Brutalism in Fishing

Cliff Hatton

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The unspeakably tragic incineration of Grenfell Tower and the deaths of so many men, women and children precipitated any number of news items concentrated on the proliferation of similar high-rise housing-units during recent decades. This catastrophe opened our eyes and our minds to the thinking of post-war town planners and architects eager, it would seem, to substitute pleasing aesthetics for the brutalism of a Brave New World devoid of soul, elegance and greenery. Most of us can picture a typical ‘artist’s impression’ of a New Town or housing estate from those times so we’ll readily recall the token saplings sketched-in to suggest a bright, new future living hand-in-hand with Nature. Concrete jungle? No, no, no, not at all. The far-sighted, go-ahead pioneers moving into these exquisite, fully-appointed apartments would experience a luxury life-style just minutes from shops, leafy avenues, schools and a main-line railway station (Kings Cross just 25 minutes!)
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Such projects – and there were many – exemplified a philosophy among those who determined how many of us lived and still live, and deliberately stuck two fingers up to the true designers of the past. Whether or not there was overt, conscious politicization at play here I am loathe to venture and probably under-qualified to discuss, but the cheap and ugly, simplistic school of thought which blessed us with monstrosities like Paternoster Square, the Lloyds Building, The Shard, the South Bank’s Queen Elizabeth Hall, Grenfell Tower and thousands more bleak and unimaginative structures throughout the country, reflect an effort to fundamentally alter a nation’s view of itself. It was American architect, Louis Sullivan, who espoused ‘function before form’, helping spawn an ugly – if functional – world-wide rash of bland accommodation and office blocks. While there can be no material proof, this phenomenon has unquestionably determined how large sections of the population feels about itself: insignificant; unimportant; rudderless; unambitious and lacking in spirit. It can do nothing else. The wise and wealthy live in the Cotswolds.

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The same dystopian mind-set has, for many years, influenced the art world to the once-unimaginable point where Tracy Emin’s ‘Unmade Bed’ and Damien Hirst’s pickled cow (form before function, admittedly) are revered by the influential trend-setters and are valued in the hundreds of thousands if not the millions; and have you listened recently to what they pump out on Radio 1? Far from being a healthy, youthful back-lash against the previous generation’s pop-fodder, it is the ‘musical’ manifestation of an age where elegance, beauty, education and CLASS have been demoted in favour of less cerebral considerations. I need not describe it; we’ve all recoiled on receiving an earful of Bad Ass Gangster Rap or Moscoman.

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What has this to do with us anglers? Well it seems to me that fishing, too, has been callously dragged-in by soul-less profiteers to the same utilitarian world created by those who seek to smash convention, and I think they know it. Even a money-motivated fisherman will be aware of, say, carp-fishing’s glorious history, its pioneers and the values they held, but to hell with that…let’s dig a lake, fill it with thousands and thousands of fish and let the punters compete for a cash prize. And they do!

Many match fishermen now flock annually to extract animals from perfectly circular, featureless holes in the ground; no logs, no bushes, no snags, no reed-beds…just a giant water-filled bowl. These contests represent quite perfectly the totalitarian thinking that now permeates society and seeks to eradicate individualism and personal flair. Having researched the extent and locations of similar fishing-puddles in England and Wales it is clear to me that the influence of the Brutalists has got a good grip even within the world of angling. There are commercial fisheries fashioned as parallel ‘canals’ specifically dug to facilitate pole-fishing in the far margin; holiday venues with uniform huts and chalets lining dead-straight banks, each with its own, standard fishing platform and waters where prizes are awarded for the capture of Old One Eye; match-men bagging-up on identical ‘F-1’s: Function before Form.

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Again, I think these ‘fishery’ owners – and those who fish their creations – are aware of their sacrilege but I don’t for one moment suggest they are consciously part of a political conspiracy to drag fishing down to one, low standard for the masses! I’m equally sure they don’t feel “insignificant; unimportant; rudderless; unambitious and lacking in spirit‘, but I do suspect they have allowed themselves to be sucked-in by what I see as the current doctrine of mediocrity: the devaluing and desecration of what was always considered unassailably good, right and proper. I DO believe they have lost something.

