • LITERATURE • EVENTS • MUSIC • MUSEUMS...


This month in history...


EACH MONTH Jerry Ozaniec,
Secretary of the Old Edinburgh
Club, reminds us of some of the
notable historical events which
have taken place in Edinburgh.

3RD
In 1847, Alexander Graham Bell
was born at a home in South
Charlotte Street.

7TH
In 1744, the Honourable Company
of Edinburgh Golfers was founded;
the oldest known golf club in the
world, it produced 13 "Rules of Golf"
for its first competition which was
played for the "Silver Club"; the club
played on the five holes at Leith
Links for nearly a century.

In 1924, sculptor Sir Eduardo
Paolozzi was born in Leith.

8TH
In 1859, Kenneth Grahame, author
of "The Wind in the Willows", was
born in Edinburgh.

In 1940, an artillery shell was fired
into Leith from Inchkeith Defensive
Battery! Here's the report: “Several
people had remarkable escapes

when a 100lb shell crashed through
the walls of this house in Leith,
Scotland. The shell, which had been
fired from a costal battery across the
bows of a trawler, struck the water,
ricocheted, skimmed the housetops,
went through a factory roof and
struck a house.” The picture shows
the local police inspecting the
damage. The story “allegedly” was
that a young lieutenant arrived on
Inchkeith with the Royal
Artillery during these
dark war years and the
gun crew were ordered
to fire a salvo across
the bows of the trawler.
Despite the attempts of
the gun crew who tried
to tell this young officer
that the shells were not
blanks, the officer
dismissed their protests

and curtly ordered the crew to fire,
resulting in the shelling of
Salamander Street. Thankfully no
one was injured and it was
amusingly known in Leith as the
“Battle of Salamander Street”.

17TH
In 1800, Catherine Sinclair,
Scottish novelist and a writer of
children's literature which departed
from the moralising
approach common in
that period, was born
at 9 Charlotte Square in
Edinburgh near which
there is a memorial to
her. She is credited
with discovering
that the author of
the anonymous
Waverley Novels was
Sir Walter Scott.

For richer...


...For poorer


Hamming it up at the


Festival Theatre


Artist Lisa inspired by wildlife


POOR THINGS: AN EXHIBITION OF
SCULPTURE IN THE CONTEXT OF CLASS
Brought together by artists Emma Hart
and Dean Kenning
04 March – 21 May
Exhibition Galleries at Fruitmarket
45 Market Street, EH1 1DF

POOR THINGS is an exhibition that has
come out of conversations about art and
social class. Conversations that artists Emma
Hart and Dean Kenning have had together as
friends, and with the Fruitmarket, a free
public space for art. In order to explore these
things Hart and Kenning have brought
together what they consider to be some of
the best “Poor Things” made by
contemporary artists based in the UK.
In a spirit of solidarity they will engage
with te each of the artists in front of their
sculptures and fire up conversation. Audio
recordings of these conversations will be
available for visitors to listen to while going
round the exhibition and will be collated for
a publication to be launched while the
exhibition is ongoing.
Fiona Bradley, Director, Fruitmarket, said:
“I am looking forward to seeing the work of
these artists come together with each other
and our audience.”
The exhibition features artists : Linda
Aloysius, Eric Bainbridge, Jonathan Baldock,
Simeon Barclay, Joseph Buckley, Beagles and
Ramsay, Chila Burman, Andrew Cooper,
Jamie Cooper, Penny Goring, Brian Griffiths,
Emma Hart, Lee Holden, Dean Kenning, Josie
KO, Rosie McGinn, Rebecca Moss, Janette
Parris, Anne Ryan, Aled Simons, Laura Yuile.

HAMILTON
28 Feb - 27 Apr 2024
Festival Theatre Edinburgh

HAMILTON THE Broadway sensation
is coming to Edinburgh next spring,
and Sir Cameron Mackintosh was in town
to herald the announcement.
Mackintosh and his fellow producer
Jeffrey Seller say they are delighted to bring
the hip hop history to the capital of
Scotland. And of course Hamilton, the first
Secretary of the Treasury, and one of the
Founding Fathers, had Scottish heritage.
His father was born in Ayrshire in the 1700s
before moving to Nevis in the West Indies.
Hamilton is the story of America then,

told by America now. Featuring a score that
blends hip-hop, jazz, R&B and Broadway,
Hamilton has taken the story of American
founding father Alexander Hamilton and
created a revolutionary moment in
theatre—a musical that has had a profound
impact on culture, politics, and education.
With book, music, and lyrics by Lin-Manuel
Miranda, direction by Thomas Kail,
choreography by Andy Blankenbuehler, and
musical supervision and orchestrations by
Alex Lacamoire, Hamilton is based on Ron
Chernow’s acclaimed biography. The
Hamilton creative team previously
collaborated on the Tony Award-Winning
Best Musical In the Heights.
http://www.capitaltheatres.com

LISA HOOPER SWLA
1 March - 16 April 2023
Opening hours: Wed-Sun
(10-4) • Free entry
Scottish Ornithologists’
Club, Aberlady EH32 0PY

PRESENTING new prints by
Lisa Hooper accompanied
by glass sculptures by
Graham Muir.
Hooper is an established
wildlife artist and has been
working, primarily as a
printmaker, for 30 years. She
lives in west Galloway and

takes inspiration from the
birds and wildlife she sees
close to home and on
frequent visits to Orkney
and Shetland. She presents
a new body of prints, mostly
woodcuts and linocuts as
well as some etchings.
Lisa values the focus that
printmaking encourages
and has developed a
distinctive style, producing
colourful, bold compositions
sometimes flirting with
abstraction. Her work is well
regarded by her peers, she is

an elected member of the
Society of Wildlife Artists.
She has published two
books with Langford Press,
First Impressions and
Printing Wildlife.
Lisa’s work is
accompanied by glass
sculptures by Graham Muir.
Graham’s glass waves are
inspired the beauty and
power of the sea but also by
the process of making glass
itself, which he describes as
a conversation between the
glass and the artist.

Sir Eduardo Paolozzi
Free download pdf