Malian artist barred from UK

Visiting Artists’ Campaign, latest news… An audience member at an artist’s talk that took place on Tuesday 6 December, expressed her huge disappointment about the absence of Malian artist Abdoulaye Konate. The artist was invited to give a talk about his new commission for Rivington Place, but faced visa problems. Lara Pawson contacted the Manifesto Club hotline with the following statement: “Huge disappointment last night when long-awaited Q&A with superb Malian artist, Abdoulaye Konate, could not take place due to his immigration problems in Paris. Shame and irritation are what I feel. Theresa May is a fool. We can only benefit from…

Testing the right to photograph in public

Someone just sent me this YouTube video , featuring London Street Photography Festival’s fascinating experiment testing the limits to freedom in public space. Six photographers went out to take photos in different areas of the city. The photographers were told to take photos in a normal manner. They are not aggressive, they were not behaving strangely, and they were polite and reasonable at all times. (This is important – other campaigners have carried out stunts defending their right to photograph while wearing masks, or otherwise making a point, which gives the action an artificial quality.) The results of the experiment are worrying…

University of York campaigns against poster ban

Like many other universities, York has strict rules limiting students’ use of posters on campus. This rule is ostensibly to stop litter, but actually is about a generalised hostility of university management towards spontaneous activities on campus. Poster-bans inhibit student societies, since (especially on campuses) posters are one of the main way of getting your event out there. York students have a petition against the ban; we should support them. Sign the petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/university-of-york-repeal-the-ban-on-campus-postering See the Manifesto Club campaign against leafleting bans: http://www.manifestoclub.com/leafletingban

Crackdown on Brick lane touts

Brick Lane is defined by its touts, who stand outside every restaurant enticing passersby to try ‘the best curry in London’. Yet now this extravagant self-promotion is to be banned. I’ve just received an email from a Manifesto Club supporter, reporting that ‘Tower Hamlets council’s latest initiative is to ban restaurant owners from using touts outside their establishments to entice customers in. An anti-tout pledge will now be added to their licensing conditions. Are touts, with their old world manners and quaint turn of phrases, really a threat to anyone seeking a good curry?’ I don’t imagine anyone has complained about the…

Don’t talk to the builders

I just received this email about a school in Devon undergoing building works: ‘Our two boys attend a grammar school in Devon (every possible Ofsted accolade) where they were told in assembly that with the construction of a new block they were not to speak to any builder, and that no builder must speak to them or he will face dismissal. How can we possibly hope to build any kind of better (or ‘big’) society with such an frightening lack of trust, not to mention courtesy? The school’s instructions sound like something out of a 1950s sci-fi nightmare.’ The business of bringing…

British Legion banned from Birmingham high street

British Legion collectors will be prevented from collecting in two of Birmingham’s main shopping streets, in the run-up to Remembrance Sunday. Birmingham – like many other towns and cities – has restrictions on the numbers of charities that can be collecting in a particular street at a particular time. And in this case Shelter and Oxfam have already ‘booked’ the street for key days, which means the British Legion can’t go there too. These rules are connected with controls on leafleting and other forms of public petitioning or appeal. Councils are starting to issue licenses – to charge fees, set certain terms,…

Government u-turn on cutting red tape for live music

The UK has a truly absurd system for licensing ‘entertainment’ – under which any pub wanting to host a single guitar player, or poetry reader, or choir, or just about any other form of performance needs to get a council licence, which comes with high costs and piles of forms. The coalition government has made very encouraging promises that it would cut this red tape, and indeed has been feeding suggestions to the press that it would abolish music licensing altogether. Now the Live Music Forum – the campaign group that has been leading the rebellion against these ridiculous laws – reveals…

Speech by Nicholas Trench, Earl of Clancarty

A speech by Nicholas Trench, Earl of Clancarty in the House of Lords, about the effect of the UK’s points-based visa system on visiting artists. This talk was given at the Border Walk event, in August. ‘First I would like to say thank you very much indeed to Rocca, Claudia and Manick for inviting me to this event. May I begin by saying something about myself and my own involvement in this campaign. My name is Nick Trench. I am an artist – and I am also a parliamentarian. I sit in the House of Lords as a crossbencher, which means I…

‘No photos in a toy shop!’

This email from a gentleman in Cambridge describes how photos in places related to children – even if there are no children actually present – have also become latently suspicious: ‘I was recently taking part in a work-organised “treasure hunt” team-building activity. One of the clues that we had to follow led to a toy shop in the tiny village in Cambridgeshire. The organisers had asked for one of the team to be photographed standing alongside Thomas the Tank Engine, the allegedly popular children’s storybook character. No sooner had one of my colleagues posed beside a toy TTE, and another colleague whipped…