Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
The art of protest
TOM HARDY demonstrates the power of creativity in gaining the upper hand during protests, and points to the irony of an exhibition celebrating the very activists who are now under arrest
(L) The exhibition Barricade & Beacon showing the "tensegrity" towers at the V&A, London, September 2024; (R) The towers in action at Murdoch's Newsprinters presses at Broxbourne in Hertfordshire, September 2020. Demonstrators have accused the News Corp papers of failing to report on climate change. [Tom Hardy/Gareth Morris]

LAST month, the Victoria and Albert museum hosted the London Design Festival, which examined “how design can shape a space, bring people together and foster rituals, through a series of installations exploring global cultures across the museum.”

The installation Barricade and Beacon, presented by the V&A and RIBA in collaboration with Studio Bark, explored the intersection between architecture and activism and centred around Extinction Rebellion’s creative and thought-provoking designs and photography. At its heart were two of the bamboo “tensegrity” (a portmanteau of tension and integrity) towers specifically designed to thwart arrests, made by architect Julian Maynard Smith and engineer Morgan Trowland.

Maynard Smith described the thinking behind them: “We started using Bamboo tripods [in 2019]. We put a structure up in Oxford Circus – three tripods with a tripod on top. But I never found the tripod a very elegant structure and the police can just drive a forklift up to it and arrest the activists. With the tensegrity towers, you can be right in the middle of them and the police can't get to you. In the frame of XR you want to take over a space as long as possible — and make it difficult for the police to take you away.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
An office worker carries a large fan through Westminster, central London. The Met Office has issued an amber weather warning for extreme heat across parts of the UK ahead of further soaring temperatures this week. Picture date: Tuesday July 12, 2022
Workers' Rights / 5 June 2025
5 June 2025

As summer nears, TOM HARDY explains how unions are organising heat strikes and cool stations while calling for legal maximum workplace temperatures — because employers currently have no duty to protect workers from dangerous heat

THE WAY FORWARD: A general view of the Viking windfarm SSE R
Features / 17 January 2025
17 January 2025
Thanks to impressive progress in Britain with wind and solar generation, clean electricity now costs a fraction of the price of gas — yet the current system keeps bills artificially high to protect fossil fuels, writes TOM HARDY
Activists participate in a demonstration for phasing out fos
Features / 20 November 2024
20 November 2024
TOM HARDY traces how these climate conferences have been captured by fossil fuel interests while CO₂ levels have continued to rise since 1995 — but XR’s citizen assemblies and direct action have offered an alternative
Extinction Rebellion demonstrators end four days of action w
Features / 29 October 2024
29 October 2024
Will Labour live up to its campaign promises and support this vital Bill as it passes into the next stage of its passage through Parliament, asks TOM HARDY
Similar stories
Daniel Lind-Ramos, Ensamblajes, Nottingham Contemporary
Exhibition review / 20 February 2025
20 February 2025
ANDY HEDGECOCK relishes two exhibitions that blur the boundaries between art and community engagement