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Sharks!
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| Sharks! | |
|---|---|
The art installation in 2021 | |
![]() | |
| Artist | Jaimie Shorten |
| Location | London, England |
| 51°32′09″N 0°04′18″W / 51.535906°N 0.071622°W | |
Sharks! is an art installation in London, England by architect Jaimie Shorten.[1] The art was built following its concept winning the 2020 Antepavilion, an annual art contest. Currently, they are displayed on floating platforms on the River Thames, in front of the art centre in repurposed docks at 55 Laburnum Street, in the Hoxton neighbourhood within the Borough of Hackney.
Art
[edit]Sharks! consists of five life-sized fibreglass model sharks.[2] The project was inspired by The Headington Shark in Oxford.[1] The installation cost £25,000.[3] It was selected and built as the 2020 Antepavilion, fitting the year's theme of "tension of authoritarian governance of the built environment and aesthetic libertarianism".[4][5] Shorten said that he thinks of the sharks as ingénues, that have surfaced in the "centre of hipster maelstrom" and as "dumb recipients of the horrible world" that are redeemed through being in Hoxton and "being together".[6]
Dispute
[edit]In August 2020, Hackney London Borough Council obtained an interim injunction order to prohibit the Sharks! from being installed at the Regent's Canal in Hoxton.[7] As stated in the interim injunction order, the Order was made at a hearing without notice to the Defendants.
In October 2020, Hackney London Borough Council obtained a varied interim High Court injunction order to remove Sharks! from Regent's Canal in Hoxton after a reconsideration hearing.[8][9]
In April 2021, Sharks! was relocated to Islington Boat Club.[10][11]
In June 2021, the sharks were removed from their home in the Islington Boat Club[12] and returned to Antepavilion where they were stored on a river barge.
In July 2021, the Court of Appeal granted permission to appeal the injunction order.[13]
In 2024, Hackney Council lost an appeal by Antepavilion to Sharks! on the Regent’s Canal.[14] According to Antepavilion, Hackney Council now has to decide whether Sharks! requires planning permission.[15]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Wainwright, Oliver (18 August 2020). "Sharks! Why are five man-eaters being unleashed into a popular canal?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 23 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ Brown, Jessica (25 November 2020). "The singing sharks of Hackney: a roguish architect versus a 'humourless' council". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 25 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ Pitcher, Greg (24 August 2020). "Council moves to halt architect's shark installation". Architects' Journal. Archived from the original on 23 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ "2020 winner". Antepavilion. Archived from the original on 24 May 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
- ^ Fulcher, Merlin (27 March 2020). "Jaws-dropping: Sharkitecture wins Antepavilion 4 contest". Architects' Journal. Archived from the original on 24 May 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
- ^ Buxton, Pamela (28 August 2020). "Four SHARKS! arrive in Regent's Canal – to council's horror". RIBA Journal. Archived from the original on 24 May 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
- ^ "Interim Injunction Order". Retrieved 3 June 2022.
- ^ Chant, Holly (10 November 2020). "Hoxton singing sharks removed from Regent's canal". Hackney Gazette. Archived from the original on 23 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ "London Borough of Hackney v Shiva Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 2489 (QB) (18 September 2020)". BAILII. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
- ^ Chant, Holly (26 April 2021). "Hoxton's singing sharks move to Islington". Hackney Gazette. Archived from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
- ^ "Interim Injunction Order".
- ^ Antepavilion [@antepavilion] (24 June 2021). "Sharks! hiding from the #Hackney Council after being evicted from the Islington Boat Club @cgpgrey #art #canalart #sharks" (Tweet). Retrieved 24 August 2021 – via Twitter.
- ^ "Court of Appeal Order".
- ^ Bolden, Paul (Summer 2024). "Shark appeal" (PDF). Spaces (83). Hackney Society: 4. ISSN 2047-7465.
- ^ "The Hackney sharks are back, or are they? Are they art or a building?". Antepavilion. 1 February 2025. Archived from the original on 22 February 2025. Retrieved 22 February 2025.
External links
[edit]- London Borough of Hackney v Shiva Ltd & Ors [2020] EWHC 2489 (QB) judgment on BAILII
- The Battle of SHARKS! (YouTube Video). CGP Grey. 23 May 2021.
