
Penis-inscribed tables and parking meter chairs: the lost queer genius of House of Beauty and Culture
Its output included shoes, furniture, garments, jewellery and art. Much of the work was made from salvaged materials, for both aesthetic and financial reasons: the collective were all broke. The floor of the shop was scattered with loose change, as a joke on their collective lack of money. Their romantic, fragile work was made against the backdrop of Margaret Thatcher's Britain, in the shadow of the Aids crisis.
It only lasted a few years, but the impact of the shop was so great that, according to legend, the artist and fashion designer Martin Margiela first turned to deconstruction after his visit. In 2015, a Louis Vuitton menswear show was inspired by the collective: its then designer, Kim Jones, was an avid collector of their work. And yet, today, no pieces by its protagonists are held in the permanent collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, nor the Design Museum. In our institutions, it's like HOBAC never existed.
To me, HOBAC has always seemed from a parallel universe, with creative freedom totally at odds with the crippling environment of today's London. For the past five years, I've been writing a novel, Nova Scotia House, attempting to reconnect with queer philosophies and alternate ways of living from the 70s and 80s. The primary focus is HIV/Aids, and the underexplored repercussions of that pandemic. But also central to the narrative are stories of queer creative acts, like HOBAC, that have been underacknowledged. It's not just their work, it's how they worked: communally, collaboratively, outside heteronormative value systems.
Its members included John Moore, the shoemaker who founded the collective; Judy Blame, a jeweller and stylist who went on to art direct the debut albums by Neneh Cherry and Massive Attack; Richard Torry, who worked in knitwear, and the designer Christopher Nemeth, known for making garments from old postal sacks. Within fashion circles, these names are known and respected. It is the furniture makers Frick & Frack who to me seem entirely excluded from cultural discourse.
The duo, Alan MacDonald and Fritz Solomon, often made pieces that looked as if they should fall over. Chairs of salvaged wood seem to not have enough support to hold them up; lamps of bent pipe have the lightbulb so far from the base it is as if they will topple. Found objects became visual jokes, like a table made from a stolen parking restriction sign, or a chair seat made from the cover of an old parking meter that reads 'NO: WAITING, LOADING, UNLOADING'.
Their friend Dave Baby would often add provocative carvings to the furniture. According to Kasia Maciejowska's 2016 book on HOBAC, Boy George ordered a set of two tables and four chairs from Frick & Frack, with penises carved into the armrests by Dave Baby. The work wasn't cheap: they charged George £4,000, the equivalent of about £11,700 today. The value was in the craft, rather than the materials used: Frick & Frack's make was exquisite, even if the look was raw.
Many of their friends still live with their pieces, nearly four decades on. This was how I wanted to depict the work in my novel: radical furniture, made within a community, that was part of everyday life, indeed that made living better, but was unrepresented in institutions. Those living with the furniture are now entering late midlife and late life: what happens to the legacy when they are gone?
Frick & Frack's work is often confused with that of Andy Marshall, AKA Andy the Furniture Maker, a gay man who was also making furniture with salvaged materials. Recently, a 1986 documentary about Andy has become cult viewing online, raising his profile. But, just like Frick & Frack, no work by Andy the Furniture Maker can be found in the V&A nor the Design Museum.
Andy was close friends with the artist Derek Jarman, as were members of HOBAC. Today, Jarman is widely known for his films, books, and his Dungeness home Prospect Cottage, with its shingle garden. Still to be more widely acknowledged is his art – there has yet to be a Jarman retrospective at Tate Britain – and his experiments in living as a young man. In the 1970s, Jarman and his friends made homes in a series of abandoned warehouses on the South Bank of the Thames.
We can particularly see Jarman's philosophy of living in his first film, Studio Bankside, 1971, and the last, Glitterbug, a compilation of Super 8 footage released posthumously. He makes art, he reads, he thinks, they party, they play. It is Jarman's design of living that matters, like a hammock strung across a room: pleasure is essential. Of course, the easy response is that no one can live that way any more, that the cost of living is too great. But a re-creation of the past is not the point, it is about learning from the past. Such learning can only happen when our queer legacies are brought to light.
Crucially, this is not about deification. It can feel as if Jarman has been elevated to sainthood, spoken about as though he were an overlord of UK queer culture. Actually, he was separate from much of counterculture. In the catalogue for the Tate's current Leigh Bowery show, Torry writes that while Bowery 'appreciated Derek being open about his sexuality, he hated Derek's aesthetic, which he found too earnest.'
