Larkin 25
Larkin 25 – Arts Festival | |
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Dates | 14 June to 2 December 2010 |
Location(s) | HullandEast Riding of Yorkshire |
Website | [1] |
Larkin 25was anarts festivaland cultural event inKingston upon Hull,England, organised to mark the 25th anniversary of the death of the poet andUniversity of Hulllibrarian,Philip Larkin.The festival was launched atHull Truck Theatreon 14 June 2010 and concluded on 2 December 2010, the twenty-fifth anniversary of the poet's death, with the unveiling of a statue in his likeness atHull Paragon Interchange.[1][2][3][4][5]
Philip Larkin
[edit]Larkin was born inCoventryand lived in Hull while he was head librarian at theBrynmor Jones Library[6]from 1955 until his death in 1985. Larkin was a jazz critic forThe Daily Telegraphbetween 1961 and 1971.[7]He lived for much of this time in a flat inPearson Parkin Hull[8]near the university, and later in a house atNewland Park.[9]
Festival
[edit]The Larkin 25 festival coincided with Hull's annual literature festival, 'Humber Mouth',[10]and included walking tours, art and photography exhibitions, musical events and an exhibition of Larkinmemorabilia.A compilation of Larkin's favourite jazz recordings titled "Larkin's Jazz" was released in conjunction with the festival.[7] In June, SirTom Courtenayvisited the University of Hull to perform a one-man play,Larkin Revisited,and repeated the performance at Hull Truck Theatre in November 2010. A Hull city bus was named "Philip Larkin" by SirAndrew Motionin honour of the poet. On 7 October 2010, "Poetry on the Buses" was launched in Hull and East Yorkshire to coincide with National Poetry Day. Forty of Larkin's poems were displayed onEast Yorkshire Motor Servicesvehicles until the end of the festival in December 2010.[11][12]
Larkin with Toads
[edit]The centrepiece of the festival was a public art display and trail, "Larkin with Toads", launched in the city centre on Saturday 17 July.[13]It consisted of 40 fibre-glass toad sculptures, each painted with a unique design created by artists and local people inspired by Larkin's poems about working life,ToadsandToads Revisited.[14][15][16]Examples of the designs included a "Larkin toad", a "Punk toad", a "Tiger Toad" (based on the mascot ofHull City A.F.C.) and a "Typographical toad" adorned with Larkin's poetry.[15] The toads were auctioned for charity at the end of the event, though there were calls to make them a permanent feature. Most of the sculptures have been removed and transported to their new owners[17]but some remainedin situafter the sale. On 26 September 2010 it was reported that the toads had been auctioned for £60,000 though some had hoped their popularity could have made them a permanent feature.[17][18]
The Larkin toad trail covered many locations in the city centre, such as Hull Paragon Interchange, Hull Truck Theatre, theMuseums QuarterandThe Deep.There were toads in theSt Stephen's,Princes Quayand Prospect shopping centres. Other toads were located in outlying areas, such as The Avenues and the university, with some beyond Hull's boundaries in areas of the East Riding of Yorkshire familiar to Larkin, including one inBeverley.
By late July 2010 theHull Daily Mailreported that over 30,000 guides had been distributed and a marketing company was employed to manage the high level of public interest.[19]
During the festival some Larkin toads were vandalised and stolen.[20][21]A 'punk toad' near Hull Truck Theatre had its mohican hair ripped off, and an 'astronaut toad' outside the railway station was damaged. The organisers repaired the damage and made the toads more resilient to vandalism.[20][22]The Magenta Toad was stolen fromMelton.[23][24]It was later found dumped by theA63and recovered for repair.[25]
A report after the event has suggested that the toad trail brought about £1 million in to the local economy.[26]
Philip Larkin statue
[edit]On the 25th anniversary of his Larkin's death, Thursday 2 December 2010, the festival concluded with the unveiling of a life-sizebronzestatue at Hull Paragon Interchange by the Lord Mayor.[1][27][28]Funding for the £100,000 statue was raised during the festival.[5]The unveiling was accompanied by Nathaniel Seaman'sFanfare for Larkin,specially composed to mark the occasion.