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For most of my life, anglers were complaining about the lack of fishing programmes on TV then, if memory serves correctly, we got The Golden Maggot followed by one or two other unsatisfactory representations of our hobby: the Great Fishing Race, was it? Mercifully, and like manna from heaven, we and the general non-angling public were blessed (no less) with A Passion for Angling, possibly the best portrayal of angling-life we have ever seen on our screens. Filmed by Hugh Miles and featuring Chris Yates and Bob James, we were taken into another, timeless world where nothing else mattered; a place where you could smell the boggy margins and the water-mint from your armchair in suburbia. ‘Passion’ captured it all, to the point where there was little else to say about the pure joy of freedom, fun and fishing. Jeremy Wade, too, has done his considerable bit to widen peoples’ perception of what fishing is all about.

More recently, however, we’ve had a run of Chav-Culture programmes clearly promoting a brutally distorted view of angling to the less thoughtful among us: what was the idea of teaming-up with a former ‘glamour’ model, Mr Macey? And what’s with the back-to-front baseball caps, the shouting and the mock fights? Well, it’s an attempt to ‘sex-up’ fishing; to create and appeal to a new market. This isn’t cynicism here; time and money simply aren’t pumped into a television production with no profit-motive. As with the infamous ‘Pile of Bricks’ and Emin’s ‘My Tent’ these portrayals of angling pander to the base instincts at a time when the world badly needs a large shot of ‘quality’…an appreciation of musical composition, the written word, genuine artwork and well-designed buildings – why do I happen upon The Life Story of Michelangelo or The Building of the Taj Mahal only on BBC 2 and at 3 in the morning? Shouldn’t these be on CBBC with an appropriate spin for youngsters?

To summarize: I do not believe or even seriously think there might be some sinister, Marxist scheme at play within the world of fishing; neither do I think there has ever been an official political plan to dehumanize us through hideous architecture, worthless ‘art’ and tuneless ‘music’. These products are the results of individual political mind-sets determined to make their marks purely through being different, anti-establishment, revolutionary and, with money to be made by those with the means of convincing us all of their worth, we are unwittingly drawn-in to their way of thinking and they are only too willing to be exploited by the auctioneers. Sotheby’s will laud the artistic merit of a sixteen-foot alabaster turd; Radio 1 will hype-up the talents of talentless gangster-rappers and the architectural trend-setters will (or did) sell us the dream of ‘function before form’. A distant but appreciable by-product of this non-culture is, I believe, the new commercial fisheries.
I am optimistic though. Have a look at these and let me know which version of fishing you prefer. Both bring enormous pleasure to people but I know which style I prefer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aV2sKZn8I78

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wng6OVnJ9B0&list=PLE56101C2A1B3FF22
 
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john step

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There is a lot here. Will contemplate before commenting.
 
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binka

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Bloody hell Cliff!

Whilst the impulsive side of me wants to launch into reply on a multiple of thoughts it's only an issue, in respect of the fishing, if you subscribe to that way of thinking.

I don't, clearly you don't and we can only hope and prey that waters will continue to exist that fall beyond the wayside of commercialism and rivers by their very nature will continue to fulfil that role.

I think we have to accept that commercials play a role such as for those who find 'natural' venues inaccessible, as is often their very nature, but maybe something has gone wrong when it becomes a convenient norm?

Either way, reality bites.

I think it's a general side effect of the insatiable and unsustainable growth driven commercial (general not angling term) machine which is often called life these days, it moves so fast that if you're not careful you can reach the end without ever really realising you've lived it but you will have paid a fair few dividends...

If of course you subscribed to it in the first place ;)
 

fishing4luckies

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A very interesting post/article/essay. Plenty to ponder and think about and in all honesty it probably deserves a more considered and thoughtful response than I am likely to provide.

One thing I would say though, is that while I prefer my fishing a bit more 'on the wild side' as it were, tending to seek out overgrown old farm ponds, hidden mill or hammer ponds and overgrown stretches of the Rivers down here in Kent, I feel we must be careful to differentiate between the venues of today and the personalities of yesterday.

What I mean is that although Redmire has assumed an almost mystical and slightly dewey-eyed romanticism it was once just a field. Then someone dug a hole and stuck some carp in it.