- "Legal Injunction". Antepavilion. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
Sharks!
View on GrokipediaBackground and Conception
Antepavilion Prize Win
In March 2020, the SHARKS! project by architect Jaimie Shorten of Barker Shorten Architects was selected as the winner of the fourth annual Antepavilion competition, organized by the Architecture Foundation to commission temporary, provocative installations along London's Regent's Canal that challenge planning regulations and urban governance.[11][12] The competition received 135 entries, from which five were shortlisted, with SHARKS! chosen for its bold response to the brief's emphasis on the conflict between "authoritarian governance" and "aesthetic libertarianism."[11] The winning design featured six full-scale fibreglass replica sharks mounted on wooden bases, arranged to appear as if leaping from the water in the canal at Hoxton Docks, Hackney, equipped with audio systems to broadcast songs, lectures on urbanism, and bubble effects.[11][12] Inspired by the contentious 1986 Headington Shark—a rooftop sculpture in Oxford that defied local authorities—SHARKS! was intended to satirize bureaucratic opposition to prior Antepavilions, including Hackney Council's enforcement actions against the 2017 and 2019 installations.[11][13] The prize awarded £25,000, with a requirement that at least 60 percent be allocated to materials and labor for construction on a platform of up to seven NATO-standard pontoons (each 4.2 meters by 2.1 meters), moored at the competition site sponsored by developer Russell Gray of Shiva.[14][15] Installation was initially slated for autumn 2020, though delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent regulatory disputes.[11] The jury praised the entry's surreal humor and potential to spark public discourse on planning freedoms, aligning with the competition's history of installations that test legal boundaries without formal permissions.[12][16]Artistic and Conceptual Origins
The Sharks! installation originated as the winning proposal by architect Jaimie Shorten in the 2020 Antepavilion competition, an annual initiative by the Architecture Foundation aimed at challenging conventional architectural norms through temporary, provocative structures at Hoxton Docks along the Regent's Canal in London.[15] Shorten's concept envisioned a pod of full-scale fibreglass sharks dramatically leaping from the water, adapting the singular, rooftop iconography of the Headington Shark—a 25-foot (7.6-meter) sculpture installed on August 9, 1986, by Oxford resident Bill Heine on the roof of his home at 2 New High Street, Headington.[11][17] Heine's shark, fabricated by local artist John Buckley, served as a satirical emblem of existential peril, evoking the sudden destructiveness of aerial bombardment amid Cold War nuclear anxieties and the 1986 U.S. bombing of Libya, with its jaws agape in a mock attack on the domestic structure below.[18][19] Shorten's multiplication and aquatic repositioning of the shark motif extended this symbolism to critique contemporary urban planning rigidities, directly referencing Hackney Council's prior enforcement actions against earlier Antepavilions at the site, which had been deemed unauthorized developments.[15] The proposal embodied "aesthetic libertarianism," positioning disharmonious, eccentric interventions as deliberate acts of resistance against bureaucratic overreach, much like the Headington Shark's own protracted legal battle, which culminated in a 1992 Department of the Environment ruling upholding its retention: "the shark is not in harmony with its surroundings, but then it is not intended to be in harmony with them."[15][13] This meta-commentary on planning disputes framed Sharks! as a floating tableau of defiance, celebrating the triumph of artistic provocation over regulatory conformity.[11] Conceptually, the sharks transcended passive sculpture by incorporating performative elements—emitting bubbles, vocalizing songs, and broadcasting lectures on urbanism—to foster public engagement and debate on architecture's societal role, aligning with the Antepavilion's ethos of ephemeral structures that interrogate power dynamics in built environments.[13] Shorten's design thus rooted its origins in historical protest art while adapting it to site-specific tensions, prioritizing symbolic disruption over aesthetic integration.[15]Design and Features
Physical Construction of the Sharks