Martin Jennings produced the sculpture using photographs from the University of Hull's Larkin Research Centre and researched his poems and biography to "get a sense of the man."[29]He worked on themaquettefor the finished casting at his studio in Coombe, Oxfordshire. Professor James Booth of thePhilip Larkin Societydescribed the statue as, "magnificent, poetic, refined, exactly the Larkin I'm familiar with." The statue was gifted to the people of Hull by the Philip Larkin Society.[30]On 2 December 2011, a year since the original unveiling ceremony, five additional slate roundels containing inscriptions of Larkin's poems were installed in the floor space around the statue. The sculpture has become a popular subject for photography at the Interchange.[31]In December 2012 amemorial benchwas installed around a pillar near the statue.[32]
Reception
[edit]The Daily Telegraphopined that the reclusive Larkin would be unimpressed by the event[33]and Stephen McClarence inThe Timesobserved that "the city is celebrating this year's 25th anniversary of his death in fine style."[34]Plans for the sculpture trail were initially criticised because of concerns about expenditure during thelate-2000s recession[35]but the event went ahead. Artists were invited to design a toad and sponsorship invited. When the toads were displayed theHull Daily Mailreported that opinion had shifted in favour of the sculptures and an online poll recorded a majority of readers favouring the event.[13]In December 2010 theHull Daily Maildescribed the exhibition as "hugely successful".[5]
References
[edit]- ^ab"Philip Larkin statue unveiled in Hull".BBC News Online.BBC. 2 December 2010.Retrieved2 December2010.
- ^"Philip Larkin statue at Paragon Station".Larkin 25. 2 December 2010.Retrieved2 December2010.
- ^"Events December 2010".Philip Larkin Society.Retrieved2 December2010.
- ^Youngs, Ian (2 December 2010)."Remembering Philip Larkin 25 years on".BBC News Online.BBC.Retrieved2 December2010.
- ^abc"Bronze tribute depicts Philip Larkin rushing for train at Paragon".Hull Daily Mail.3 December 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 11 December 2010.Retrieved3 December2010.
- ^Paul Harrop."Brynmor Jones Library, University of Hull".
- ^abSpencer, Charles(7 August 2010)."Philip Larkin's box-set will be pure poetry".The Daily Telegraph.London. Archived fromthe originalon 11 August 2010.Retrieved7 August2010.
- ^Paul Harrop."31 and 32 Pearson Park, Hull".
- ^Paul Harrop."105 Newland Park, Hull".
- ^*"HM10".Humber Mouth. 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 13 June 2013.Retrieved18 June2010.
- "Commemorating the life and work of Philip Larkin".Larkin25.Retrieved4 June2010.
- "Larkin Revisited – Tom Courtenay".Dig Yorkshire. 19 June 2010.Retrieved15 September2010.
- Jones, Rebecca (interviewer) (16 June 2010).Sir Tom Courtenay on 'my Larkin'(Radio broadcast). BBC Radio 4 Today.Retrieved1 July2010.
- "Welcome aboard the Philip Larkin bus!".Larkin 25. 7 July 2010.Retrieved12 October2010.
- "Clipper round-the-world crews return to Humber".BBC News Humberside.17 July 2010.Retrieved17 October2010.
- "'City's healthiest Larkin25 toad goes on tour'".Citycare-developments.co.uk.Retrieved15 September2010.
- ^"Philip Larkin's poetry aboard East Yorkshire buses".BBC News.7 October 2010.Retrieved8 October2010.
- ^"Buses are fare way to celebrate city poet".Yorkshire Evening Post.6 July 2010.Retrieved7 July2010.
- ^ab"Weird and wonderful toads hop onto city streets for Larkin 25 celebrations".This is Hull and East Riding.17 July 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 20 July 2010.Retrieved17 July2010.
