Wednesday, 7 December 2016

7th December - Hut 177




Tonight we were launched into outer space thanks to hut 177 and the artwork of Kira and Katie.

They had done their homework and discovered that the Bible describes angels as messengers, facilitating communication from heaven to earth.  




Fast forward to today and we find that we can communicate in ways that our ancestors would have regarded as miraculous and only possible for angelic beings.  



For example we can talk to someone hundreds of miles away whenever we want to or we can watch imagery from the other side of the world, far beyond the range of human sight.  




All of this is facilitated by the wonders of digital technology - a new form of angel - helping us to communicate by passing messages through the heavens as satellites whizz above our heads bouncing our words and images backwards and forwards at lightning speed.





The hut tonight showed us a representation of this with mini satellites floating amongst spinning rocks with streams of data connecting earth to heaven.  All of this was watched over by a space angel who stood guard like some sort of digital watchman.






Angels delivered the words of God and perhaps this is a reminder to us to look for the divine messages of hope and light that are integral to this season of Advent.

The next hut takes us up to Hove Lagoon and is number 403.







Tuesday, 6 December 2016

6th December - Hut 73




The largest angel we've had so far inhabited hut 73 tonight, pretty much filling it and smiling out benevolently at the throng gathered for the event.

The angel hovered above a carpet of candles and seemed to be floating on light.




This angel has appeared at a beach hut before and is the creation of local artist Ros Lomax and has a beautiful serene expression on her face.


This raises a bit of a question about gender in relation to angels - are they male or female?  When mentioned in the Bible angels are universally described as male but it's also clear that they are genderless in heaven and are often portrayed as female in art.   






Hut 73 is in the parish of All Saints and the church is only a quarter of a mile directly north of our location tonight.


The whole display was put together by All Saints congregation member Sarah Sutherland-Rowe drawing on the creative talents of the young people of the church who made all the small silver angels in the hut.  


BBC TV news turned up to broadcast live from the hut and interviewed Sarah about the process of putting this together and her thoughts about advent.

The next hut is quite close to the King Alfred leisure centre and is number 177. 


Monday, 5 December 2016

5th December - Hut 305



The display in hut 305 this evening stretched far beyond the hut itself and almost filled the whole promenade.  Not only was the installation expansive but there was a lot to do and see throughout the evening.


The major part of the installation was a very simple spiral labyrinth outlined with evergreen branches and pots filled with sprigs of basil.  Everyone who came was invited to journey into the labyrinth and wind their way to the middle where they would find a young angel waiting to hand them a blessing.  These were written by elderly folk who had been asked what their wish for the world was.

The centre of the labyrinth also contained a simple Christmas tree prayer made from a pallet with the message 'Blessings of candle light and star light be with you'.



More pallets came into play beside the hut itself which asked what angels do in heaven when it is Christmas and reminded us to keep a place ready for them in our homes.


Yesterday we mentioned entertaining strangers unawares and this theme continued today as there was an opportunity to take a grab bag to give to a homeless person at some point.  This contained a hard warmer pack and a list of other items we could put in to make a homeless person Christmas better.

Inside the hut was a little row of very warm, inviting looking houses lined up under a beautiful image of a Christmas tree.

More pallet art reminded us of some key themes of the season - Joy, wisdom, love, hope, peace, believe.







On top of all of this we were treated to a series of dance performances by the young pupils of Hayley of Dancefit as well as the dulcet tones of a choir singing not only some Christmas carols but also their own version of Robbie Williams 'Angel' which was so prominent in hut 253 yesterday.


Our next hut is at the East end of the promenade and is number 73.



Sunday, 4 December 2016

4th December - Hut 253



Hut 253 brought a modern twist to the angel theme that we've set for the Advent Calendar this year.  









The hut was turned into a disco for the evening with a constant playlist of angel themed pop songs, including Robbie Williams and Annie Lennox.



The club had it's own VIP area that was roped off from the hut itself which was set aside as a beach front dance floor.  Security was provided by staff from Angels Inc. including the Archangel Michael himself who was on duty all night.



Dancing wasn't the only activity for those inside the hut.  Looking down on the dance floor was an angel who had shed her feathers into a bowl that sat in front of her with some instructions.


These read: Take a feather and name your angel, hold them tight to think about your special angel.

During the evening people took paper angels and wrote names on them and added them to the crowd watching the beach hut dance floor.




This hut reminded us that we can be entertaining angels unawares, especially in the strangers that we meet as part of our daily lives.  



One of the joys of the Beach Hut Advent Calendar is the opportunity to meet new people, make new friends and discover the angelic qualities of those around us.


The next hut is 305, just a little further to the west than the angel disco of tonight.


Saturday, 3 December 2016

3rd December - Hut 367




Hut 367 was inspired by the artist Cornelia Parker who takes ordinary objects and puts them into unusual installations, she's famous for blowing up a shed and suspending the fragments in mid-air.  