HOBAC and Jarman are influences on my novel, but so too are illegal raves and lawless gay bars, the ecosystems of which to me are the result of creative acts. I was thinking about Gideon Berger, the DJ and co-founder of the NYC Downlow, Glastonbury's queer club that's been running during the festival since 2007, often described as the best party in the world.
Berger grew up in south London in the 80s and early 90s, obsessed with pirate radio. He went to illegal raves and squat parties, eventually setting up his own queer sound system. When nightlife is historicised, it is usually clubs that are listed or promoted, rather than the ephemeral or the outlier. In my novel, I wanted to show illegal rave culture as embedded in queer experience.
It's also the creative nourishment that comes from the seemingly squalid. A gay bar is more than just booze and a backroom. It is the philosophies with which they are established and run, just as vital as the something-from-nothing ethics of HOBAC. A prime example is the Joiners Arms, an east London after-hours gay bar opened with intentional permissiveness.
'The Joiners is a theoretical impossibility,' its late landlord David Pollard told writer Paul Flynn for a 2008 i-D feature. 'That's one of its joys. It shouldn't exist, legally even. But if enough people want to have fun they can sustain somewhere like it.'
The Joiners closed in 2015. What matters is the seriousness with which it took pleasure. It changed my life. From 2008-2012, I co-ran a weekly party on Thursday nights at the Joiners called Macho City. At the time, I was a jobbing journalist at the tipping point of mainstream print media's decline. Before, I'd spent most nights at the Joiners hogging the jukebox to play Sylvester records. We started the party to keep late disco and Hi-NRG in the contemporary conversation. Each week, it was wild. It opened my eyes to what else I could do. The party in the Joiners led to me being able to write books.
Try to write these histories as nonfiction, and so much would be blank. So much was not recorded at the time, inevitable in communities that face discrimination, or was misrepresented in homophobic media. So many died in the Aids crisis, their stories now gone.
Institutions such as the V&A and the Design Museum can, and should, act to ensure queer histories are represented, before they are lost. In the meantime, to get to the heart of these stories, close to what feels to me like truth, all I could do was write fiction.
Nova Scotia House by Charlie Porter is published by Particular (£18.99). To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.
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The Herald Scotland
6 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Inside the ten year campaign for LGBT-inclusive education
Their campaign has been one of the most effective that Holyrood has seen, securing a victory that few thought possible, and it all started with a chance meeting back in 2014. 'I was holding a fundraiser in our local area to raise money for food banks,' Liam explains. 'Jordan had been told by a mutual friend that he should go along as they thought we might get on with each other.' That thought turned out to be correct, despite the pair's obvious differences: at the time Liam was a thirty-six year old tanker driver with a wife and a young daughter, while Jordan was a gay nineteen year old politics students at the University of Glasgow. As they got to know each other, Jordan opened up about the impact of homophobia and bullying during his time at school, the fact that such abuse was normalised, and the consequences of a total lack of representation of LGBT people in the curriculum. 'It was only when I left school that I started to learn that there had actually been a lot of other people like me throughout history,' Jordan explains. 'I read about people like Alan Turing, Sally Ride, Peter Staley, and I also learned that there was an entire rights movement too. It was through watching the documentary How To Survive A Plague, which chronicles the work of ACT UP during the HIV/AIDS crisis in the 1980s, that I saw out, proud, confident gay people advocating for their rights and that completely changed my perspective on what it meant to be gay. 'We both watched that documentary together when we first met, and I just remember saying to Liam that if I had learned about some of my community's history at school, it would have changed how I felt about myself as a young gay person, and it would have changed the perspectives of some of my peers who thought that homophobic bullying was acceptable.' Jordan and Liam have been recognised for the effectiveness of their campaign work around LGBT-inclusive education. (Image: Time for Inclusive Education) Liam echoes those sentiments, telling me that his friendship with Jordan helped him to see that so many people – especially young people – were still suffering due to feeling that society didn't accept them: 'At that time, he was the first friend I had who was gay, and our discussions had opened my eyes to the experiences that some young people were still having in our schools with homophobia, and I had thought that we had progressed beyond that by this stage. 