- ^"Picking a Tigger toad for Larkin Festival".This is Hull and East Riding.9 April 2010.Retrieved15 July2010.
- ^abFlood, Alison (12 May 2010)."Hull to mark 25th anniversary of Larkin's death with giant model toads".The Guardian.London.Retrieved4 June2010.
- ^"Larkin toads get finishing touches".This is Hull and East Riding.13 July 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 3 May 2012.Retrieved15 July2010.
- ^ab"City's toad invasion could be here to stay after 'incredibly positive' response".This is Hull and East Riding.20 July 2010.Retrieved20 July2010.
- ^"Hull's Larkin toads make £60,000 at charity auction".BBC News Humberside.26 September 2010.Retrieved4 October2010.
- ^"Toad trail maps leap off shelves".This is Hull and East Riding.27 July 2010.Retrieved27 July2010.
- ^ab"Hull's Larkin toads attacked by vandals".BBC News Humberside.21 July 2010.Retrieved21 July2010.
- ^"Toads in a hole as tributes hit by pond life".The Yorkshire Post.20 July 2010.Retrieved28 July2010.
- ^Adams, Stephen (21 July 2010)."Philip Larkin toads vandalised".The Telegraph.London.Retrieved23 July2010.
- ^"Thieves steal giant Philip Larkin toad in Hull".BBC News Humberside.6 September 2010.Retrieved6 September2010.
- ^"Larkin Toad stolen from North Ferriby".This is Hull and East Riding.6 September 2010.Retrieved6 September2010.
- ^"Stolen toad found dumped by A63".This is Hull and East Riding.7 September 2010.Retrieved7 September2010.
- ^"Hull's toads sculpture trail brings £1m to city".BBC News Humberside.BBC. 22 March 2011.Retrieved24 March2011.
- ^The statue portrays Larkin hurrying to catch a train with a manuscript under his arm and is inscribed with the first line of his poem, "The Whitsun Weddings".*"Council go-ahead for Larkin statue".BBC News Humberside.BBC. 5 August 2010.Retrieved16 October2010.
- "Life-size statue of Larkin to be put up at Paragon station – despite divided opinion".This is Hull and East Riding.5 August 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 6 August 2010.Retrieved16 October2010.
- "Sculptor chosen for Larkin statue".BBC News Online.BBC. 17 February 2010.Retrieved12 July2010.
- "Festival to celebrate Philip Larkin's life kicks-off".This is Hull and East Riding.14 June 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 5 May 2013.Retrieved14 June2010.
- "Commemorations planned for Hull poet Philip Larkin".BBC News Humberside.11 February 2010.Retrieved1 July2010.
- ^"Hull's buses display Larkin's poems in tribute to poet".BBC News Humberside.7 July 2010.Retrieved7 July2010.
- ^"Sculptor captures poetry in motion: Martin Jennings on his Philip Larkin statue".Hull Daily Mail.6 December 2010.Retrieved6 December2010.
- ^"Poet's deep affection for Hull recognised in statue".The Yorkshire Post.2 December 2010.Retrieved3 December2010.
- ^"Larkins words set to greet visitors".Hull Daily Mail.23 November 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 24 November 2011.Retrieved6 December2011.
- ^"Philip Larkin honoured at Hull Paragon station".BBC News.BBC. 2 December 2012.Retrieved6 December2012.
- ^"Hull organises tourist tour for 25th anniversary of death".The Daily Telegraph(Culture section ed.). London. 12 January 2010.Retrieved1 October2010.
- ^McClarence, Steve (18 June 2010)."Poetry in the provincial: Philip Larkin's Hull".The Times.London.Retrieved18 June2010.(subscription required)
- ^Thornhill, Ted (15 March 2010)."Hull council spends £200,000 on toads".Metro.co.uk.Associated Newspapers Limited.Retrieved5 June2010.
Further reading
[edit]- Thwaite, Anthony (12 July 2010)."Toad trip 25 years on".New Statesman.Retrieved3 August2010.