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Attractions

Gone, Not Forgotten

In late summer, the world’s media focused its lens on a depressed beachside town in the UK. The reason was the anonymous urban artist, Banksy, and a satirical pop-up art attraction


Following a life span of just five weeks, Banksy’s Dismaland has been dismantled.

The building materials are now shelters for refugees stranded at the French port of Calais, where 6,000 migrants live in limbo in the “Jungle”.

The site where the “bemusement park” briefly stood has returned to normal: an abandoned lido, called Tropicana, once the heart of British seaside town Weston-super-Mare, and a place where Banksy spent his (or her) summers until the age of 17.

The Dismaland website – which drip-fed information to a clamouring public – is now defunct, and just a photo of a cardboard-cutout Dismaland remains.

But Dismaland left much in its wake. The pop-up art installation – based around the idea of a twisted Disneyland – generated more than £20m ($30.5m, €27.3m) for the local economy, with tourism businesses such as hotels, B&Bs, restaurants and attractions reporting significant boosts in revenue, according to tourism body Visit Somerset.

The Hoteliers Association said an additional 50,000 bed-nights were sold in Weston’s hotels and train passengers between the town and London doubled during the 21 August to 27 September period when Dismaland was open.

The park featured 10 new sculptures and artworks by Banksy, as well as works by 56 of Banksy’s favourite contemporary artists. Attractions included Mini Gulf, Guerilla Island and Cinderella’s Castle. Live comedy and music events also took place, with Fatboy Slim, Damon Albarn and Russian feminist punk act Pussy Riot performing.

Dismaland was a satirical jab at theme parks, there’s no doubt. The sulky workforce, the long queues, the litter on the ground, the unwinnable games and the general ambience of disrepair – and despair – underlined what can be wrong with parks.

In a way, Dismaland also highlighted what’s right. Dismaland brought people out, together. It got people talking, it got them excited and – whether they were supposed to or not – they had fun.

We see plenty of crossover between sectors in the modern industry, with museums seeking to entertain and visitor attractions seeking to educate. Banksy took this to the extreme with an art gallery in an amusement park – although he says he was not too pleased with the result.

“I have to admit there was no one more disappointed than me. I think the whole idea might have been a big mistake. By repackaging an art show as an amusement park, everybody’s expectations were raised substantially – the branding writes a cheque that the event doesn’t cash,” Banksy told The Sunday Times.

“I suddenly realised the whole premise was wrong. I’d pushed it too far and it had gone from being a pretty good art show to a very sub-standard amusement park.”

A DAY OUT AT DISMALAND

Kevin Murphy
Kevin Murphy
Kevin Murphy,

VP of Sales,

Attraktion!


Whilst I’m not a great art fan, the opportunity to visit Dismaland was not to be missed. In the long queue to get in, the buzz of expectation came from an enthused arty crowd and a younger, more rebellious visitor. There were very few children, and none of the usual theme park visitors here.

It wasn’t dismal. Frayed and run down, but well put together with no signage needed. I spent two hours, but I could have spent four. Dismaland was an art installation like nothing you’ll see again. The setting in a slightly worn English seaside resort and an abandoned building was perfect.

The art complemented the setting, and it was challenging in terms of the subject matter. The staff were something else, and they really did looked bored.

You went in with interest but expecting little and you came out, well, enlightened! Funny, entertaining and frankly unique: impossible to duplicate and a one-off experience in the right place at the right time.

A DAY OUT AT DISMALAND

Alice Davis
Alice Davis
Alice Davis,

Managing Editor,

Attractions Management


Banksy’s dystopian park is about inequality. It’s the anti-Disneyland. The art is highly politicised. Dismaland is asking us (or asking young people) not to become immune and desensitised to the suffering that happens – we don’t live in a happy-ever-after Disney-type world.

The world of Disney had to be parodied. Mickey Mouse was eaten by a snake. The Little Mermaid was distorted and disfigured. Cinderella was killed when her carriage overturned – to the paparazzi’s delight.

In a traditional gallery, it might be too dark. But the “bemusement park” setting brought levity, and the humour – albeit the blackest humour I’ve encountered – stopped it being overwhelming.