The Sharks! installation consists of large-scale shark sculptures fabricated primarily from polystyrene foam cores overlaid with fibreglass skins to ensure buoyancy, durability, and resistance to aquatic environments.[16][13] This construction method allowed the structures to float independently in Regent's Canal while simulating dynamic leaping and lunging poses above the water surface.[12][14] Each sculpture features a hollow interior designed to accommodate integrated mechanical and audiovisual systems, including speakers for broadcasting lectures and songs on urbanism, smoke machines for visual effects, bubble generators, and laser projectors.[13][12] The winning proposal specified six such models, though reports indicate five were ultimately prepared and deployed.[12][13] Fabrication began with 3D digital modeling to create anatomically inspired forms, drawing from the iconic Headington Shark—a full-scale fibreglass sculpture installed on a rooftop in Oxford in 1986.[15] Polystyrene cores were then milled using a 7-axis robotic arm at the Pro-Duck workshop in Ramsgate, enabling precise shaping of the lightweight, buoyant bases.[20] These cores underwent hand-finishing, painting for aesthetic detail, and application of fibreglass reinforcements to achieve structural integrity suitable for temporary outdoor exhibition.[20][16] The largest shark, dubbed Megalodon, weighed 400 kilograms and was assembled by specialist Mark Boyes of Propcreator through a process of core formation followed by fibreglass lamination, highlighting the engineering demands of scaling up the design for performative stability in water.[16] Overall, the demountable nature of the fibreglass-polystyrene composites facilitated transport, installation, and potential disassembly, aligning with Antepavilion guidelines for non-permanent pavilions budgeted at £25,000.[21][14]Interactive and Symbolic Elements
The Sharks! installation featured five full-scale replica sharks—two megalodons, two great whites, and one tiger shark—constructed from polystyrene and fibreglass, positioned as if leaping from the Regent's Canal.[13] These sculptures incorporated mechanical elements for dynamic interaction with viewers and the environment, including smoke machines that emitted smoke and bubbles to simulate aquatic disturbance, laser beams projected from the sharks' forms, and integrated speakers enabling audio performances such as singing, lectures on architectural theory and urbanism, and potentially simulated interviews with figures like psychiatrists or architects.[13][16] Additional planned effects included fountains inspired by Bernini's Villa d'Este, allowing the ensemble to reconfigure into performative tableaux, such as echoes of Théodore Géricault's The Raft of the Medusa, enhancing visitor engagement through visual and auditory spectacle during temporary displays.[16] Symbolically, Sharks! critiqued authoritarian planning regimes while championing aesthetic libertarianism, directly referencing the 1986 Headington Shark—a fibreglass sculpture atop an Oxford house that prevailed in a protracted planning dispute against local authorities, embodying resistance to regulatory conformity.[15][13] The installation's surreal, discordant floating arrangement mirrored ongoing tensions between artistic intervention and bureaucratic enforcement, positioning the sharks as predatory emblems of eccentricity challenging institutional control over the built environment, much like the Antepavilion project's own conflicts with Hackney Council.[15][16] This conceptual framework underscored a broader advocacy for liberating architecture from prescriptive governance, using the sharks' predatory imagery to highlight the disruptive potential of unapproved aesthetic acts in urban spaces.[13]Installation Attempt and Initial Response
Deployment at Hoxton Docks
The "Sharks!" installation, consisting of five large fibreglass sculptures depicting great white sharks, was designed for deployment on floating platforms in the Regent's Canal adjacent to Hoxton Docks in Hackney, London.[22] Following Jaimie Shorten's win of the 2020 Antepavilion competition on March 27, 2020, construction began under the supervision of developer Russell Gray of Shiva, who owned the Hoxton Docks site.[14] The sharks, each approximately 4 meters long, were engineered with integrated speakers for audio playback, smoke machines, and laser projectors to create dynamic effects symbolizing urban intrusion into natural waterways.[13] Deployment commenced in August 2020, with four of the sharks positioned on rafts and floated into the canal by August 28, marking the initial public visibility of the work.[16] The platforms were anchored near the Hoxton Docks complex at 55 Laburnum Street, allowing the sculptures to appear as if leaping from the water toward the urban shoreline.[23] Installation of the fifth shark was underway on dry land adjacent to the site when Hackney Council obtained an interim injunction from the High Court on August 24, 2020, suspending further work pending a full hearing.[24] This legal intervention, initiated due to alleged breaches of planning permissions for structures on the water, left the partial deployment in limbo, with the floated sharks remaining visible but non-operational.[22] The deployment process highlighted tensions between temporary public art and local regulatory frameworks, as the Antepavilion brief specified non-permanent installations to avoid full planning consent requirements.[25] Despite the halt, the visible sharks drew early attention along the canal towpath, though full activation of interactive elements like synchronized singing and light shows was never realized at the site.[13] Subsequent court rulings in September 2020 ordered the removal of the structures, effectively ending the Hoxton Docks deployment.[26]Immediate Public and Official Reactions
