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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsIn Memory of the Englishman Who Kept a Shark on His Roof
Good fish story? Or best fish story ever?
Link to tweet
Letter from the U.K.
In Memory of the Englishman Who Kept a Shark on His Roof
By Lou Stoppard May 5, 2019
https://media.newyorker.com/photos/5ccb120da21d1c027f73256b/master/w_649,c_limit/Stoppard-HeadingtonShark.jpg
The Oxford City Council once sought to remove Untitled 1986, a twenty-five-foot fibreglass shark installed on the roof of a home in Headington, Oxford.
Photograph by David Clover
One drizzly afternoon this past April, Anne Whitehouse and John Buckley stood outside a two-story brick house on New High Street, in the English suburb of Headington, Oxford. The house is typical of the area in most ways, apart from the twenty-five-foot shark that sticks out of its roof, as if dropped, nose first, from the sky. The tail leans forward slightly toward the road, and, on this particular morning, it glistened with rainwater. Buckley, a sculptor who bears a striking resemblance to Santa Claus, installed the shark in cahoots with the houses owner, Bill Heine, an American from Illinois, who moved to Oxford in the late nineteen-sixties to study law. Heine, who went on to manage nearby cinemas and later presented a local radio show, died, of cancer, on April 2nd, and Buckley was feeling reflective. Its sort of unreal, when you come around the corner, he said, looking skyward toward the caudal fin.
Buckley and Heine first had the idea to plant a shark in the roof of Heines house in 1986, over a glass of wine on the street outside. Theyd visited the sculptures in the gardens at Sutton Place, in Surrey, and were feeling inspired. Heine was also agitated about recent political events. On the day hed bought the house, American bombs had fallen on Tripoli and Benghazi, in Libya. Buckley, who lives a short drive away from the house, had just returned from a sailing trip in the Pacific. Id been drawing a lot of sharks, he recalled. He was terrified of them, and often imagined what it would be like to be attacked by one, the way it would hurtle into him out of the deep. The image of a shark seemed to the men an apt metaphor for the bombs: the fear of the thunderous crash of the unknown. Bill suggested putting a shark over the front door, Buckley said. I said, Just stick it through the roof.
....
Thus began a six-year battle with the Oxford City Council over Untitled 1986, as Heine and Buckley called the shark. In 1990, the council refused Heines retroactive planning-permission request, and, in 1992, his appeal made its way to the then Secretary of State for the Environment, Michael Heseltine, who is best known for his prominent role in Margaret Thatchers government. Many came out in support of the shark, including June Whitehouse. The report by Heseltines appointed inspector, Peter Macdonald, read, Following initial surprise and confusion, sheJune Whitehousehad given the matter some consideration and decided that the shark was unique and brilliant. Until her death, in 2011, June assumed responsibility for the Sharkive, a bulging collection of press clippings, which includes references to the shark in a Czech school textbook; a book titled Eccentric Britain, which features the shark on its cover; an advertisement for AA home insurance; and coverage of the sharks various birthday parties, to which the whole street was invited.
Not everyone liked the shark. The county councillor Brian Hook, an architect, argued that the best art was in sympathy with, and contributed to, its setting. Moreover, he argued, the shark could provoke copycats: If the appellant got away with it, why not others? Sharks could be followed by Mickey Mouse, vampires, flashing lights, etc. Several residents at Alison Clay House, a nearby retirement community, had signed a petition to have it removed, although Rosy Grace, a resident, was in favor of keeping the shark, and had, according to Macdonalds report, risen from her sick bed to say so. Grace alleged foul play: She did not think that many of those who had signed the petition . . . knew what they were signing, the report reads, and some had felt constrained to sign even when they had no real objection.
....
In Memory of the Englishman Who Kept a Shark on His Roof
By Lou Stoppard May 5, 2019
https://media.newyorker.com/photos/5ccb120da21d1c027f73256b/master/w_649,c_limit/Stoppard-HeadingtonShark.jpg
The Oxford City Council once sought to remove Untitled 1986, a twenty-five-foot fibreglass shark installed on the roof of a home in Headington, Oxford.
Photograph by David Clover
One drizzly afternoon this past April, Anne Whitehouse and John Buckley stood outside a two-story brick house on New High Street, in the English suburb of Headington, Oxford. The house is typical of the area in most ways, apart from the twenty-five-foot shark that sticks out of its roof, as if dropped, nose first, from the sky. The tail leans forward slightly toward the road, and, on this particular morning, it glistened with rainwater. Buckley, a sculptor who bears a striking resemblance to Santa Claus, installed the shark in cahoots with the houses owner, Bill Heine, an American from Illinois, who moved to Oxford in the late nineteen-sixties to study law. Heine, who went on to manage nearby cinemas and later presented a local radio show, died, of cancer, on April 2nd, and Buckley was feeling reflective. Its sort of unreal, when you come around the corner, he said, looking skyward toward the caudal fin.
Buckley and Heine first had the idea to plant a shark in the roof of Heines house in 1986, over a glass of wine on the street outside. Theyd visited the sculptures in the gardens at Sutton Place, in Surrey, and were feeling inspired. Heine was also agitated about recent political events. On the day hed bought the house, American bombs had fallen on Tripoli and Benghazi, in Libya. Buckley, who lives a short drive away from the house, had just returned from a sailing trip in the Pacific. Id been drawing a lot of sharks, he recalled. He was terrified of them, and often imagined what it would be like to be attacked by one, the way it would hurtle into him out of the deep. The image of a shark seemed to the men an apt metaphor for the bombs: the fear of the thunderous crash of the unknown. Bill suggested putting a shark over the front door, Buckley said. I said, Just stick it through the roof.
....
Thus began a six-year battle with the Oxford City Council over Untitled 1986, as Heine and Buckley called the shark. In 1990, the council refused Heines retroactive planning-permission request, and, in 1992, his appeal made its way to the then Secretary of State for the Environment, Michael Heseltine, who is best known for his prominent role in Margaret Thatchers government. Many came out in support of the shark, including June Whitehouse. The report by Heseltines appointed inspector, Peter Macdonald, read, Following initial surprise and confusion, sheJune Whitehousehad given the matter some consideration and decided that the shark was unique and brilliant. Until her death, in 2011, June assumed responsibility for the Sharkive, a bulging collection of press clippings, which includes references to the shark in a Czech school textbook; a book titled Eccentric Britain, which features the shark on its cover; an advertisement for AA home insurance; and coverage of the sharks various birthday parties, to which the whole street was invited.
Not everyone liked the shark. The county councillor Brian Hook, an architect, argued that the best art was in sympathy with, and contributed to, its setting. Moreover, he argued, the shark could provoke copycats: If the appellant got away with it, why not others? Sharks could be followed by Mickey Mouse, vampires, flashing lights, etc. Several residents at Alison Clay House, a nearby retirement community, had signed a petition to have it removed, although Rosy Grace, a resident, was in favor of keeping the shark, and had, according to Macdonalds report, risen from her sick bed to say so. Grace alleged foul play: She did not think that many of those who had signed the petition . . . knew what they were signing, the report reads, and some had felt constrained to sign even when they had no real objection.
....
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