Synopses & Reviews
In 2008, Manchester decided to embark on a counter-cyclical project, much as the city fathers had done in the last great recession, and invest significantly in two civic buildings, two buildings that were cornerstones of the making of the first modern industrialised city; Manchester Town Hall Extension and Manchester Central Library.
Early on in this major redevelopment project artists Dan Dubowitz and Alan Ward were given privileged and open access to witness this transformational period in the life of these two iconic buildings. Through large-format photographs and interviews taken and conducted over a period of eighteen months, they captured the moment when the city's citizens and workers had been locked out and the spaces were being stripped bare; revealing both a glimpse of what they had been and what they might become.
The artwork provides insights on the reciprocal relationship between people and place, and reveals how the refurbishment of a building can go far beyond physical refurbishment, questioning the relationships between a city, its citizens and place.
Synopsis
An insight into the refurbishment of Manchester's Town Hall Extension and Central Library, through large-format photographs
About the Author
Dan Dubowitz is a multi-disciplinary artist, photographer and cultural master-planner. His previous book for MUP was The Peeps: The Presence of Absence about the world's first industrial suburb.
Alan Ward is an award-winning designer, photographer and artist who lives in Manchester, UK.
Table of Contents
1. Special Projects
2. Wisdom is the Principal Thing
3. I was Born... in the Crime Section
4. Worshipping at the Altar of Process
5. Dangerous Buildings
6. Concilio et Labore
7. Coleridge at 44
8. Crisis in Heaven
9. What Would Vincent Harris do?
10. Vincent Harris, Stanley Jast and Charles Nowell
11. The Project
12. Echoes
13. Main Contractor
14. Sub-contractors / One Team
Apprentices
Artists' Acknowledgements