Hackney London Borough Council responded immediately to the partial deployment of four fibreglass sharks into the Regent's Canal near Hoxton Docks on August 20, 2020, by securing an interim injunction from the High Court that same day.[22] The council contended that the installation represented a "material change of use" of the waterway, necessitating planning permission, and halted the placement of the fifth shark while prohibiting activation of audio, smoke, and laser effects.[22][23] This action extended prior enforcement efforts against Antepavilion projects at the site, framing the sharks as unauthorized structures rather than temporary art.[16] Public reception contrasted sharply, with passersby along the canal expressing amusement at the sight of the pontoon-mounted sculptures—two great whites, one tiger shark, and two megalodons—before full effects were operational.[16] Within the architecture and art communities, the council's intervention drew criticism as disproportionate; Antepavilion juror Russell Gray labeled it "pathetic" and suggestive of bureaucratic scrambling triggered by media attention.[22] Architect Jaimie Shorten, the installation's creator, voiced surprise at the escalation, noting it deviated from expectations of dialogue despite Hackney's history of planning tensions with local artists.[22] Early media coverage amplified support for the project as a provocative commentary on regulatory constraints, portraying the sharks as a whimsical challenge to conformity in public spaces.[13]Legal Disputes and Planning Conflicts
Hackney Council's Enforcement Actions
In August 2020, the London Borough of Hackney issued an enforcement notice targeting the display of art installations at Hoxton Docks, specifically aimed at the "Sharks!" project, which the council deemed a material change of use requiring planning permission rather than a permissible temporary artistic display.[27] On August 20, 2020, Hackney secured an interim injunction from the High Court prohibiting further installation or operation of the fibreglass sharks, arguing that the structures—intended to emerge from the Regent's Canal with features like singing, speeches, smoke, and bubbles—constituted an unauthorized operational development on the site.[28] This followed the partial deployment of four sharks, which had begun without prior council approval despite the site's history of hosting Antepavilion works.[16] The council's High Court application emphasized that the installation breached planning controls established after prior enforcement against rooftop structures from earlier Antepavilions in 2019, reinforcing a policy against recurrent unpermitted alterations at the docks.[25] On September 24, 2020, Mr Justice Holgate ruled in Hackney's favor, granting a permanent injunction to prevent the sharks' use for performative elements, describing the proposal as exceeding mere artistic exhibition by involving structural and functional changes to the waterway and surrounding area.[29] The judgment highlighted the council's evidence of potential harm to the site's conservation area status and navigational safety on the canal, leading to the mandatory removal of the installed sharks by November 2020.[30] Hackney's actions were part of a broader enforcement campaign, including a 2019 notice against four prior structures, which a 2021 planning inspector partially upheld, limiting future displays to nine-month temporary permissions under strict conditions.[31] Critics, including Antepavilion organizers, attributed the council's rigor to bureaucratic overreach, estimating public costs exceeding £100,000 in legal fees for the "Sharks!" dispute alone, though Hackney maintained the measures protected regulatory integrity against repeated non-compliance.[32] In a subsequent development, a planning appeal quashed the 2020 enforcement notice in early 2025, allowing potential reinstallation, but this did not retroactively alter the initial prohibitive actions.[33]Court Cases and Judicial Rulings
In August 2020, the London Borough of Hackney obtained an interim injunction from the High Court against Shiva Limited, the lessee of the Hoxton Docks site, and Antepavilion Trust, prohibiting further installation of the "Sharks!" artwork and requiring preservation of the status quo pending a full hearing.[34] The council argued that placing fibreglass sharks on pontoons in the Regent's Canal constituted a material change of use under section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, as it exceeded incidental use ancillary to the site's permitted B1 commercial operations and lacked planning permission.[35] On 23 September 2020, Mr Justice Murray, in The Mayor and Burgesses of the London Borough of Hackney v Shiva Limited & Ors EWHC 2489 (QB), upheld and extended the injunction following the return date hearing.[35] The judge found a serious issue to be tried, determining that the installation represented an unauthorized operational development or change of use, given its scale—four sharks already placed, with plans for a fifth—and potential for ongoing public interaction, including musical elements.