1ST OCTOBER / ATOMIC ED

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Atomic Ed unveils the journey of Ed Grothus, from working in Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico to becoming an outspoken antinuclear activist.

Founded by the U.S. Government during World War II, Los Alamos was selected to be one of the sites of the top-secret Manhattan Project because it is so remote. It was here that scientists were able to harness the power of the atom, developing and deploying the atomic weaponry used at Hiroshima & Nagasaki. Ed Grothus had first arrived at this hidden outpost of science to work as a machinist for the laboratory in 1949. During what Ed considered to be an unjust Vietnam War he felt no longer able to support the development of nuclear weapons and left the lab becoming one of the most outspoken anti-nuclear protestors of the 20th Century.

Over the next four decades Ed collected a breadth of surplus material from the lab, turning a former grocery store into a Mecca of technological obsolescence named The Black Hole. It became a unique repository for artefacts of nuclear science, exerting a relentless gravity that accumulated a collection far surpassing the quantity and variety of any museum collection.

The exhibition at Diffusion features past and recent photographs and archival documents including correspondence between Ed Grothus and politicians, scientists, the media and his family taking us back and forth through the nuclear history of the USA.

OPENING NIGHT / 1ST OCTOBER 2021
6.30 PM til late.
BOOK YOUR FREE TICKETS HERE

EXHIBITION RUNS FROM THE 1ST TO THE 30TH OF OCTOBER:
Opening times: Thursday to Saturday. 12pm to 5pm.

As part of Diffusion Festival 2021.