Greenwich Degree Zero,
Rod Dickinson and Tom McCarthy

Greenwich Degree Zero

Rod Dickinson and Tom McCarthy
A Beaconsfield Commission

22 February - 30 April 2006
Wednesday ­ Sunday 12-6pm
(closed Good Friday, 14 April)
Preview ­ Tuesday 21 February from 6pm

GDO in Germany 2007-08: click here for more info

Greenwich Degree Zero is the first collaboration between artist Rod Dickinson and artist/novelist Tom McCarthy.

The artists' starting point is a strange late nineteenth-century event: on the afternoon of February 15th, 1894, a French anarchist named Martial Bourdin was killed when the bomb he was carrying detonated. The explosion took place on the slope beneath the Royal Observatory in London's Greenwich Park, and it was generally assumed that his intention had been to blow up this building — the place from which all time throughout the British Empire and the world was measured and regulated.

In Greenwich Degree Zero, Rod Dickinson and Tom McCarthy re-imagine Bourdin’s act as a successful attack on the Observatory. The resulting installation reports an event that did not quite happen, blurring the distinction between fact and fiction and relocating the genuine public outrage and hysteria about the threat of anarchist terror that prevailed in the 1890s in this ambiguous space of non-event.

For details of talks and events, please click here

New Beaconsfield edition specially created for Greenwich Degree Zero.
Click here for details.

Beaconsfield's Conceptual Café

For more information, please contact Beaconsfield,
T: 020 7582 6465
E: info@beaconsfield.ltd.uk
Beaconsfield, 22 Newport Street, London SE11 6AY.

Greenwich Degree Zero is supported by funding from Arts Council England. Beaconsfield is financially assisted by Arts Council England.