The Scotsman

Vision for new gallery finally bears fruit

After years of planning and negotiatio­n, Edinburgh’s new Fruitmarke­t Gallery is at last ready for the first show by Karla Black, writes Brian Ferguson

- bferguson@scotsman .

It has a chequered history as a magnet for nightclubb­ers in Edinburgh spanning five decades.

But now a 19th century market building above the city’s Waverley Station has been transforme­d into a major new addition to the city’s cultural landscape which promises to help revive its nightlife scene.

A long-awaited overhaul and expansion of one of Scotland’s leading contempora­ry art galleries will allow the new warehouse space tp play host to drama, dance, music and poetry events as well as visual exhibition­s.

The Fruitmarke­t Gallery is expected to work with other festival and event organisers and promoters to turn it into a major new venue for the city centre boasting original features more than a century old.

The steel-framed and bricklined industrial architectu­re of the Victorian fruit market on Market Street was revealed following the stripping out of the former Electric Circus nightclub, which was also known as Buster Browns and Mercado when it was open in the 1970s.

Its owners agreed to give up the site to help the gallery expand four years ago, spelling an end to nightclubb­ing on the site, but unlocking a long-planned redevelopm­ent of the Fruitmarke­t.

The gallery had warned for years that its future was under threat because its facilities were out of date and it did not have enough space for major shows.

Now it has effectivel­y doubled in size with the creation of the new space following a two-year closure, with the Fruitmarke­t unveiling a major show spanning 20 years of work by the Turner Prize-nominated Scottish artist Karla Black.

The £4.3 million project has been in the planning stages

for the past decade.

As well as achieving a second major space for exhibition­s, the gallery has been able to expand its cafe and bookshop, create a new main staircase, open a dedicated space for classes, workshops and meetings and create a new walkway to the former nightclub.

Director Fiona Bradley said: “I was employed in 2003 with a remit to expand the Fruitmarke­t. We’ve known that we didn’t have the facilities that we needed for artists or audiences for quite a long time.

"We didn’t get cracking right away, but we produced a feasibilit­y study ten years ago on what we wanted to remedy. The ambition wasn’t necessaril­y about expansion.

“A lot our facilities were old and tired. Our galleries hadn’t been invested in for 20 years, the front door was hard to open, the lift didn’t work properly, we didn’t have enough toilets and we didn’t have an education space.

“Everything needed an upgrade and we needed better facilities, which inevitably meant we needed more space.

"The footprint of the exhibition spaces we had is the same, but they have been simplified and upgraded, with re-cladding of all the walls and new lighting.

"We wanted the thing that people loved about the Fruitmarke­t, such as the light flooding in from the top of the building, to stay the same.”

The Fruitmarke­t’s origins as a gallery date back to 1974 with the transforma­tion of an old market building dating back to 1938 and it was radically overhauled in the mid1990s. However, the adjacent building which the Fruitmarke­t has expanded into is said to date back to 1889.

Bradley added: “We have left the new warehouse space as raw as possible. We have stripped a lot out, although only the first floor of the building had really been redevelope­d over the years for nightclub spaces. All the original material used for the market was still there.

"When we went in we could see that if we knocked all the cladding out and all the other parapherna­lia on the ground floor we would have a really big warehouse space.

“We felt we could create something really inspiratio­nal for artists working across different art forms if we could take as much out as possible and leave the space as raw as possible.

"We have offered it to Karla initially to show what it can do as an experiment­al space for a visual artist.

"But the idea is that the new space will learn and we will learn what it can do as long as artists can have ideas for it.

"We’re really hoping to have live music, theatre performers, dance events and encourage artists to using whatever art form or media that they feel is appropriat­e. We see it as a place for us to work in partnershi­p with other people.

"It’s a new space right in the centre of Edinburgh that I think is a bit unexpected. We’re very keen to talk to other people about what we can do with it.”

Neil Gillespie, director of Reiach & Hall Architects, who were appointed to work on the project in 2018, said: “The original galleries are seen as a series of white spaces, abstract and precise. Surfaces are smooth and continuous while detail and material expression are suppressed.

"The palette in the warehouse, by contrast, is dark and sensual..

“As an ensemble they offer the artist, curator and their audience remarkable contrastin­g and complement­ary spaces for art and performanc­e.”

Amanda Catto, head of visual arts at Creative Scotland, said: “Beginning with an unmissable exhibition of work by Karla Black, the Fruitmarke­t will be at the heart of Edinburgh's year-round cultural sce ne, with new spaces and new opportunit­ies to present the very best in Scottish and internatio­nal contempora­ry art.”

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 ??  ?? 0 The nightclub premises have been transforme­d. The original galleries are seen as a series of white spaces and the warehouse is raw, dark and sensual
0 The nightclub premises have been transforme­d. The original galleries are seen as a series of white spaces and the warehouse is raw, dark and sensual

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