Then Yates and James found it and made a name for themselves by catching them.

Whilst it clearly would be wrong to compare Redmire with the abomination of a lake shown in the first video they are still both holes in the ground full of water and fish.

Ultimately what strikes me as being the big difference are the personalities in front of the camera. In both films the main protagonists are making a living from angling. I'm sure Andy May is a thoroughly decent chap and could teach me more than I could probably ever take in when it comes to fishing, but I'd rather go for a walk and have a beer with Chris Yates.

Like I said, my response is probably not sufficiently well put or thought through but hey, it's 10 to midnight on a Monday night and I'm looking forward to a late night in the workshop planing (by hand) and chiselling and sawing to make a coffee table by lunchtime tomorrow. I'd better stop procrastinating and get on with it. :D
 

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A very well written thought provoking piece Cliff. Artistic as well, you could have done a Tracy Eminent but you gave us the full Montyelangelo.
I have fished the good, the bad and the ugly of commercials, which is one point, the good were very good, Frant Lakes was always a favorite, in the beautiful Vale of Kent, exceptionally laid out, wonderful bird life, in fact the owners charge £2 to bird-watchers; the fishing was a bit contrived but plenty of variety to choose from. Then there were the bad and the ugly, forgotten where they were as never went back to them.
The antidote to them are rivers, some canals and natural lakes which are more often than not controlled by clubs. We have a lot of rivers in this country, hard fishing often enough but able to surprise in a way commercials cannot and free if you search for it. Not always beautiful maybe but nuggets exist. And not forgetting our coast-line for those that want to venture out a bit, I can see a rugged cliff face, peregrines, fulmars, sometimes dolphins or porpoises plus glimmering mackerel shoals within ten minutes.
Its the same in all the arts, fishing, writing, painting, you have to search for what fills your heart with joy; you might just have to rummage a bit deeper sometimes.
But I think we all know this, your point really is; who is striving to produce the things that fill our hearts with joy in the modern world, I get that.
Lets dig a hole in the ground, any hole will do and fill it up with fish or lets produce a beautiful place full of variety and aesthetic pleasure and then put some fish in.
 
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thecrow

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The article is deserving of more than one read but just one point that I will comment on and that is that anglers have always fished manmade featureless waters ever since they were dug the difference being that they were not dug for the benefit of anglers or to make a profit from them, the fens are what I am talking about. In my experience its whether the fish are there that attracts anglers not purely aesthetics.

Matches that were held on these waters were rarely fair to all anglers, of course some were better anglers than others but to catch fish they had to be in front of them which they often were not, the round featureless match waters of today are at least fair in that the fish have no particular reason to be in front of any one angler other than maybe weather conditions and bankside disturbance, they are ugly to say the least but the very fact that they attract anglers shows that they are what lots of modern match anglers want to fish, how many rivers or fen drains are capable of attracting match anglers nowadays?
 

mikench

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Very thought provoking! sadly we live in age of more and more materialism/commercialism and suffer from communication overload.Unreality TV has a lot to answer for catering for the more prurient tastes and even the BBC are besotted with news and the worse it is the better!

I have no interest in twitface and communicating with my washing machine and tumble dryer. Believe it or not the former has wifi to send you a message when it is finished!:( To some these advances are marvelous but to me they are a waste of time and an irritation. I go fishing for the company of nice like minded people, the fresh air and countryside, the wildlife and the "mindfulness" i can indulge in when planning a trip, setting up my tackle and trying first one and then other tactics to try and catch different species of fish.

I do not want to sound perjorative about match fishing but the whole thing turns me off. I accept i will never have the skillset to be able to catch fish after fish after fish, whilst simultaneously recasting rebaiting and unhooking. By the same token I have no interest in trying to eat 25 pork pies in 20 minutes;) Fishing is a hobby and thus is intended to be relaxing. Sitting cheek by jowl with dozens of match fishermen is not my scene. However my scene does not make for outrageous TV whereas the competion aspect of match fishing/ big carp and game fishing clearly does in the eyes of many.