[35] He weighed the balance of convenience in favor of the council, citing the defendants' history of non-compliance with prior enforcement notices and the risk of irreversible harm to planning control if removal were delayed, while noting that dismantling the pontoon-mounted structures would not impose undue hardship.[35] Mandatory relief was granted, ordering the removal of the four installed sharks within 14 days, with prohibitory orders preventing completion or similar displays until planning permission or further court order.[35] In June 2021, Antepavilion Trust successfully challenged a Metropolitan Police raid on the site via judicial review, securing a ruling that the action—undertaken at Hackney Council's behest to enforce removal—was unlawful due to lack of proper authorization.[36] The High Court awarded £60,000 in compensation for legal costs and damages, though this addressed procedural overreach rather than the underlying planning merits.[36] No subsequent High Court rulings directly overturned the 2020 injunction on the "Sharks!" installation itself, which was dismantled shortly after the September order.[37]Key Legal Arguments from Both Sides
Hackney Council maintained that the installation of the Sharks! sculptures constituted a material change of use of the land under Section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, as it involved placing large fibreglass structures on pontoons in the Regent's Canal, thereby altering the site's ancillary artistic activities beyond the permitted B1 office/studio use and requiring planning permission.[34] The council further argued that this amounted to operational development and building operations, given the engineering required for the pontoons and shark fixings, which intensified the site's unauthorized use in a conservation area and potentially harmed heritage assets under Section 72(1) of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990.[34] They rejected claims of artistic exemption, asserting that no precedent, such as the unpermitted Headington Shark sculpture in Oxford, overrode statutory planning controls, and emphasized the risk of proliferation without enforcement.[34] In response, the defendants, including Shiva Ltd and Antepavilion organizers, contended that the Sharks! display was ancillary to the site's long-established B1 use, with over 25 years of similar temporary art installations at Hoxton Docks that had been tolerated by the council, thus not triggering a material change of use.[34] [38] They argued the installation was temporary and sculptural in nature, akin to non-operational artworks like the Headington Shark, lacking the permanence or scale to constitute operational development or require consent, and noted the absence of objections from the Canal & River Trust as evidence against significant intensification.[34] Antepavilion further invoked artistic freedom and cultural value, challenging the injunction under Section 187B of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 by highlighting the council's prior knowledge and acceptance of site activities, positioning enforcement as an overreach against established creative expression rather than a genuine planning breach.[38] In subsequent proceedings, including a 2020 High Court ruling granting the injunction, the council's prima facie case on material change prevailed, with the judge finding the balance of convenience favored removal pending full planning determination, though defendants secured Court of Appeal permission to challenge in July 2021.[34] Antepavilion's appeals emphasized historical site use for mixed purposes, including art displays, ultimately leading to a planning inspector's decision quashing the council's enforcement notice against such installations in early 2022, affirming retrospective elements of the site's operational mix.[33]Broader Implications and Criticisms
Critiques of Bureaucratic Overreach
Critics of Hackney Council's response to the Sharks! installation argued that the rapid issuance of a High Court injunction on August 21, 2020, represented an disproportionate exercise of regulatory power against a temporary artwork designed for public engagement rather than permanent alteration.[25] The installation, comprising five fibreglass sharks equipped with speakers, lasers, and smoke effects, was intended to last one year as part of the Antepavilion competition, yet the council classified it as a "material change of use" requiring full planning permission, echoing enforcement against prior temporary pieces like the 2019 Potemkin Theatre.[22] Antepavilion founder Russell Gray described the council's intervention—issued after four sharks were already installed—as "pathetic," attributing it to planners' resentment toward smaller, independent projects overruled by larger developers, rather than genuine safety or conservation concerns in the Hoxton Docks area.[22] Proponents of the artwork highlighted the financial burden on taxpayers, with the council expending tens of thousands of pounds on legal proceedings that culminated in the sharks' removal by November 10, 2020, despite the installation's minimal environmental impact and alignment with the site's 25-year history of unpermitted art displays.