Using click-bait installations, attention-grabbing Disney references and a “theme park” as a vehicle, the art – 56 artists’ works were on show – reached a global audience on an unprecedented scale. And what art museum wouldn’t love to do that?

A DAY OUT AT DISMALAND

Magali Robathan
Magali Robathan
Magali Robathan,

Managing editor,

CLADmag


While the anti-corporate, anti establishment message of the park isn’t exactly breaking new ground, there were installations that I found genuinely throught-provoking.

The Museum of Cruel Objects, curated by Gavin Grindon, is a series of exhibits inside a caravan. It tells the story of the role of design in keeping people in line on behalf of the state, from stun tongs to anti homeless spikes. I found the timeline explaining the history of CCTV enlightening – it made me think about how we blindly accept an increasing lack of privacy without questioning where it might be leading us.

Not all of the exhibits worked for me – some felt one-dimensional; as though they were trying to be clever without any genuine meaning behind them. The oil caliphate-themed crazy golf course Mini Gulf fell into this category. All in all, it was dark and unsettling, at times thought-provoking, and a lot more fun than I’d expected.

A DAY OUT AT DISMALAND

Martin Barratt
Martin Barratt
Martin Barratt
,

Visitor attractions consultant,



I’m not sure why I wanted to visit Dismaland. Was it because I had an interest in Banksy’s dystopian world vision? Or because it was a parody of a theme park?

Either way, it was the most thought-provoking thing I’ve done this year. From a theme park perspective it shared the queues. Queues to get in, queues for the rides – but no queues for the toilets.

In his foreword in Dismaland’s brochure, Banksy suggests that in the face of “global injustice”, “climate catastrophe” and a lack of jobs, today’s children should be taught that “maybe escapism will have to wait”.

That’s where Dismaland makes its comment on our industry. Is riding out your day on theme park rides the equivalent of riding to hell in a handcart? Fiddling while Western civilisation burns?

THE DISMALS

Jemma Gray
Dismal Steward

Jemma Gray
Jemma Gray

What was your job title?
We never had an official title, but came to be known as Dismal Stewards or, more affectionately, the Dismals.

How did you apply?
I saw it advertised on reed.co.uk as a runner for a movie being filmed in Weston. It was also in the local paper, a tiny ad that barely anyone noticed.

What did you know about the job?
“Training” began a local hotel on 17 August, but when we started having improvisation training and developing characters, it all seemed a bit odd.
At the end of the third day we got more details about the job – only because a tabloid had leaked something.

There were a few people who hadn’t heard of Banksy, but others were avid fans and couldn’t believe we were going to be part of something like this.

What was the brief for your job?
Be Dismal! It sounds simple but there was a fine line between what we could and couldn’t do. We couldn’t laugh, smile or give any customer service to the public, which is hard when you’ve got a seventy-year-old begging you to direct them to the loos. It was a team effort building up the Dismal environment and hard work to maintain a Dismal persona all day, but I’m glad I did – the feedback has been amazing.

How hard was it to look so dejected?
I found it quite easy being Dismal – but then I do want to be an actor. The hardest part was not smiling or laughing. There’s a position at Bill Barminksi’s security installation where stewards hand out maps as the public enters Dismaland. I’d drop the maps before the punters had a grasp of them, provoking laughter from the visitors. But if I’d broken character and laughed it would have diluted the entire encounter. The improvisation training did help us each find our own unique Dismal approach.

How did visitors react to Dismaland?
It was mixed. Most people loved our Dismalness and the more miserable we were the better. There were others who thought we were rude and bad at our jobs and got quite upset with the concept.

What did you think of Dismaland?
It’s one of the best art exhibitions I’ve seen. I think it was brave and ambitious and visitors were very lucky to pay £3 for world-class art and the experience. I also got to go in the Tropicana again, a favourite childhood memory, so I’m grateful to Banksy for dreaming this up.

Was there a moment that stood out?
At the masked ball – the final gig night – we all wore bandanas so Banksy could roam around and not be spotted.

That, and the very last night when the staff had the park to themselves, a free bar and the giant supermoon eclipsed – that was a pretty special night.

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Attractions: Gone, Not Forgotten
We find out what people thought of Dismaland, Banksy’s twisted theme park and contemporary art attraction – and talk to one of the Dismal Stewards
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