ALLOTMENTS BY ANDREW BUURMAN

August 4th, 2009 admin

I met up with Dewi Lewis at Rhubarb Rhubarb over the weekend and was thrilled to hear he will be publishing Andrew Buurman’s work Allotments this fall.

Here’s the publicity blurb- “There’s something about the word ‘allotments’ that conjures up an image of traditional values, of balmy summer days spent working the land, escaping in honest toil. A rural idylll far removed from our everyday experience. And even though allotments can be found throughout the world, in our minds they still seem to encapsulate a certain Britishness. Andrew Buurman’s photographs capture the essence of the allotment and convey the enthusiasm and diversity of today’s plot holders.”

The history of allotments tracks the major social and political changes in British life: the move away from open field agriculture, the urbanisation of the Industrial Revolution, the need for home grown produce during both World Wars. By 1943 there were some 1.4 million allotments in the UK growing 10 percent of the nation’s food. Inevitably both increasing affluence and the redevelopment of many sites led to a dramatic decrease in numbers, though in recent years there has been a resurgence of interest. There are now some 300,000 allotments in the UK often shared between families and friends. I came across countless on my England sojourn and a photograph taken at the Whitehouse Allotments in Middlesbrough is featured in We English.

Buurman’s photographs were all taken on Uplands Allotments, in Handsworth, in the heart of Birmingham. The largest allotment site in the UK – with 422 plots – it opened in 1949, with its own office and meeting hall. Even today it retains much of the communal spirit of the post war era with weekly tea dances, bingo nights and an annual flower and vegetable show.

Here are a few….

Picture 7

Picture 1

Picture 2

Picture 4

Picture 8

Picture 3

Picture 6

Picture 5

Picture 10

Picture 9

All photographs © Andrew Buurman.

You can see more work from Allotments and other projects by Buurman on his website.

Allotments will be published by Dewi Lewis in October 2009.

2 RESPONSES TO “ALLOTMENTS BY ANDREW BUURMAN”

  1. Great to see allotments being treated as a British tradition. Andrew’s studies gain interest also because of the cultural mix of holders in the Birmingham area.

    Brian

  2. […] a few shots of the garden alone. Turned out pretty nicely and his portrait has been compared to Andrew Buurman’s Allotments project which is a lovely compliment because I love that series! Grandad and his potatoes. By Genea Bailey […]

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