'When he spoke to me about the flippant use of homophobic language at his school, and the feelings of shame that caused, I realised that people like me, who aren't gay, had a role to play. I also thought about my own daughter, who was three at the time, and I knew that I wanted her generation to have a different experience at school.' For Jordan, what they were setting out to achieve was 'simply common sense education'; homophobic bullying, he says, 'has been an issue in schools for generations and needed an educational response.' At the time, they also believed that the wider social conditions that existed made change possible, presenting them with an opportunity that they couldn't ignore. 'When we first met in 2014,' Liam explains, 'it felt like the cultural and political climate was one of positivity and progress - it felt more compassionate. 'There was a lot of discussion during the referendum about creating a better Scotland and that included addressing inequality, so I thought that we would be able to successfully have a sensible conversation about homophobia in schools, and develop and deliver an educational response to this.' READ MORE The campaign began with a petition to the Scottish Parliament in the summer of 2015, followed by an emotional appearance before Holyrood's Public Petitions Committee a few months later. Despite initially expressing support for TIE's aims, the committee ultimately closed the petition in a move that attracted widespread condemnation. But support continued to grow. In February 2016, UNISON became the first trade union to offer its backing, followed by the wider STUC just a couple of months later. In the intervening period, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon publicly backed TIE during a hustings event for the 2016 election, and every major party's manifesto in the lead up to that vote made some form of commitment to inclusive education. By the spring of 2017 a majority of MSPs publicly supported the campaign and the government announced the creation of a new working group. It ultimately made 33 recommendations – all of which were accepted – in November 2018, sparking the development of new training courses, curricular resources and national policy guidelines. With the launch of in September 2021, the implementation process had begun. The changes that Jordan and Liam had hoped for in the first months of their friendship were finally becoming a reality. 'We spent a lot of time working with teachers to develop what our early educational approach and services would be,' Jordan says. 'One of them was an input with a strong focus on anti-bullying, where I share some of the experiences of homophobia that I had at school, the impact that had on me, and what helped me, while Liam discusses his perspective as someone who isn't gay, and encourages young people to consider the use of homophobic language and the impact it can have on others. 'Through those inputs, I've heard from teachers about young people who then find the confidence to open up to their teachers or parents and carers that they are experiencing bullying, or they are struggling, and they are able to get support. 'We see the very positive impact of that work and the power of hearing from someone who has overcome what is, unfortunately, a common experience for so many young people, and the hope that can provide them.' Liam agrees, arguing that their engagement work in schools, and the data they have gathered, means that they 'know that the outcomes for those young people have changed for the better.' But it's not just the LGBT children and their families who are benefitting: 'While we directly address homophobic bullying in schools, it also actually plays a role in addressing other forms of prejudice-based bullying and helping young people find the confidence to discuss issues that they are experiencing with teachers, and get that support they need. 'I also know that there are a lot of young people who aren't LGBT themselves who have developed a better understanding of the impact of homophobia and changed their behaviours towards others in their year groups. That's what motivates me, and the rest of our team, because we know how life changing that can be.' Ever since the campaign began, the scale of the task being undertaken and the number of people needing help has left little time for reflection, but as the tenth anniversary has approached, Jordan and Liam have been encouraged to think about the impact they have had. 'I can see with hindsight just how much progress has been made,' says Jordan. 'When we started our work, we didn't have a clear and considered programme for addressing LGBT-related prejudice in schools through education, and now there is national guidance, a policy framework, resources, and a professional learning course. 'Another significant change for me has been more cultural - there is now a willingness, across education, to discuss and address homophobia in schools with confidence, and there is an understanding that this is about ensuring all pupils and families are included at school.' TIE secured cross-party support for LGBT-inclusive education in schools. (Image: Time for Inclusive Education) Those broader changes are also important to Liam, who recounts a story from the early days of their work in schools: 'I remember a teacher we worked with telling us in 2016 that there were same-sex parents with a child at their school, and the parents felt that they had to make a decision about which one of them would be visible at the school for parents' evenings or sports days because they were worried about their child being bullied. That story always stuck with me as a parent because my child was going to school at that same time and those were not considerations for our family - and it should not have been for that family either. 