We live in a brutal world but fishing should be the exception and not the rule!
 

geoffmaynard

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Rule one of Design is Function over Form. We are all aware of interesting looking 'things' in life man has created which look amazing but are bloody useless - and that extends to organisations, rivers trusts, charities and authorities who adopt the philosophy of supporting the man over his purpose. I'm thinking here of the millions wasted in administrating top heavy 'authorities' who spend 90% of their income (often publicly funded) on the admin, wages and pensions of employees than on the work they were created to do in the first place.
Then we have the lucky coincidence - without the motorway system we would have few gravel and sand pits which have matured into such beautiful fisheries over the last fifty years. No design, just serendipity.
 

john step

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Been thinking. A lot of modern things like architecture and art are like the emperor's new clothes.

You get so called experts extolling on about such things that anyone can plainly see is complete rubbish.
Piles of bricks, half dead cows, unmade beds, Lowry ,Hockney, Picasso etc.

I remember old Charlie boy calling an extension to the British Library a carbuncle and the experts giving him a roasting.

Its not only fishing that has suffered the standardisation of uniform places to go to.
One of the reasons I packed up with a caravan was that sites went down the route of hard standings all arranged in uniform neat convenient to maintain rows just like a housing estate on wheels.
You see the occupants glued to TV in the evenings instead of enjoying the outdoors. Crazy..
Whoa betide if you rolled up without booking on the net in advance.

I suppose one of the problems today is just too many people of which as a baby boomer, I am one!
The various governments have not had enough time in the last 70 years to plan things whilst eagerly collecting our income tax and National Insurance contributions.

Now we are an aging population.a problem:mad:
 
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Peter Jacobs

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The thing is Cliff that there are no thugs with guns forcing people onto these featureless, and dare I say, soul-less venues.

It is just that in this world and age of "instant" results for everything from meals to fishing that many have sold their souls for the end, and typically very swift, result.

One of those venues that enticed, shall we say the not so good anglers, was Anglers Paradise where for the sake of a few shillings you could rent one of the colourless and soul-less cabins and fish for exotic species that were certainly not indigenous to these islands.

The need for speed-y results then spread and some (enlightened?) farmers saw the instant cash that could be generated or rather prised from the ever-eager hands of the less than average anglers.

What followed you have noted well, the featureless island pools or the dead straight canalised venues that were, in truth, much favoured and exploited by the pole manufacturers . . . . .

Meanwhile many of us were being ridiculed for preferring to fish natural venues, that were not (over)stocked and using rods ,reels and tackle that many of the instant result anglers wouldn't be seen dead in possession of . . . .

You don't really have to think too deeply to see who may well have it right . . . . .
 
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sam vimes

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You can't impose your own ideals and tastes on anyone. I'm afraid that most of the post reads as someone of an older generation bemoaning the next. Something which has occurred since time immemorial. I'm firmly into middle age now, I have sympathy with, and understand, some of the issues. However, others I reject completely.

Times change, whether we are 18 or 80, we may not like those changes. I fail to see the real connections between modern art, modern music, dodgy architecture (some of which is anything but modern) and commercial fishing beyond the OP not really liking any of them. At this point in time, I'm still accepting enough of "modern". However, I'm well able to cherry pick the bits out of modern that I like and mix it with old. I really hope to stay that way. I don't want to turn into a grumpy old sod that seems to hate anything new. My body is going to get old whether I like it or not. I hope that my attitudes stay (relatively) young until the day I die. I'm quite happy with the prospect of being old, but I don't want to think old.

Music is a prime example for me. I dearly love the music from my youth. The best of the eighties and nineties will probably always be my era. However, I really hope that I continue to find joy discovering new music, whether it be from before I was born or bang up to date. I'd be missing out on so much if I couldn't contemplate listening to anything but music from "my era".

In this respect, fishing is no different. I can't say that commercials are my thing, but I can visit the best of them on my terms without any feeling of soullessness or betraying an ideal. I feel no compunction whatsoever to live up to anyone else's ideals. I couldn't care less if someone else thinks less of me because I won't. I'd go so far as to suggest that if we did all follow a single ideal, we'd end up being exactly the kind of soulless drones that the op laments.

