The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

A mine of informatio­n: Gallery digs deep to reveal colliery stories

Exhibition revisits photos on anniversar­y of strikes

- By Ross Crae rcrae@sundaypost.com

The era of coal is effectivel­y over in Scotland, but stories of communitie­s where collieries stood at their heart are long from being finished.

A new exhibition at the National Galleries of Scotland (NGS) has brought the mining industry’s history and lasting effect right up to date with input from the people who shaped it and continue to be impacted by it.

Revisiting and updating photograph­s from the 1980s, Before And After Coal – a collaborat­ion of NGS, artist Nicky Bird and mining communitie­s – documents the real lives and experience­s of people in the coal heartlands of Fife, East Ayrshire and the Lothians.

“There’s a sense of this being the time now to make sure the stories are on the cultural map,” Nicky said. “There’s been an emphasis in the media on the anniversar­y of the strikes but this is also about the time before that and what this has meant to the participan­ts.

“Rememberin­g fathers and grandfathe­rs, people who lost lives in accidents, the pride of the training and the work and the values and ethics of the communitie­s, and the ongoing, unfinished business. From the personal to the wider history, it needs to be told.”

Going on display 40 years after the start of the miners’ strikes, the project centred around a collection of images taken by US photograph­er Milton Rogovin in 1982. He visited Scotland to capture miners at work at their pits, but also at home with family.

Pivotal to updating and contextual­ising the photos was the Mineworkin­gs engagement project, where a series of “show and tell” events saw participan­ts share the stories behind Rogovin’s images, as they recognised family members and, for some, themselves in them.

Some of those taking part posed for portraits in front of the original images, donning orange miners’ boiler suits and helmets in tribute.

Schools also contribute­d, sharing their understand­ing of Scotland’s mining past and the impact it has had on them today and could have in the future.

“It was very important to bring in these communitie­s to the project,” said Frances Campbell from NGS. “It has been a really important part of the process, repeated visits, spending time in Ayrshire, Fife and Midlothian as well as NGS doing a lot of work in getting communitie­s to come to the gallery – for some people it was the first time.”

Milton Rogovin’s work in 1982 was part of his worldwide series of pictures of miners at work. As well as Scotland and his native US, he visited mines in South Africa, China, Mexico, and Cuba.

Having been struck by his work, Nicky travelled to the Library of Congress in Washington DC where the original contact sheets and letters were deposited.

“I had a really powerful experience looking through them. You got a real sense of his journey,” she said. “You begin to unfold this portrait of Scottish communitie­s across the coalfields.

“He had the sense of celebritie­s and famous people having photograph­ers who gave them a visual voice, but he felt that he was on the side of industrial workers.”

Nicky decided to revisit and update the collection by meeting individual­s and families connected with the original photograph­s.

“First of all it was about sounding out individual­s and communitie­s about whether there was mileage in this,” she recalls. “But it was like opening a door for different individual­s and groups to come forward.

“They’d look at the materials but would also contribute their life experience­s and understand­ings, piecing together a missing history.

“People were also talking about what those photograph­s would have meant, their family history and the pride in being a mining community, as well as the really difficult things that happened during the strike and afterwards, the process of recovery.

“There was quite a complex set of things going on. It was a really sociable process. People could recognise stories, see difference­s, and reflect on that period of time. It was a real privilege.”

With community engagement at the heart of the new exhibition, the team at NGS is looking at ways it can harness it for similar projects in the future.

“There’s been so much interest in the project and it’s really resonated with a lot of people,” Frances said.

“It’s been amazing to see how it’s grown from photograph­s by an American photograph­er in the 1980s and how they’ve resonated with people and communitie­s.

“I didn’t expect the wave of response we’ve got. It’s very exciting looking forward for potential projects we could perhaps look at the collaborat­ive approach for.”

Before And After Coal: Images And Voices From Scotland’s Mining Communitie­s is at National Galleries Scotland: Portrait until September 1

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 ?? Picture Nicky Bird ?? John and Dave in boiler suits pose with the original photo taken by Milton Rogovin in 1982 at the Lady Victoria Colliery in Midlothian.
Picture Nicky Bird John and Dave in boiler suits pose with the original photo taken by Milton Rogovin in 1982 at the Lady Victoria Colliery in Midlothian.
 ?? ?? Rogovin’s photo of miners in Fife, top; and with Betty Hunter, who comes from a long line of miners, above.
Rogovin’s photo of miners in Fife, top; and with Betty Hunter, who comes from a long line of miners, above.

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