If you're a UCATT member and need advice, call 0800 262 467 or email info@ucatt.org.uk quoting your membership number.

UCATT News and Events

Keeping You Up To Date

UCATT plays an active part in the political sphere, working with a number of other trade unions, public bodies and political parties to improve the lot of everyone working in our industry. This page tells you about some of our current activity, as well as offering an archive of past stories.
For any press enquiries please contact
Barckley Sumner, UCATT Press and Research Officer
General Office: 020 7622 2442
Mobile: 0780 2329 235

Print

Monday, 11 February 2008

Elitist art critics should engage brain before opening mouth

Construction union UCATT, have reacted with fury after their memorial to construction workers killed in the building of London was criticised on The Today Programme.

Tim Knox director, of the little known Sir John Soames Museum made the criticism.

He described the statue as looking like a “navvy” and describing it as being unsuitable for its location in Tower Hill as this was a site of “spiritual and national resonance” where queens and saints were martyred.”

Alan Ritchie, general secretary of construction union UCATT, said: “Knox’s comments are elitist and offensive. It is the kind of class-ridden comments that give art critics a bad name. Thousands of construction workers have lost their lives in building London. Knox clearly would rather that their sacrifice went unrecognised and ignored.”

The statue, which was unveiled in October 2006 and cost £100,000, is a construction worker, loosely based on Michelangelo’s David. The project took four years to come to fruition and won the support of Ken Livingstone Mayor of London, the Greater London Assembly, MPs and the trade union movement.

Since the statue’s unveiling the statue has become a focus for worker’s memorial day, which commemorates those who lose their lives while at work. Many families of construction workers killed while at work, have also visited the statue since its unveiling.

Last year 2006/7 10-construction workers were killed in London. In the last five years over 350 workers have been killed in Britain. In the current reporting year (April to March) at least 52 construction workers have already lost their lives.

Mr Ritchie, added: “There is only one national statue to construction workers killed at work. For some people like Mr Knox that is one too many. Strangely they tend to be the same people who consider the weekly deaths of construction workers as an unfortunate by-product of the industry.”

Despite his direct criticism of UCATT’s statue, the union was not given the opportunity to defend their installation.