A Brief History of Artists Football in Birmingham or The whole world + artist’s football = the whole world but with a bit faux partisanship Why Birmingham? The story of artist’s football is a chequered one, akin to watching a box set of ‘The Wire’ with the curtains drawn. It all started in early 2007 when a syndicate of 5 businessmen of ‘Old Birmingham’ notoriety were notified by an anonymous text to meet at midnight in the centre of Calthorpe Park, a neglected area of greenery south of the city that attracts all that is rare in life. It would later transpire that these 5 men’s involvement in a match that would be dubbed the ‘Battle for Calthorpe Park’ would become the defining moment in the history of artists’ football. The clandestine meetings appeared to be set to coincide with when Art Monthly came out and each member was instructed bizarrely to bring nylon offerings from Sports World as well as energy drinks in the colour of that month’s front cover. Present at these moonlight meetings were founder members Jacob Masters, Robert Grose, Chris Poolman, Tubs Westbrook and various other housemates of Poolman’s ‘Fawlty Towers-esque’ B’n’B that he was running at the time. These ‘Fathers’ of artist’s football, as they would soon become known, would describe themselves as the ‘Lumina Taverna’ society, due mainly to their connections to a local hostelry (and a basic attempt to drum up some sponsorship). The moonlit conditions encouraged early Lumina Taverna discussions to veer between pressing social issues such as basic car maintenance, doner kebab pizzas and whether you could really fit 120 people in the back room of the Lamp Tavern. Discussions were brief though; people either ran around the park to warm up or sat back in their cars to listen to the radio. There were however some intense debates on the work of conceptual artist Peter ‘Sol le’ Withe, who had been one of the first to reference the