Whistling in the dark

from New York, Tel Aviv, Hartlepool

Magnum Photographer Patrick Zachmann at the Hartlepool Art Gallery

Last night I had the pleasure of seeing the new exhibition at the Hartlepool Art Gallery. Patrick Zachmann’s “Eye of the Long Nose” is on display for the first time in the UK as part of the Tees Valley Photography Festival.

Based in Paris, Patrick Zachmann has been a freelance photographer since 1976 and focuses on “long-term projects on the cultural identity, memory and immigration of different communities.” The exhibition at the Hartlepool Art Gallery focuses on China from within and in its diaspora.

There are larger, moody, black and white photographs inspired by Chinese cinema of the 30s. There are also smaller postcard-like color photos full of smiles. As he described it last night, one set (the black and white) exposes the seedier face of China that which they do not want shown. The mafia, prostitutes and drug dealers, protesters in 1989 Tiananmen Square all feature in eye-opening, visually stunning photographs. The other set (color photos) feature the public face of China and it’s communities in the diaspora. These are glossy photos of proud moments and cultural celebrations. They are his vision as a “Long Nose” an old nickname for Westerners in the region.

He seemed pleased and somewhat bemused that the exhibition was hung in a (former) church. His work deals with reality and illusions and facades and he felt it appropriate to the setting.

He shared that he worked on this project from 1987-1995. He spent 6 years shooting the photographs and 2 years working on the book of the exhibition and the show. It was shown in 10 countries in Asia, though not in China.

He traveled to China for the first time as a journalist wanting to write a story on 1930s Chinese cinema. During that visit his interest in the region grew. He was determined to return through unofficial channels in a private exploration of what lay to the side of the spotlight the country shines on it’s achievements and was able to do so with the assistance of a man with underworld ties whom he refers to as W.

I asked him if he ever felt in danger while taking some of the photos. At first he responded in the negative but after giving it a few moments of consideration could think of at least 4 or 5 dicey situations he had been in that should be classed as dangerous. The resulting photos are an amazing document.

He is currently working on another project dealing with China called Chinese Confusions. He feels that people feel lost at this moment. Older people feel lost as older districts are razed to make way for modernity. Younger people feel lost as society moves so very quickly, and while feeling an attraction toward Western models, still maintaining a Chinese identity and a duty to their traditions.

Ying Zhu, Ph.D describes the cinema that intrigued him initially as follows, “If China today is in the midst of a massive and massively ambivalent transformation, it is not the first time. In the 1920s and 30s, China was similarly engaged in a great identity crisis, and Shanghai was at its forefront. Shanghai was the city where Western influences were most keenly felt even as anti-Western (anti-imperialist) nationalism also thrived, and where China’s richest and poorest people lived side by side…Shanghai came to symbolize the allure of modernity and cosmopolism [sic]… Shanghai ushered in Chinese cinema’s first golden era, producing many of the Chinese classics, including Goddess (1934), Song of the Fishermen (1934), Street Angel (1937), and New Women (1934). The Shanghai depicted in these films was corrupt and promising at the same time.”

The China and Chinese depicted in Patrick Zachmann’s photographs can be described similarly.

I asked him what he thought of the Olympics. He was very against China hosting the Olympics. It seems to him like China has won in every respect. Not only is China an economic superpower the Olympics has allowed them to win hearts and minds in the international community. Additionally, with support from Asia Societies in the U.S. many schools, from elementary schools to universities, are now teaching Chinese in language curricula (1, 2, 3) Also see this Beijing Evening News summary of a NY Times article on the Olympics. As the blogger who did the side-by-side comparisons of the article puts it, “every single statement that could possibly be seen as negative – and there’s quite a lot – has been expunged from the Beijing Evening News article, and almost every nuanced phrase that carries any negative connotations has been turned into one of unqualified praise.” It would be the equivalent of looking at only the glossy photos in Patrick Zachmann’s exhibition.

While walking through the exhibit my overwhelming sense was of the universality of the issues he is dealing with in his photography. Migration, wanting to build better lives for families and how we are perceived as individuals and communities are struggles common to the human endeavor. If you are in the Northeast this exhibition is definitely worth a special trip.

Patrick Zachmann‘s Eye of the Long Nose is on at the Hartlepool Art Gallery 13 September – 9 November, 2008.

posted by Yaffa in Hartlepool,art,photography and have View Comments

House Hunting in Hartlepool

On Tuesday, we went to see the apartments by the Marina. Hartlepool has a very cute Marina not far from the center of town. It has a bunch of restaurants and is a really pleasant place to hang out. It is one of the only places with buildings of flats (as opposed to over stores, or parts of houses / houses to rent.

We got to the office of Live Smart Homes at 2:05. We had made an appointment. We were left to sit and wait in their overly warm office entrance while crappy music played.

We overheard a young woman listen to a complaint about a leak in one of the buildings while we waited.

After about 15 minutes, which felt much longer, a woman came out from the back to take us to view a one-bedroom flat.

We enter the building entrance to the right of their office. There are workmen making a huge racket, apparently refurbishing some flats.

We enter the flat.