I propose a good healthy dose of individualism. Do what makes you happy, provided it's within the law and hurts no one. Stop worrying about what other people choose to do and get on with your life.
 

flightliner

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I ask myself why high rise flats and the like that were constructed with such wild abandon back in the fifties and sixties are now so reviled here in the uk.
Many were modeled on the ones by the french architect carbusiere , not just here but in europe , high rise apartment living is the commonly accepted mode of living, granted some of the worst have hellish reputations but at their best they are a delight.
I am frequently reminded by my daughters father in law in Milan with him saying " You english, living as you do in your little boxes with a square of grass back and front, " A referance to his preferred way of living in a pretty large apartment block (and very nice too).
Years ago as a young apprentice I worked on many "brutalist" concrete structures , universities, high rise apartments/flats and others and to be honest they were really nice in the main, It would have fine by me to have lived in one but circumstances dictated otherwise.
I do however go along with much of what the op says, "art" by the likes of emin is an insult to any normal person, the same goes to "banksy" , granted his work is interesting but the work he despoils-- that of the artisan bricklayer is little short of criminal, take a close look next time and check out the bond used to fashion the wall-- amasingly interesting if you know what to look for!.
All labour is dignified and he takes away that dignity, sullies it with an aerosol can and "we" applaud it!!!!.
I'm an all round angler, I enjoy catching fish of all species and size.Right now ! tho a little long in the tooth I prefer a river or a nice lake, reservoir or pond but when I moved house thirty years ago I chose to live near to a complex of ponds that at the time were "natural" with the intention of using them when travelling the long distances I do at present to distant waters became to much , in the meantime they have been redevolped into a full on commercial, not much I can do about it, and tho not my first choice I know I will enjoy using them when old and frail, sat there amongst some of sheffield and rotherhams best match anglers of the sixties who were pretty dominant at times in fenland and rivers like the Trent will be like old times playing catch up.
 
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nottskev

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I've got a lot of sympathy for anglers trying to put their finger on the rather dispiriting trends in instant, convenience, big-catch fisheries. I don't agree it's a matter of older guys resisting the march of time etc – change can be for the better or the worse, anyone is entitled to evaluate and criticise it, and older guys are more likely to know than difference than anglers who have grown up with that model of fishing as the dominant one and have experienced little else.

If I had to find a comparison to capture the difference between the gist of the commercial and the gist of the natural – yes, I know those are approximate terms – I'd say think of the difference between a shopping mall and a city. I feel much the same on a commercial complex as I do in an Outlet Village, as they quaintly call them, and that's not good. You can certainly bag plenty of stuff in the mall shops, as you can bag fish in the donut lakes and canals of the “fish outlets”, and it's all there for you – the food court, the car park. But the places are barren, monotonous, and seem such a reduction to basics, and I think fishing is a lot more than a branch of shopping and natural waters far less consumerist contexts.

Of course, where you fish is your choice. But a Tesco on every high street might just be part of dwindling choices, and I find it gets harder to find fisheries that aren't on the carp-mall model. I'm happy to read the views of anglers who speak up for other facets of angling and other types of water as a contribution to keeping them, and the values associated with them, alive.
 

mikench

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I would just add to the discussions that whilst I am not against change per se , I retain the right to accept or reject it! Our town centre 30 years ago was full of individual shops , cafes and restaurants and small businesses. Few remain now and it is like every other town centre in the country full of "the chains" like Starbucks, Cafe Nero et al. I refuse to frequent them partly on principle but mainly because their coffee is awful! We did have a MacDonalds but it closed down!!

Going abroad is not quite the adventure it was unless you really go off the beaten track. Who wants to see or use a Pizza Hut next to the Pyramids in Cairo for heavens sake!

Music is my joy and i never tire of listening to old and new, classical or rock. An eclectic taste in all things is most healthy! As Fleetwood Mac say " Go your own way"
 

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Design is the route to create 'objects of desire'. Some designs achieve it others don't. But sometimes Nature creates the best of the objects. I look out my window at the countryside here on the Wales/England border and see a child's idealistic painting of blue sky with fluffy clouds, a myriad of patchwork fields in greens of different hues - all surrounded by neatly trimmed hedges; some with sheep, others with red or blue tractors baling up rounds of dry grass for silage. Tiny white boxes mark out farm buildings here and there interspersed with copses of trees. It's incredibly beautiful and is the result of nothing but total chaos in design terms. Randomly created by man's economic forces over centuries. Stunning.
 

