What to do on a thoroughly wet day? We went to the Usher Gallery in Lincoln to see Richard Ansett’s Liminal Presence display, subtitled A Street Photography Experiment. Richard went around Lincoln city centre on a summer’s day with an accomplice holding a bright light on a pole to counteract back lit imaging. He took pictures of city dwellers going about their business in an approach not unlike that of Martin Parr and quite spontaneous in terms of his subject matter and their responses - or lack of them. It was described as an immersive experience capturing a moment in time and all wrapped up on the day. The resulting display was a series of bright, ceiling to floor splashes of colour showing some purposeful shoppers going about their business contrasting with others with just hours to fill. Hardly mind-blowing stuff but mildly entertaining all the same.
Newark Castle’s station Italian restaurant is open again
under another name, which is encouraging and the replacement station totems in
Midland Region maroon reminded me that the MR reached Newark before the GNR,
hence this historically significant and architecturally notable building.
I stopped rather abruptly on my way into Waterstones to
shake the rain off the umbrella. The lady behind me bumped into my arm and
dropped her white cardigan into a mucky puddle just outside the shop. “Oh dear”,
I exclaimed as I turned to see what had happened. “No worries”, she said with a
smile as she stooped to pick it up. “Good job its not a white one”, I quipped,
but her smile quickly turned to a glower. Maybe not, big mouth, I thought, but
it was too late.
The train to Lincoln had been facemask busy with Port Vale supporters heading to the match at Sincil Bank. On the way home, it was full of revellers heading for a good night out in Nottingham. It was only half past three, though the boozing had begun on the platform and continued on the train, which perhaps says as much about pub prices in the city as anything else.
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