Thursday 23 August 2007

Only average people see the average in things

“Every tree and plant in the meadow seemed to be dancing, those which average eyes would see as fixed and still” - Jalal ad-Din Rumi

No one likes to think they’re average. But the fact of the matter is at least half of us are below average. Yes it’s true I’m afraid, averageness is all around us.

Now I think I’m quite a proud Englishman, despite the fact that we are generally average at everything in the modern world. Our culture is average, we’re average at sport, our economy is average, our service is average, our music is average, our weather is average and it would seem that even our creative industries are now seen as average. At least that’s how people generally think of it.

As a nation we seem to be a pessimistic bunch with such high expectations - God forbid should our great empire be considered average. I think we are way to hard on ourselves sometimes and perhaps a bit of optimism is in order. Just like this fantastic exhibition currently on at Tate Britain.

‘How we are: photographing Britain’ was an open exhibition that invited anyone to contribute photographs of Britain taken through their own lens so to speak.

It doesn’t necessarily celebrate our averageness, but embraces it and portrays Britain in its most unspoilt and often humbling way. Much of it is optimistic and endearing, looking for the interesting thing in an ordinary life or object. Such as these:

Enjoy the stormy weather


Grandma



Leeds Leap


You can view all the entrants and winners here

2 comments:

Will said...

Thanks for pointing me in the direction of that.

I agree, as a nation, we need to stand up and be counting sometimes. Too much griping about the weather/queueing/life/the universe in general.

I'm bloody proud to come from England.

Carl said...

I think the media is responsible for feeding the Nation's often despondent and gloomy outlook.

I'd be interested to know how other countries compare. Countries like Australia probably take a far more positive perspective. Hence the term 'whinging poms' I guess