The other two finalists were Thomas MacGregor and Afsheen Nasir. The newly-developed Castlefield Basin would have suited MacGregor’s preferred red green palette and the way he paints buildings. Nasir would have revelled in the geometry of the canal architecture and basin and maybe painted some interesting cutaways as she did at Levens to show what lies beyond.
I liked Desmond Downes work too. A look at his paintings here tell me he’s good at contemporary urban and more pastoral scenes and can blend the two.
desd.ie/index.html#/
I feel your pain Mummer and made the point upthread about how Enfield has ignored people altogether.
I’m still wondering about the fire and I suspect the gallery curator is too. We know Enfield likes to paint fire but it has no place here. Yes, one of her guides described and showed her how the cotton mill at Littleborough had been the subject of an arson attack. We know about the harsh working conditions of mill workers but the fire wasn’t a political act - just teenage vandals as far as I can tell from news reports at the time and nothing to celebrate. In any event she’s put the fire in the hills not by the canal where the mill would have drawn its water from. Symbolically, we might think of fire as cleansing - phoenix rising from the ashes and so forth but the mill is still sitting there in a derelict state. Are there any plans to restore or convert it?
Like Maybee, I enjoy industrial landscapes. In my younger days, an enthusiastic narrowboater fascinated by the locks and bridges and the sheer graft that went into building and later restoring the network. Ancestors were working bargemen,. Maybe why I feel so disappointed with this painting.
Over the last two years, there have been some offshoots from the main competitions - the portait paint-alongs during lockdown, for example. I’d love to see what MacGregor, Nasir and Downes would have made of this opportunity.