To the left there are two closets. One is mostly taken up by a hot water heater. One is mostly taken up with a clothes dryer.

To the right there is a serviceable bathroom. One of the marketing highlights is that new tenants get a fresh shower curtain.

There is a shoebox of a kitchen – with a washing machine [clothing], microwave, half size fridge built in. Only one person would be able to fit at a time, and with no place to sit, I guess you’re not really meant to eat at home.

The bedroom is completely taken up by a double bed. The room is so small you can’t really stand at the foot of the bed. You can stand to the side of the bed, across from which is the built-in closets, covered with mirror doors. Ugly, but serviceable, and your only clothing storage space.

The living room is almost completely taken up by a not-too-comfortable two-seat sofa covered in cheap blue fabric. Across from it is a “fireplace”, with electric heater. In the corner is another marketing highlight, you get a small TV over a VCR (VIDEO Machine) in the corner of the room. Is this 1990? Does anyone still have videos, that they use?!

The best part of the living room is the hideous wallpaper. Flowers on the bottom half of the walls, split by a wallpaper border and intense stripes on the top half. It is ugly and makes the room look even smaller.

I think it would be psychologically damaging to assaulted by this aesthetic every day. I might become the woman in The Yellow Wallpaper, completely insane, minus the post-partum depression.

Are they worried people will make the walls dirty? [Dirt would probably get lost in the busy design of it.] Kevin’s theory is that they bought it cheaply in bulk. The aesthetic is of an anonymous, ugly hotel, that you don’t mind staying in for a night because it’s cheap and you’re surprised by how clean it is.

Here’s the problem…it’s not cheap…Non-refundable credit checks at £75 each [£150 total] which include a change of locks. £500 security deposit. £425 Rent per month [Slightly larger one-bedrooms are £435, 2 bedrooms start at £465.].

The water bill is included, as is a membership for 2 to the nearby Springs gym [£60-£100 value]. Any home repairs are done by the management company. Council Tax is not included and is an additional £95 a month nor is the Electric Bill.

This is a lot of money for a shoe box, even one that is centrally located. As described above the one bedroom we looked at was really one medium-sized room divided into the different areas with walls. Two people could not live in it.

The sad thing is it would be much better as a studio without the wall separating the bedroom and living room. And, it would look larger if you painted the walls a light color and/or added a mirror. I am not a decorator…even I know this stuff!

I could really only see it as an option for a single person without a lot of stuff, who is almost never home, possibly blind.

Thankfully, we have another option. There is a small three-bedroom house we can rent for less money that is less central. No contest.

Free download of The Yellow Wallpaper or purchase from amazon below.

The Yellow Wallpaper

The Yellow Wallpaper


posted by Yaffa in Hartlepool,books and have View Comments

Photos of the Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery

Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool

I have sent an email to Donald Wiseman, editor of the website of Kehilat Middlesbrough Newsletter and Archives.

It is a useful site for people researching Jewish life and geneology in the Northeast of England. They have a section about the Jewish Cemetery in Hartlepool. It is not always online so I have decided to reprint details here with links to my photos of the graves taken on August 20, 2006.

The photos I have uploaded so far can be found here as a group:
Flickr Set of Photos of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery

There will be more uploaded. Below are details and links to individual photos. On Flickr when you are on a photo’s page you can click on “All Sizes” and get larger sizes of the photos and you can download them.

Individually:

Abraham Barnett and Freda Barnett (Father and daughter)
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone for Abraham Barnett who died Jan. 23, 1918 (age 44) and for his daughter Freda who died Feb. 25, 1919 at the age of 14. His Hebrew name was Avraham ?? son of Dov. Her Hebrew/Yiddish name was Freda.

Grace Barnett
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Died November 7, 1984 (age 87). Her Hebrew name was Gitel daughter of Avraham. (KMBRO doesn’t have the date listed on its site nor a record of the stone.)

Jacob Barnett
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Jacob Barnett who died April 13, 1945 (age 70). His Hebrew name was Yaakov son of Shaul.

Yetta Barnett
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Yetta Barnett who died December 7, 1957 (age 77). Her Hebrew name was Yetta daughter of Yechezkel.

Samuel Benjamin
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Samuel Benjamin who died July 2, 1881 (age 50). His Hebrew name was Shmuel.

Israel Broady
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Israel Broady, husband of Shiphrah Broady, who died September 16, 1902 (age 85). His Hebrew name was Yisrael son of Yitzhak.

Morris Cohen
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone for Morris Cohen son of Solomon and Rachel Cohen who died August 30, 1877 at the age of 23 months. His Hebrew name was Meir son of Yehoshua Shlomo.

Wolf Golt and Fanny Golt
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone in memory of Wolf Golt who died May 11, 1939 (age 67) and Fanny Golt who died June 10, 1923 (age 47). Their Hebrew names were Ze’ev son of Chaim and Fredel daughter of Tuvia.