'We have been able to see some full circle moments in relation to this, because we have been working with an academic from University of California, Los Angeles for an independent evaluation of the impact of our work, and one of their key findings has been the effect that this work has on children who have same-sex parents - with teachers observing that those children feel more confident and comfortable to discuss their family dynamic in class after the school has begun integrating this learning into their curriculum. 'No child should feel excluded or ostracised simply because of who they are, or because of their family dynamic - and that's why simple representation like a same-sex family in a storybook, during ordinary learning, can be so important and meaningful.' At a recent event to mark the tenth anniversary of TIE, speakers and other guests talked about the way in which inclusive education has been changing lives for the better, and reflected on the scale of Jordan and Liam's extraordinary achievements. But they also spoke about what comes next – a conversation that quickly turned to the need to protect the progress that has been made, with former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon saying: 'There are people coming for TIE right now in Scotland.' Host Susie McCabe, who is also a patron of the charity, repeated that message. She told the audience to 'drink and dance and have a great time' before adding: 'But tomorrow we go again. We have work to do.' A decade ago, the campaign for LGBT inclusive education had to overcome misplaced concerns that Scotland simply wasn't capable of, or ready for, such a change, but actual opposition was largely limited to a handful of fringe organisations and individuals; today it is facing attacks from a far larger cohort featuring hate groups and conspiracy theorists, but which also includes apparently respectable commentators, columnists and politicians. Jordan believes that although much progress has been made, a changing cultural climate has seen LGBT topics and education initiatives 'being weaponised and misrepresented to fan the flames of prejudice for political and ideological reasons.' 'If we look at America, we can see the effect of dangerous and false narratives that children are being 'groomed' at school, or encouraged to transition by 'woke' teachers, and it is very rooted in conspiratorial language, which ultimately attempts to disrupt trust in educational institutions and uses LGBT people to do it. We can see that rhetoric imported from US culture wars is here too, especially online, and it is utterly detached from the reality in schools.' Liam adds that the work being carried out by TIE will also have to be adapted to meet the new challenges of 'radical misogyny, the mainstreaming of so-called manosphere and incel language across social media platforms, and how this is normalising old prejudice in a new way.' 'The teachers that we employ to deliver our education services noticed changes in how prejudice was manifesting in schools, and there was this sentiment of 'cool to be cruel' that is really not disconnected from the change in climate and discourse that Jordan has spoken about. That led to us collaborating with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) - international experts on hate speech, disinformation, and extremism - to develop the Digital Discourse Initiative, a new resource for schools to help them directly address this. 'That will be a key focus for us moving forward, making sure that we are adapting and providing solutions to new manifestations of prejudice, online hate in this instance, and continuing to work with experts to provide schools and teachers with solutions that can protect children and young people. That includes those on the receiving end of hateful or prejudicial behaviours, but also those acting on emotive propaganda that is designed to anger them and is targeted at them through algorithms that promote sensationalist content.' READ MORE But despite those regressive cultural changes, and the increasingly complex challenges they face, Jordan and Liam remain committed to ensuring that young people in Scotland get to experience an education system that makes them feel welcomed, included, and loved. Organisations like the EIS, STUC and Scottish Government support inclusive education in schools, and evidence shows that the same is true of parents. 'As parent,' Liam says, 'I think we are fortunate to live in a Scotland that has a world-leading approach to addressing homophobic bullying, one that recognises it's time to break the generational cycle of normalised prejudice in schools. 'When I speak to other parents and carers across the country, both in my personal life and through this work, I hear overwhelming support for this kind of common sense education, and recent polling reflects that too. 'I want to protect my daughter from prejudice and hate in any of its forms - and I know that's what most parents want as well.' For Jordan, who has spoken openly about being driven to suicidal thoughts during his teens, the success of TIE means that many young people now have the support and acceptance that he never found at school: 'While we didn't expect to still be around after ten years, I know the impact that this work would have had on me at school, and I see the impact that it has today for many young people and their families. 'With all of the resources and support available for schools, teachers today have the opportunity to make sure that every young person is included and reflected in their education, and that really can be life-changing.'


