The Sunday Post (Dundee)

All the fun of the Square...and the tears, tanks, and freedom fighters

Artist’s special concert will hail history of city landmark

- By Bill Gibb BGIBB@SUNDAYPOST.COM

He recalls having lunchtime sandwiches there on visits to Goldbergs department store while the Poll Tax protests raged around him.

Now Turner Prize-winning artist Douglas Gordon is celebratin­g the history and heritage of George Square in Glasgow.

Citizens of Everywhere! is one of the landmark events of Festival 2018, which runs alongside the inaugural European Championsh­ips that begin in the city on

Wednesday. And coming home to curate Thursday’s concert was an opportunit­y Maryhillbo­rn Douglas couldn’t pass up.

“I was thrilled to be asked and to be given ‘carte blanche’ to do something special in the heart of the city as it’s taken over by the Championsh­ips,” said Berlin-based Douglas, 51.

“The Square has been at the centre of so many big moments in history.”

Having worked with her in Edinburgh last year, Douglas recruited makar Jackie Kay, as well as working with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Central to the concert will be found footage of singer and political activist Paul Robeson.

“I came across this Pathe film, with no sound, of him leading the May Day parade from George Square to Queen’s Park in 1960,” said Douglas.

Jackie is working on poetry to deliver with it and there will also be a version of Robeson’s Old Man River and rock band Mogwai’s Monument For A Forgotten Future, played by the RSNO.

“I hope that wherever you are in the city centre you may hear snippets,” added Douglas. The Square could have looked very different today if the city fathers had had their way. Plans were announced in 2012 for a £15 million makeover to restore its “lost grandeur” ahead of the 2014 Commonweal­th Games. The famous statues were to be moved to effect changes enhancing “Glasgow’s reputation as an internatio­nal city”. But there was widespread opposition – and the scheme was scrapped. Three years after his release from prison, Nelson Mandela visited Glasgow. During his incarcerat­ion he was offered the Freedom of the City and, just a year before he became South African president, he came to offer his thanks. During the visit in October 1993, a 15,000-strong crowd gathered in George Square and he told them how, though he was physically denied freedom at home, Glasgow refused to accept apartheid and declared freedom – he then joined them in a dance! The Square has often been a gathering point for protestors with the Poll Tax just one issue bringing people on to the streets. But the darkest times were in January 1919 with “the Battle of George Square” or “Bloody Friday”. Workers struck for shorter hours after the First World War and the Government feared an uprising. With protestors outside City Chambers, rioting broke out and troops were called in.

 ??  ?? CGI view of how George Square will look during European Championsh­ips starting on Thursday
CGI view of how George Square will look during European Championsh­ips starting on Thursday
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 ??  ?? A First World War procession in Glasgow. Tanks were sent in to quell strikes a year later
A First World War procession in Glasgow. Tanks were sent in to quell strikes a year later
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 ??  ?? Artist Douglas Gordon, left, and activist Paul Robeson
Artist Douglas Gordon, left, and activist Paul Robeson
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