Hyman Hirschfeld
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Half of the gravestone of Hyman Hirschfeld who died September 24, 1877 (age 58). His Hebrew name was Chaim son of Yehuda.
Photo of Gravestone as It Was

Sarah Hush
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Sarah Hush who died July 10, 1882 at age 3 months. She was the daughter of Isaac and Henrietta Hush. She was from nearby Middlesbro.

Abram Jacobs and Rosie Jacobs
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone for Abram Jacobs who died Nov. 25, 1928 (age 68) and Rosie Jacobs who died November 16, 1930 (age 72). Their Hebrew names were Avraham Yaakov son of Chaim Shlomo and Raizel daughter of Arye. [Name listed on stone as Abram (not Abraham).]

Annie Kaufman
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Annie Kaufman who died in 1932 at the age of 32. Her Hebrew name was Chana daughter of Yisrael.

Isaac and Rachel Kaufman
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Monument to Isaac and Rachel Kaufman who passed away in 1907. Hebrew names were Yitzhak son of Shalom and Rachel.

Hinda Levi
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Hinda Levi who died August 21, 1878 (age 59). Her Hebrew name was Hinda daughter of Yehuda.

Solomon Isaac (Sol) Levinson
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Solomon Isaac (Sol) Levinson who died May 11, 1993 (age 74). His Hebrew name was Shlomo Yitzhak son of Yaakov. His wife Betty still lives in town and makes a nice cup of tea.

Annie Levy
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Annie Levy who died November 10, 1883 (Date gotten from Hebrew date). Her Hebrew name was Chana daughter of Yitzhak.

Harry Levy
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Harry Levy who died March 7, 1922 (age 49). His Hebrew name was Aharon Tzvi son of Shlomo Halevy.

Louis Levy
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Louis Levy who died on April 15, 1876 (age 56) (or April 4, 1877 – depending on if the last letter of the year is a Vav or Zayin – based on Hebrew date). His Hebrew name was Yehuda son of Arye Halevy.

Marian Levy
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Marian Levy (widow of Jacob Levy) who died Feb. 4, 1914 (age 84). Her Hebrew name was Miriam daughter of Elyakum Arye. (Kmbro has her listed as Miriam.)

Calmer Lotinga
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Calmer Lotinga who died on June 25, 1904 (age 96). His Hebrew name was Klonimus son of Moshe Halevi.

Maurice Michel Michelson
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Maurice Michel Michelson who died at the age of 6 months. His Hebrew name was Moshe son of Asher.

David Morris
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of David Morris who died Nov. 27, 1963 (age 67) . His Hebrew name was David son of Yisrael Moshe.

Kate Nathan
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Kate Nathan (widow of Benjamin Nathan) who died October 30, 1883 (age 61). Her Hebrew name was Gitel daughter of Eliezer Hacohen.

Joyce Barbara Rachkind
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Joyce Barbara Rachkind who died April 20, 1972 (age 46). Her Hebrew name was Shayna Basha daughter of Avraham.

Sidney Rose and Esther Rose
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone in memory of Sidney Rose who died April 29, 1963 (age 61) [KMBRO has this listed as May.] and Esther Rose who died August 16, 1978. [Listed on Stone in Hebrew Date.] Their Hebrew names were Zussman son of Avraham and Esther daughter of Yaakov.

Louis Smith
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone of Louis Smith of Middlesbrough who died January 8, 1880. His Hebrew name was Eliezer son of Yechezkel.

Jacob Stockton
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Gravestone for Jacob Stockton who died in 1879 at the age of 12. The only legible parts are the name Stockton, The acronym for May his soul be bound up in the bond of life (from Samuel I, 25:29) and the Jewish year 5640 which translates to 1879.

Graves I can’t identify:
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool

General pictures of the cemetery:
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Cemeteries of Hartlepool Cemeteries of Hartlepool Cemeteries of Hartlepool
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Wall dividing cemeteries of Hartlepool
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Steetley Site in Hartlepool Persistence of the Living Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool
Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Jewish Cemetery of Hartlepool Old Cemetery Road, Hartlepool End of Old Cemetery Road in Hartlepool

Update: Featured in Kehilat Middlesbrough Newsletter No 22 November 2006 page 12 (of 12)

posted by Yaffa in Hartlepool,Jewish,photography and have View Comments

Snakes on a Plane in Hartlepool

ticket

Went to see Snakes on a Plane opening night in Hartlepool, a town in the northeast of England. In NY I would have had to buy my tickets online a couple of weeks in advance as soon as they went on sale. People would be in costume, bringing snakes to the screening (really quite fabulous in my imagination.) Maybe doing the cheers and audience participation here: snakeplay.pbwiki.com/script

Also, I would have had to get there at least an hour in advance to get a seat that wasn’t in the front row – lining up before the previous screening let out. There is something to be said for arriving to the theater 4 minutes before the stated time having 12 people in the theater and your pick of seats. Welcome to Hartlepool.

Snakes on a Plane (Widescreen Edition)
(DVD)
Manufacturer:New Line Home Video
Released:02 January, 2007
Snakes on a Plane: The Album
(Music)
Artist:Original Soundtrack
Manufacturer:New Line Records
Released:15 August, 2006


posted by Yaffa in Hartlepool,movies and have View Comments