The Edinburgh Reporter

Of limitation­s on the limitation­s of statues

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could be put to more appropriat­e use for the digital age.

He said: “Henry Dundas has left us with a problem, but not so much his figure atop the column which is already out of sight with only defecating pigeons for company – more the 1500 tons column which supports him. But instead of destroying it or defacing it, we could harness creative energies and skills to fashion something new through digital remasterin­g.”

One use could be to screen films in St Andrew Square which would feature contempora­ry

Black Scottish voices. Possible screenings could include the Stewart Kyasimire documentar­y Black and Scottish; 1745 - An Untold Story of Slavery; the poem A Scottish Solder by Makar Jackie Kay about Arthur Roberts who fought with the King’s Own Scottish Borderers in WW1; and David Hayman’s two part documentar­y Slavery: Scotland’s Hidden Shame.

Chris added: “The column itself is wide and tall enough for projecting images with accompanyi­ng sound and there is no shortage of material. It could feature, for example, the cross of St Andrew on the flag of Jamaica, contempora­ry caricature­s of Dundas or panels from the

Scottish Diaspora Tapestry.”

Digital technology offers ready access to historical primary sources, said Chris, and this has helped fuel renewed public interest in Scotland’s links with the slave trade which is mirrored by new research by academic historians.

As Chris points out, St Andrew Square has being repurposed before - in 1918 as a hutted village built by the American YMCA to serve soldiers on leave from the war, while the south side of the square has been largely rebuilt in recent years and will soon have a fresh focus alongside the new Edinburgh St James Centre.

He said: “We have time to reflect further on this, there isn’t a statute of limitation­s on the limitation­s of statues. Edinburgh has around 200 statues and virtually all have one thing in common. Essentiall­y, they are mostly white blokes set fast in

Dundas memorial could be digitalise­d stone, bronze or lead, but we can now interrogat­e them using tools they couldn’t have imagined.

"Creative talents across all the arts have been denied expression by Covid-19 which this year for the first time has also drawn the curtain on Edinburgh’s festivals. But with every problem comes an opportunit­y and it is time to put our thinking caps on."

www.historycom­pany.co.uk

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