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On a nice sunny day over a week ago I arranged to meet Alan in Glasgow City Centre near Clyde Street. The city centre waterfront was in its usual graffiti splattered condition and has been that way since the covid lockdowns. This is the back of a casino.
Out on the water nearby a life-craft from the old Nautical College (now City of Glasgow College) was instructing students in rescue skills from the water by the looks of it. These orange lifeboats on the back of ships are not speedy but they will save your life. Falling into the North Sea or the Atlantic Ocean at these latitudes you will not last very long in the water, even with full exposure kit on and lifejackets.
The day we were there a sizable police presence was noticeable, moving anyone on who appeared to be loitering down here. A common occurrence now in this area.
Coming in by bus from two different districts we agreed to meet at the mural wall along the Clydeside near the suspension bridge.
A lot of good murals used to exist here but now its mainly just graffiti on this occasion.
One of the reasons for that might be murals don't last too long down here. You can spend a half day or a long full day; hours on a work and it doesn't last long. I'm guessing this is about T and The E.F. correspondence and the current world situation. Nuff said.
We then had a wander round the Saltmarket, The Trongate/Glasgow Cross area, seen above, where Alan noticed a poster trying to drum up funds for turning this elevated disused railway line (or one nearby) into a high level park. ( Similar to the famous one in New York City.) They will need to make it graffiti and vandal resistant in this district though I found myself thinking. During the 1960s to the 1990s I grew up in and later worked throughout the large council estates on the outskirts of Glasgow that used to be awash with graffiti for decades but now they've mostly been cleaned up. Right here...the Glasgow Waterfront is now the number one area for graffiti in this city I would guess.
We then visited several galleries in the Argyle Street/ King Street area.
Inspired by their surroundings, members of the public had created their own art in the gallery toilets... or it could well be yet another exhibit. I would not be surprised. T. E. perhaps? At least this one was cheap. When is it art? And what exactly is art?
The new replacing the old in every city. Met tower with yellow fins on the roof. Apparently it has a roof terrace. For student or resident use presumably? According to what I can find online they may be refurbishing this old building which is empty at the moment... or pulling it down. Take your pick.
Glasgow Cross View. Still the old city of the 1800s 'Tobacco Lords' in this image. Rum, Sugar and plantation slaves as well during that unenlightened Georgian era. Vapes, nail bars, and smart phones being the modern hedonistic examples.
Rainbow Pride Walk. Only moan about this is that it should have been either coated or painted on a wall as folk walking on it destroys it. Same with the long list of music bands that have played at the Barrowfield on the floor of a small park near the venue. Now mostly erased by passing feet, if still there at all.
Instead why not put it on a back lane wall like this one... or any wall higher up or otherwise. It lasts then.
































7 comments:
Ah, the weird sculpture that I featured last week! It didn’t do much for me either. I also too some pictures of cat graffiti nearby but not the same ones as yours. The video was very impressive.
Not a fan of graffiti as you know. Beautiful buildings, that is another thing entirely! I would love to just stare in wonder at big buildings.
The current cost of living situation isn't self-inflicted in any way - we just have to suffer it - we can't influence it (like most things going on).
The woman's eyes mural is very, very good - they've really studied people's eyes for that one. Couldn't figure out what the cat one was about...
AI has been very helpful to me since they brought it out on Google and so on - it's helped me research all my medical ailments so I'm almost on equal terms with the docs about it all - certainly the mechanics of it all and sometimes in much deeper detail. It's also been solving problems with my solar installation tonight when they manual which came with the inverter was no help whatsoever!
I do know AI has its bad sides though and will cause a lot of bad effects. But it's really sorted google searches out...
Hi Anabel, I'm glad you watched that. Ai is so good now you could be face calling a close friend and if the operator is skilled and well informed you might never know the difference. A new golden age for scammers, Not to mention the film industry as I'd happily watch a good Ai film and have done already. The Last of Us (the first one) watched as a film is in my top 100 films of the decade . The Road (an actual film on the same subject) is not in my top 10,000 films of the decade.
Hi Kay. Graffiti normally does not bother me in the housing estates but this is Glasgow's tourist face, The city centre waterfront is right outside numerous Clyde Street hotels so I think they could do better for the image of Glasgow. However online shopping, outskirts retail parks, and changing trends are killing traditional High Streets and town centres UK wide. And once an area like that has established graffiti on it ( it is a legal art wall) I'd imagine it would be hard to get rid of it and turn it into something else.
Hi Carol, I was thinking more of the currently closed Strait of Hormuz, the worldwide fuel and fertilizer shortages with Spring arriving and the help that Russia is getting from this oil conflict. That is if you want Europe to survive this current war. I liked google Ai at first but it doesn't take a genius to see where it's heading next.
Yeah but my point is that there's damn all we can do about it personally - only governments can
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