[36] This escalation, critics contended, exemplified how rigid planning laws under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 stifle innovative public art by treating ephemeral structures as "development," potentially discouraging future interventions without resources for prolonged litigation.[25] The case drew parallels to the 1986 Headington Shark dispute in Oxford, where a rooftop sculpture endured a six-year battle before prevailing, underscoring a pattern of initial bureaucratic resistance to provocative yet harmless expressions.[39] By April 2024, the council's enforcement notice was quashed on planning appeal, with organizers noting the authority's implicit admission of wasted public resources after over three years of contention, further fueling arguments that such actions prioritize procedural absolutism over cultural vitality.[40] Detractors maintained that the Sharks! project's explicit aim—to expose "planning system nonsense" through interactive critique—made the council's opposition self-defeating, as it amplified awareness of regulatory barriers to spontaneous urban creativity without evidence of proportional harm.[22]Defenses of Regulatory Necessity
Hackney Council defended its enforcement actions against the Sharks! installation by asserting that it represented a flagrant breach of planning control under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, constituting both operational development—through the fixing of fibreglass sharks to pontoons in the Regent's Canal—and a material change of use by altering the waterway's primary function from navigation to artistic display without requisite permission.[29][41] The council emphasized that prior ancillary artistic uses at the site since 1995 did not exempt the Sharks! project, which intensified the scale and impact, occupying approximately 61 square meters of canal space and introducing fixed structures that exceeded incidental activities under permitted B1 commercial use.[29][42] Regulatory proponents, including council planning officers, argued that unchecked installations posed tangible risks to public safety and navigation on the shared waterway, where the floating pontoons and leaping shark models could obstruct boat passage and compromise emergency access along the towpath.[29] Features such as smoke machines, laser beams, and amplified audio—intended to broadcast lectures, speeches, and renditions of songs like "La Mer"—further justified intervention to mitigate disturbances to residential amenity in adjacent properties and potential hazards from light emissions near public paths.[29][26] The High Court, in its September 18, 2020, ruling by Mr Justice Murray ( EWHC 2489 (QB)), affirmed the necessity of these controls by granting a permanent injunction prohibiting full deployment and ordering the removal of partially installed components, finding a "serious issue to be tried" on the planning breaches and that the balance of convenience favored enforcement to avert irreversible harms.[35][41] The judgment underscored that artistic expression does not confer immunity from statutory planning requirements, particularly in a designated conservation area where the installation inflicted "less than substantial" harm to the heritage setting of Haggerston Bridge and the broader Regent's Canal character.[29][41] This outcome highlighted the regulatory framework's role in preventing selective non-compliance, given the site's history of two prior outstanding enforcement notices against the property owner, Shiva Ltd., which rendered traditional remedies potentially ineffective.[42][26] Planning experts and legal commentators have cited the case as exemplifying the imperative for proactive enforcement to uphold the rule of law in urban environments, where exemptions for "temporary" or cultural projects could erode controls essential for coordinated land use, environmental protection, and equitable public access.[41][42] Without such measures, authorities argued, proliferation of unauthorized structures in sensitive waterways could cascade into broader degradation of navigational infrastructure and local heritage assets, prioritizing verifiable compliance over subjective claims of anti-authoritarian intent.[26][35]Reception and Cultural Impact
Media Coverage and Public Support
The "Sharks!" installation garnered significant media attention starting in early 2020, with initial coverage emphasizing its whimsical and provocative design as the winner of the Antepavilion 4 competition. The Guardian featured a feature article on August 18, 2020, portraying the five fibreglass sharks—equipped with speakers for singing urbanism lectures, smoke machines, and laser beams—as a surreal intervention in Regent's Canal, highlighting architect Jaimie Shorten's intent to critique planning bureaucracy through anti-authoritarian spectacle.