A six hundred feet long installation on London’s South Bank showing painter Feliks Topolski’s ‘Memoir of the 20th Century’ will be conserved and opened up thanks to a £1million grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF).
Located within two railway arches under Hungerford Bridge, the Memoir takes viewers on a journey through a century’s history, including portraits of Gandhi, Mao, George Bernard Shaw, Martin Luther King and Picasso. There are also scenes showing everything from the Second World War and last days of the British Raj to punks in 1970’s London.
The labyrinthine Memoir, which Topolski painted continuously on the site from 1975 until his death in 1989, is in serious need of conservation. Currently suffering from damp, there are no environmental controls and a fifth of all paintings require urgent attention. In addition, the arches housing it are in need of repair and there is little information for visitors to bring the Memoir’s cultural significance to life.
The HLF grant will help restore over half of the paintings, even out floor surfaces to unify and open up the arches to everyone, and re-present the Memoir as a unique piece of cultural history that takes viewers through key events as witnessed by the artist. There will also be new visitor information panels, exhibition and audio guides to highlight and document particular stories. The new installation will have a flexible infrastructure enabling curators to display the paintings as they wish.
Sue Bowers, HLF’s Manager in London said; “The Memoir is the only one of its kind. It is a reflection of Topolski’s own experiences, a personal account of a foreign immigrant to the UK depicted through art. This lottery cash injection will secure the future of the paintings and site for years to come, but also massively improve the visitor experience and open it up to as many people as possible.”
In addition to core conservation and improvement works, a Learning Resource Centre will be set up in an adjacent arch. This will include an exhibition about Topolski and the people he painted, online access to all of his work and audio visual exploration of key themes.
The project has already had substantial support from the Waterloo Project Board, and has been developed thus far in partnership with the South Bank Centre. Network Rail, in whose arches the project is housed, has been generous and enthusiastic. Over £600,000 has already been raised from others, and the project is looking for a further £1.6m from private and charitable sources.
Once work is complete visitor numbers are expected to increase by a quarter, and schools will be particularly targeted. Opening hours will be extended to catch visitors when the South Bank is at its busiest, and guided tours will be available. There will also be an education programme linked to the National Curriculum, with teachers packs available, and volunteers will be involved in a wide range of activities, from running the box office to answering visitors questions about the Memoir.
Daniel Topolski, son of the artist and member of the board, added; “We are absolutely delighted with this award. We have excited a huge number of people with the idea of preserving an important piece of art and a great document of the twentieth century. The work is part of the heritage and the future of the South Bank, and our vision will allow future generations to enjoy it and have their imaginations sparked by it.”
Lord Moynihan, Chair of the Topolski Memoir Limited, said; “This award is not just a major contribution to the budget we need to undertake this fascinating and important project. It is also a public vote of confidence in what we are aiming to achieve, and should galvanise the extensive support and goodwill to help us find the rest of the money we need.”
Note to Editors:
The 'Memoir of the Century' is a unique mural depicting the major political world events of the Twentieth Century and the personalities who fashioned them. Six hundred feet long, the 'Memoir' is painted on hardboard panels twenty feet high and curves snake-like through railway viaduct arches Nos 150, 151 and 152, on the south bank side of London's Hungerford Bridge over the River Thames.
It is the artist Feliks Topolski's pictorial and historical representation painted over fifteen years from Topolski's many hundreds of vivid eye-witness and on-the-spot drawings and paintings made in a century of high drama. The 'Memoir', opposite the Royal Festival Hall in the arts complex at Waterloo, was donated to the nation by the artist in 1984.