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Rather than this becoming a whinge for the older generation I think it is showing the exact opposite.

Commercial pools serve a purpose and in my experience are used by a great many of the older generation of anglers.

One of our past editors here on FM, Graham Marsden, who I know very well and who has been a regular guest here in my home for fishing weekends is now at a stage where, if it were not for a decent local commercial, then he'd not be fishing today due to health issues.

If questioned however he would tell you in no in uncertain terms that he'd far rather be our on a natural river, but that is now only limited to a few days a year and even then only with some good friends.

Last week I took a trip to one of the local commercial venues in my area, Witherington Farm Lakes and would hazard a guess that the average age of the anglers there was ell over 55 and probably over 65 . . . . and that included a fair few kids too.
 

thecrow

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I find it gets harder to find fisheries that aren't on the carp-mall model.

Still trying to find a none carp day ticket water in my area or even 20/30 miles away but no luck so far, I don't mind catching carp in fact I enjoy them but it would be nice just now and again to fish where I know there are none.
 

no-one in particular

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Still trying to find a none carp day ticket water in my area or even 20/30 miles away but no luck so far, I don't mind catching carp in fact I enjoy them but it would be nice just now and again to fish where I know there are none.

I am surprised there Crow, I found a few commercials, usually the bigger ones with a few lakes where at least one lake is carp free. Owners recognize the demand and will cater for it if it draws people in.
 

Cliff Hatton

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I think I made the mistake of finally reducing my article to a 'Commercials or Naturals?' poser when its intended purpose was to draw attention to the fact of Brutalism in everyday life and to 'identify' those politically-motivated individuals who took (and continue to take) it upon themselves to devalue the worth of good, skilful, attractive, genuine art. As I said, the soul-less 'fishing bowls' we see popping-up around the country are, I believe, an unwitting by-product of a counter-culture promoted, actually, by only a small 'elitist' school of thought and actively 'sold' to us by their profit-motivated agents, the auction houses. They're perfectly aware that 'Exhibit 32 - a 10ft x 5ft representation in VOMIT of The Big Bang' is utter bo**ocks but they'll describe it in terms crafted to make US feel inadequate and uneducated. Thus, young, impressionable people are persuaded that an ugly sound, repeated without variation or punctuation, for 5-6 minutes is good to listen to. Yes, I'm fully aware of the generation-gap and of the young's natural propensity to rebel against their parents' preferences, but I think this is in a different league and with a dubious purpose: hitherto, popular music always possessed some kind of tune while Picasso's, Dali's and Matisse's work normally approximated to something comprehensible. Now, we are at the point where a $3,000,000 'installation' is mistaken by cleaners as trash and disposed of! (So they don't hoodwink all of us!)

So 'Brutalism in Fishing' wasn't the out-and-out fishing article it really should have been, more an observation of how even innocuous aspects of life - like fishing - are or might be affected by political thinking.

Regularly working with secondary schoolchildren in English and art classes, I'm appalled at the rock-bottom spelling and the atrocious handwriting I see in the majority of schools I visit. In the art-room, it is clear that a great many kids have never been shown how to handle a pencil or to produce a life-like image of, say, a tree. Children right up to Year 10 (that's the old 4th year) commonly draw two vertical lines and top them with a 'flowery' circle! What they can do well is cut-out photo's from 'Hello!' and stick them in a scrapbook: who or what has influenced the people who teach them?

Thank heaven, there are schools where standards are unusually high; so high that I dare not get involved!

But the general standard in these subjects is woefully low and this leads me to ask 'why?'

I'll leave that one hanging if you don't mind, but it would be interesting to see viewers' comments.
 

mikench

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I mainly blame the parents who expect all teaching to be given in school by teachers. Instil a love of reading and writing in a toddler and the child is set up for life! Such a child is already ahead when he or she enters junior school and virtually everything you do afterwards is aided considerably by a good vocabulary , a love of reading and the ability to produce prose.

This approach is also beneficial for learning foreign languages , history of art or generally, and pursuing your interests such as fishing. You cannot amass knowledge without reading and understanding ones native language helps considerably in learning a foreign language. Reading facilitates spelling, grammar and composition; a valuable skill indeed!
 
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