[13] This piece, which noted the sharks' partial deployment at Hoxton Docks, framed the project as a bold artistic statement amid London's regulatory landscape, drawing on Shorten's prior rooftop disputes with Hackney Council. As the legal conflict escalated, architecture and design outlets amplified criticism of Hackney Council's intervention, often depicting it as stifling creativity. Dezeen reported on August 21, 2020, that the council's injunction—prompted partly by sensational "man-eater" headlines—left one shark stranded inside Hoxton Docks, with Antepavilion organizers labeling the authority "pathetic" for prioritizing enforcement over temporary art.[22] The Architects' Journal covered the August 24, 2020, court order halting completion, underscoring the tension between ephemeral public art and planning permissions.[24] Later, The Telegraph on November 25, 2020, described the saga as a clash between a "roguish architect" and a "humourless" council, sympathizing with the installation's removal as an overreach that tested public art's limits.[39] Local outlets like the Hackney Gazette focused on the November 10, 2020, shark removal following the injunction, presenting a more procedural view aligned with council arguments on unauthorized land use changes.[30] Public support for "Sharks!" emerged strongly within artistic and architectural communities, evidenced by letters submitted during the planning inquiry process, which Antepavilion cited as backing the project's cultural value against regulatory hurdles.[44] Social media and online forums reflected intrigue and amusement, with Reddit users in 2023 praising the "amazing" story and free dance events tied to prior Antepavilions, while 2024 posts celebrated the sharks' return to Hoxton Docks after four years of disputes. The project's relocation to Islington's City Road Basin in April 2021 sustained visibility, fostering positive reactions from canal users who viewed it as harmless fun rather than nuisance.[45] By February 2025, the quashing of Hackney's enforcement notice via planning appeal reinforced perceptions of vindication, with Antepavilion updates noting renewed deliberations on reinstallation amid broader advocacy for demountable art.[33] While lacking formal polls, this grassroots enthusiasm contrasted council concerns over safety and precedent, highlighting a divide where creative sectors prioritized expressive freedom.Artistic Legacy and Influences
The Sharks! installation by architect Jaimie Shorten draws direct inspiration from the Headington Shark, a 7.6-meter fibreglass sculpture installed on a residential roof in Oxford in August 1986 by Bill Heine without planning permission, which symbolized defiance against authority following its successful appeal against Oxford City Council's enforcement in 1992.[13][16] Shorten's design adapts this motif to a watery context, featuring five life-sized fibreglass sharks moored on a pontoon in Regent's Canal, programmed to emit smoke, bubbles, sing tunes such as "Les Champs-Élysées," and deliver automated lectures on urbanism and architecture, aligning with the 2020 Antepavilion theme of "the tension of authoritarian control and the individual."[15][12] This conceptual lineage extends the tradition of using shark imagery as a provocative emblem of absurdity and resistance in public space, echoing Heine's original intent to express "anger, desperation, and a plea for hope" amid global tensions like the Chernobyl disaster and fear of nuclear war.[16] Shorten's work amplifies the interactive and performative elements, transforming static sculpture into a dynamic, sound-emitting ensemble that critiques regulatory constraints on ephemeral art, funded at £25,000 through the Antepavilion competition sponsored by the Architecture Foundation.[12] In terms of legacy, Sharks! has reinforced Antepavilion's role in contesting planning orthodoxy, prompting architectural discourse on whether temporary installations constitute "buildings" subject to full permissions or protected expressions under artistic freedoms, as evidenced by subsequent entries referencing shark motifs in 2025 shortlists and the quashing of Hackney's 2020 enforcement notice against art displays in January 2024.[33][25] The project's forced relocation to Islington in April 2021 and partial temporary approvals thereafter underscore its endurance as a case study in the friction between public art's disruptive potential and local authority oversight, influencing debates on permitting rogue interventions to foster urban vitality without compromising safety or conservation.[46][47] While not spawning direct imitators on a large scale, it exemplifies how site-specific provocations can elevate planning disputes into broader critiques of institutional rigidity, akin to the Headington Shark's transformation into a protected local landmark.[25]Recent Developments and Status
Post-2020 Updates and Attempts to Revive
