Lee Grant contacted me a few months ago to tell me of her project Belco Pride – an institutional portrait of the now empty Belconnen Remand Centre. ‘Belco’ was a small facility designed for 17 people, but according to Lee housing approximately 70 toward the end. Officially, the capacity is/was “under revision”.
The remand prisoners have since been relocated to the Alexander Maconochie Centre, which is talked up as Australia’s first prison built in accordance with the Geneva Convention (more on that in a later post).
After inmate rehousing, but before total closure, Grant took another opportunity to tour the facility, “thanks to an open day … billed, believe it or not, as a family event. And the families were out in force …”
Therefore, I was happy to see Lee post a few of her images from the ongoing series. I particularly liked these two pairings which are a wry juxtaposition.


Shortly thereafter my enjoyment turned to bafflement.
In Lee’s description of the open day she mentioned that the phrase “Arbeit macht frei” was clearly visible to all arriving visitors. This flat out shocked me. On Lee’s blog, I commented,
There is no correlation between Nazi concentration camps and modern Australian prisons. The inclusion of the phrase is confusing and offensive.
I had originally mistaken the facility, thinking the quote was on view at an opening for the new prison and not, as the case was, a closing of the old. Still, wonder remains at this crude and ill-advised allusion.
Lee responded;
[I will be sure to post any developments – be they images or elaborations on this peculiar alignment of geography, phrase and history.]
Like Lee, I do not want to judge individuals working in Corrective Services. Instead, I’ll simply say that systems in which workers operate along lines of strict procedure are likely to harbour casual and offensive attitudes. Workers are as disciplined as inmates in all prisons. So when individuals are subject to a system – relieved of actual decision making – there is no incentive to challenge objectionable attitudes.
For the best of the rest, check out Lee Grant’s Op Shop series, which proves that you can change the country and you can change the moniker (charity shop, UK; thrift store, USA) but the look, personnel, wares and atmosphere remain the same.


3 comments
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June 24, 2009 at 1:54 am
Sven
Pete, you are tireless, aren’t you? Another great post in the middle of the night!
On another note, have you checked out this new site? http://www.socialdocumentary.net
looks like a lot of strong stuff, some of it of interest to you…
June 24, 2009 at 2:02 am
petebrook
Getting less and less tireless. In fact, I am off to bed right now. Socialdocumentary.net is a great site – I’ve sourced a lot of material there for different projects. My favourite recent site for a strong collection of photojournalism is this:
http://anthropographia.org/concours/eng/info.html
One can get jaded looking at the same visual representations in third world and war-focused photojournalism, but this selection was varied enough for me to take note. We’ll continue the discussion on the great successes and great inadequacies of photojournalism next time I am down in San Francisco.
Haven’t got the brain power to type it all this late in the day … er, morning.
June 24, 2009 at 2:11 am
Sven
some very nice work on that site, thanks! Have a lovely night…