Crimson was the artist who worked with children at the Goldstone school to create angels from found objects such as leaves, orange slices and cinnamon sticks which were then suspended from a framework of branches spread in a lattice across the ceiling of the hut.




The whole scene was set against a white backdrop with silhouettes of snowflakes, stars and the Brighton Pavilion backlit so that they were projected into the scene.



There was an innovative addition to the hut in the form of a sound machine.  This consisted of a large box from which a series of white flexible tubes snaked, each tube terminating in a large golden ear trumpet.  






If you put the devices to your ear you could hear a number of different pieces of audio.






Some of the audio was children telling us about angels while others featured Crimson describing those people in her life who have been absolute angels when she needed them.  




These were all interspersed with recordings of the school orchestra rehearsing Christmas carols and the sound a baby heartbeat from within the womb - a sign of the wonder that eventually became Crimson's daughter.  This was there to remind us of the expectation of Advent as Mary waits for the birth of the baby promised to her by the Angel Gabriel.

Our next hut is number 253 between The View and Hove Lagoon.




Friday, 2 December 2016

2nd December - Hut 191


It was another beautiful still night for the second hut of the advent calendar as we gathered at hut 191 to look at the art created by the pupils of Deepdene school.

The Christmas lights around the hut formed a perfect frame for the artworks inside which were displayed like a gallery and covered every surface of the interior, even the ceiling.





The children had done lots of work on angels in classical art and had created their own versions using a variety of different techniques.

The hut was headed by a beautiful angel rendered in pastels, standing guard over the artworks inside.



Just inside the door was a collection of 'putti', this is the title used in art to describe a winged cherub head.  The children created their own version of these 'putti', each presented in the centre of a star, reminding us of the star that guided the wise men to the stable where Jesus was born.


The hut also contained a number of articulated puppets in various poses and brightly coloured costumes.

These were all versions of St. Michael, a soldier angel who is usually pictured with a sword.



Towards the floor of the hut was a row of beautiful little angel temples, each decorated with brightly coloured 'jewels' and fit for any angel to live in.





The Deepdene choir excelled themselves as they sang throughout the evening with a range of traditional carols as well as some really beautiful modern Christmas songs.


Our next hut is number 367 close to Hove Lagoon.



Thursday, 1 December 2016

1st December - Hut 348

Tonight the Kings School helped us to launch the ninth annual Brighton Beach Hut Advent Calendar. Our theme this year is angels and we've asked each group creating a hut to interpret that in any way that they want.  Angels are integral to the Christmas story in a variety of ways and we hope to explore lots of different aspects of their roles in the birth of Jesus throughout this month.

It has been a beautiful day here in Brighton and as the hut was being prepared we were witness to a gorgeous sunset with amazingly clear skies and not a breath of wind.




This gave the hut an air of serene calm as a host of simply crafted cardboard angels hung around.





The art students of year 7 had made these as a school project and the budding artists had great fun searching for their particular angel amongst the crowd. 


Many of the angels had messages written on their wings.  Some were quotations from the Bible such as the words of God spoken to Moses in Exodus 23 
"I am sending an angel ahead of you. He will guard you along the way. He will bring you to the place I have prepared."






Others were thoughts from the students about angels including this from Libby: "Angels are often silent but they are listening to every thought that stirs our souls"






Each night we will be collecting an angel which will be added to the display on Christmas Eve when we're also inviting everyone who comes to dress as an angel.



The message on the angel given to us to keep tonight was, "I think angels represent guidance and when someone passes away angels come down, take you to heaven, and give you a new, fun life there."




We were also broadcast live on the internet by @surfgalsussex on a streaming platform called Periscope.  This proved very popular and had over 25,000 viewers during the broadcast and people are still watching it now.  



You can view her broadcast here and she promises to come to as many huts as possible and broadcast live from each of them.

This has been a great opening night and really captured something of the excitement mixed with peace that is an important part of our wait for the coming of God into the world on Christmas day.  The next hut is number 191 and will be created by Deepdene school. 



Sunday, 27 March 2016

The Sixth and Final Holy Week Hut







There were very few followers who were prepared to follow Jesus all the way to the cross and there were very few of us at this last beach hut on Holy Saturday because the weather was so awful.  There is something very appropriate about focussing on death when the wind is howling around and the rain is lashing down and we had plenty of that on the seafront this day.





Helen Rawlings was the artist and we spent much of our time trying to protect her lithograph of soldiers and poppies from being damaged by the water whilst the poppy laden cross developed a beautiful shine from the water streaming down each flower.

We were reminded of Jesus words: 'greater love has no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends'.











A few hardy souls did make it down to see us and we huddled in the hut as we remembered Christ's death in the sharing of bread and wine.  It all felt very appropriate as we thought back to the feelings of those first followers as they tried to process the events of the Friday crucifixion without knowing that there was going to be a Sunday resurrection.

As I write this the Easter dawn is beginning to shine through the rain clouds and I am happy to say: 'Christ is risen, he is risen indeed'.