Following the High Court's September 2020 ruling upholding Hackney Council's injunction, the partially installed Sharks! structures were removed from Hoxton Docks by November 2020.[30] Antepavilion Trust appealed the related enforcement notices to the Planning Inspectorate, challenging the classification of the installations as unauthorized developments requiring planning permission rather than temporary public art.[48] In January 2022, Planning Inspector Luke Perkins quashed one enforcement notice targeting prior Antepavilion structures at the site (HVAC from 2017 and Potemkin Theatre from 2019) and granted retrospective planning permission for their retention, citing their cultural value and minimal visual impact in the conservation area.[49] This decision did not directly address Sharks! but bolstered arguments for treating Antepavilion projects as exempt from standard building regulations under permitted development rights for temporary art displays.[48] However, uncertainty over the site's overall status led Antepavilion to postpone its annual competition indefinitely that year, relocating future entries temporarily while pursuing further appeals specific to Sharks!.[21] Efforts to revive Sharks! continued through reapplications for consent. In 2023, Antepavilion submitted plans for a "reincarnation" of the installation, proposing five fibreglass sharks on floating platforms with audio features, framed as a seasonal public artwork to test boundaries between art and architecture.[33] When Hackney Council failed to determine the application within statutory timelines, a planning inspector in early 2024 granted temporary nine-month permission (until late 2024) for mooring the models in the freshwater dock, allowing partial reinstallation without full operational elements like speakers or lasers.[47] By February 2025, the Planning Inspectorate quashed Hackney Council's broader enforcement notice against art installations at Hoxton Docks, affirming that the display did not constitute operational development under planning law and could proceed as temporary public art.[33] This enabled full revival efforts, with a single shark initially floated for testing and plans advanced for the complete set by spring 2025.[33] Installation recommenced in mid-2025, with all five sharks returned to the canal by July, restoring the original concept amid ongoing monitoring for compliance with temporary consent conditions.[50] These developments highlighted persistent tensions over defining "art" versus "structure" in UK planning enforcement, with Antepavilion arguing the council's actions exemplified overreach against experimental architecture.[51]Ongoing Debates as of 2025
As of 2025, a primary debate centers on addressing shark depredation—the phenomenon where sharks remove fish from recreational and commercial fishing lines—pitting fishing interests against conservation priorities. The SHARKED Act, reintroduced in the U.S. House in spring 2024 and advanced in the Senate by July 2025 with bipartisan sponsorship from Senators Rick Scott (R-FL) and Brian Schatz (D-HI), proposes a national task force to study deterrents, education, and management strategies without mandating culls.[52][53] Supporters, including the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, argue it promotes science-based collaboration to mitigate economic losses for anglers, estimated in millions annually from lost catch, without broad population reductions.[54] Critics, such as Earthjustice and Shark Stewards, contend the legislation risks serving as a gateway to lethal measures like targeted removals, potentially exacerbating declines in vulnerable species amid ongoing overfishing pressures, and lacks robust ecological safeguards.[55][56] Internationally, proposals at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Conference of the Parties in 2025 seek stricter trade controls on up to 70 shark species, including listings for those threatened by finning and bycatch.[57][58] Advocates highlight empirical data showing 37% of shark species facing extinction risk due to unsustainable harvest, urging binding export quotas to enforce causal links between trade volume and population crashes.[59] Opponents, often from fishing-dependent economies, argue such measures overlook localized sustainability efforts and could displace pressure to unregulated markets, though peer-reviewed analyses emphasize that without global coordination, regional protections fail against migratory species' exploitation.[60] In Australia, a fatal shark attack in September 2025 reignited contention over drum lines and nets in New South Wales and Queensland, which caught 203 sharks and rays in the 2024-2025 season but also significant bycatch including turtles and dolphins.[61] Proponents of retention cite reduced attack rates in netted areas since the 1930s, attributing safety gains to direct predator removal despite imperfect efficacy.[62] Conservation groups counter with data indicating nets prevent fewer than 20% of approaches while amplifying ecosystem disruptions, advocating non-lethal alternatives like SMART drum lines or surveillance drones, which empirical trials show comparable risk reduction with minimal collateral damage.[61][62] This tension underscores broader causal realism: human coastal expansion heightens encounters, yet lethal controls may undermine long-term marine stability without addressing root drivers like habitat loss.References
- https://www.39essex.com/information-hub/[insight](/page/Insight)/reality-bites-art-planning-law-and-singing-sharks
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