Daily Mirror
3 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Conor McGregor's fiancée Dee Devlin makes feelings very clear after his 'nude leak'
Conor McGregor's fiancée, Dee Devlin, appears to have brushed off his recent actions after being spotted cosying up to a mystery woman and sending his own nude snaps Conor McGregor's fiancée, Dee Devlin, appears to have ignored his recent drama. The UFC fighter often hits the headlines, but in the past few days, he has found himself under fire for his actions. Just days ago, McGregor was spotted kissing and cosying up to a mystery brunette woman on a beach in full view of those around them in Fort Lauderdale. The pair were seen chatting before he placed his arm around her neck as he grew close to her, before kissing, while they kicked back on his sun lounger. But that's not all, infamous rapper Azealia Banks shared what she claimed to have been nude photos of Conor, which he had sent her on X, formerly known as Twitter. Ms Banks, 34, took to her page, and wrote: "How you gonna send a b**** a some crooked d*** pics then threaten her not to tell. @TheNotoriousMMA n**** do you know who the f*** I am?" She also went on to share a message, allegedly from Conor, reading: "Don't be a rat because all rats get caught." In one image, McGregor was seen lifting weights with his penis. But it appears that Dee, who has been with McGregor since August 2020, doesn't seem too bothered about the state of their relationship and the recent scandals surrounding Conor. Taking to his Instagram page, the 37-year-old shared a string of snaps of himself kicking back on a luxury yacht while enjoying his birthday. Sharing the images with his 46.5 million followers on the Meta platform, McGregor opted to wear a pink open-buttoned shirt and matching shorts, which he accessorised with a pair of Louis Vuitton, LV Waimea Sunglasses. In one snap, a hand could be seen on his ripped abs, with a bracelet around the wrist and pink nails, belonging to Dee. Another showed McGregor sipping a drink as the sun set behind him, again, with Dee's hands and her large engagement ring being on full display. Devlin went on to show her appreciation for the post with a cheeky reply. Merely hours after sharing a heart-eyes emoji and a prayer emoji, she later commented: "My monster." After the Irish superstar went viral for getting cosy with a random woman, Devlin was quick to break her silence on the matter. The 37-year-old spoke out by sharing a post from a fan account on Instagram, which read: "Happy Birthday to the person who always keeps Dee entertained and makes her smile." She followed this up with a series of photos featuring herself and McGregor. But while McGregor's alleged nudes appeared to have leaked, he believes there is an ulterior motive behind it. The sportsman has been posting about politics in Ireland, where Mairead McGuinness is running for President, which prompted a fan to reply: "This is why the big news is Conor's giant c*** rather than the facts he is spraying." The 'Notorious' UFC fighter then referenced the leaked naked pictures which surfaced, posting: "Don't let them distract you with my G C while they rob our country blind!"


Glasgow Times
3 days ago
- Glasgow Times
Why I hid in a cupboard at the Glasgow Garden Festival
I spent my breaks in a cupboard in the house, the only place to try and get a moment's peace, both from the constant screaming of the folk on the Coca Cola rollercoaster right outside and from the visitors who left no door unopened or item uninspected. We gave out packets of "We're Blooming Good!" seeds free to every visitor but that did not stop them helping themselves to plants from the gardens. The worst culprits were the parties from various church women's guilds who, armed with nail scissors, would "help themselves" to cuttings from every plant leaving the gardens decimated and in need of replanting every morning by our gardeners. The opening of the Glasgow Garden Festival (Image: Newsquest) When Margaret Thatcher was making an official visit the entire site was closed to the public for fear of protests against her, such was her unpopularity in Scotland. I went round the site at lunchtime to listen to choirs, look round the other exhibits and gardens and buy some souvenirs. There truly was something for everyone. The rotunda building was used as a restaurant with a statue of Eros in the centre. The bandstand from Overtoun Park in Rutherglen was used for many of the entertainments. Old friends not seen for years were met again. Old bosses too and Glasgow councillors aplenty. A young couple even spent the afternoon of their wedding there. We were issued with t-shirts proclaiming the slogan "We're Bloomin' Good!" which did, as can be imagine, result in a few comments … A highlight was when I met some of the trade union stalwarts from Upper Clyde Shipbuilders having fun posing for pictures, which I was happy to take for them and thrilled to meet them. Dorothy Connor, Rutherglen Anniesland Cross, c1935 with public conveniences at far right (Image: Glasgow City Archives) Fond memories of Anniesland Cross I enjoyed your article about Anniesland Cross (Glasgow Times, June 28, 2025). I used to cycle from Milngavie to Scotstoun shipyard where I was an apprentice. Even then it was a busy intersection. I recall a day when the fog was so thick I had to guide the bus through the cross on my bicycle. I also remember the Great Western Road was white in colour and the German bombers used that section of road to guide them on to Clydebank. I'm 91 years old but I can still recall those days. I lived in New Zealand and now stay in Canada. have been very fortunate throughout my life. I still love Scotland. Arthur Mee, Canada Drumchapel in the 1950s (Image: Eric Flack) Flushing toilet was a highlight for young family Your feature on Drumchapel brought back memories. In 1955, we moved from Bridgeton to 15 Airgold Drive on May 19, my fifth birthday. We had never seen a flushing toilet before. My sister and I put everything we could fit in to the dunny and flushed just to see it disappear. We went to Camus Place Primary the Kingsridge High. Happy days indeed. James Bryden, Glasgow Every day, we receive emails and letters from readers keen to share their memories of Glasgow. If you'd like to send us your stories and photos, email or write to Ann Fotheringham, Glasgow Times, 125 Fullarton Drive, Glasgow G32 8FG.