Anyhow, from the moment of arrival at the Shoreditch Town Hall, the audience was engaged. We were scanned by Security and forced to wear clearance passes. Then we were led from room to room experiencing different plays portrayed as really happening. As such, we became complicit in acts of torture and interrogation. The latter stage in the evening where we were moved around basement rooms and corridors was quite frankly, one of the scariest experiences of my life. At one point, we became the subjects of a play, 'Mountain Language'. Prisoners of a strange military regime whose representives shouted at us and generally behaved in a manner that somewhat violated the Geneva Convention.
The production ended with us being escorted out of one of the back doors of the Shoreditch Town Hall. No applause for the actors, just a renewed appreciation for the work of Amnesty etc who force the apathetic public to acknowledge the atrocities perpetrated around the world towards prisoners of even so-called 'progressive' nations.
I didn't know where I was and I was amazed how my reaction at this point at 9.30 pm matched my response upon arriving in Shoreditch (I have been there twice before in the past but only in the last couple of months) and it's still new to me.
Shoreditch is peculiar. If Dalston can be said to have a multicultural community feel about it, Shoreditch is London's arterial flow. It's a seemingly endless assortment of nightclubs and bars. Surly security festoon the entrances to cubbyholes, secret caves of moral expenditure. The young and ageless cascade down the streets in groups. The age of the couple relegated to an older generation at home with 'X-Factor' and 'The Killing'. I wasn't sure whether this area made me feel at home or just slightly out there. There was a typically strange moment when some kind of people carrier passed me with a group of ten people standing vertically on it. I sadly didn't photograph it, but it represented something about the area. Also when I was standing outside the Shoreditch Town Hall, a car drove past in which someone was shouting out inarticulate expressions of supposed joy. Everything about the area amazed me. I wrote a couple of lines of poetry, which I will share here because I rarely do that online and it sums up my thoughts on Shoreditch:
Who shouts the loudest,
who whispers at
The staggered entrance
to the Palatial ruins.
Something, archaic about Shoreditch, it looks rundown yet that is its charm. That's what makes it fascinating. I want to explore it properly with other people. I want more feedback. I want to know what it means to the people who play there.
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| Shoreditch High Street entrance. Something about the orange lettering inspires me. It's like an aesthetic call to arms. |
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| Shoreditch High Street London Overground Sign |
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| Outside the Shoreditch Town Hall. Once shown out the venue, this was the first thing I saw. The windows captured me. |
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| Shoreditch Town Hall - A Detail. What is it about stairs that mean so much to me these days? |
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| Interesting looking building and a Tea Shop called Time For Tea. I liked the clock without a hand. It should be a symbol for Shoreditch. |
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| Shoreditch - A never ending work in progress. A project outside the London Overground Station. |





