Cycling, Art, and Utopian Possibilities

Against the grim background of the Covid-19 catastrophe, there is some small cause for hope in the current renewal of enthusiasm for cycling.
Photo by Ryan Wang, via Unsplash
By: Bruce Bennett

In the course of researching my latest book on the screen history of the bicycle, I watched hundreds of films featuring cycling and cyclists. One of the things that struck me again and again about the films I viewed was how enviably empty the roads are.

According to a recent road traffic estimate released by the U.K. government’s Department for Transport, motor traffic in the U.K. has increased by more than 10 times since 1949, most of this driven by private car use. So the experience of negotiating British roads whether as a driver or passenger, cyclist or pedestrian, is all too often frustrating and terrifying. As someone who regularly rides a bike, the open roads in some of the films I was analyzing looked almost utopian, as if the films were documents from an irretrievable past.

Bruce Bennett is the author of “Cycling and Cinema.”

Of course, as in other countries, one of the consequences of the U.K.’s partial lockdown in response to the Covid-19 pandemic is that we have seen the roads suddenly emptied of motor traffic almost overnight, while the skies overhead have become virtually free of the contrails of jet aircraft, the clatter of helicopters, and the acid haze of exhaust fumes.

The news media have been documenting the spectacular evacuation of these public spaces, paying particular attention to the uncanny emptiness of urban spaces that would normally be thronging with crowds. The similarity between photographs of deserted city centers and the opening shots of eco-horror film fantasies such as “The Day the Earth Caught Fire,” “Dawn of the Dead,” “28 Days Later,” or “I Am Legend” is irresistible. For filmmakers, the image of an empty road is a powerful device for visualizing radical and catastrophic social change.

For filmmakers, the image of an empty road is a powerful device for visualizing radical and catastrophic social change.

However, one of the surprising features of the lockdown has been that, in order both to allow key workers remain mobile and to encourage people to remain physically active, a number of cities around the world have been making renewed efforts to encourage cycling by closing roads to motor traffic, and widening and extending cycle lanes and footpaths. As in most aspects of its response to the pandemic, the U.K. government has lagged behind other countries in this area, but in mid-April the Department for Transport announced that local authorities would be permitted to close roads in order to facilitate essential mobility (while promising at the same time that these looser rules will be “withdrawn once conditions allow”).

The similarity between photographs of deserted city centers and the opening shots of eco-horror film fantasies such as “28 Days Later” is irresistible. Image: film still from Danny Boyle’s “28 Days Later.”

And just as we are seeing an unprecedented effort to facilitate the movements of cyclists and pedestrians by city councils and local government, it seems that there has been a corresponding boom in the demand for bicycles, with a manager of one bike shop in Sydney, Australia declaring, “We’re the new toilet paper and everyone wants a piece.” In the context of a global catastrophe that still appears to be in its early stages, what is tentatively hopeful about this phenomenon is that it could be the basis for a new more sustainable infrastructure when we emerge from the pandemic, laying the foundation for a different conception of mobility. For instance, Leicester City Council, in the U.K., which is exploring ‘tactical urbanism’ in its approach to town-planning, has announced that it is considering installing a new network of cycle lanes to “enable those who have used the temporary lanes to continue cycling or walking once the lockdown ends.”


It is appropriate that the bicycle is one of the objects through which differently mobile futures are being rehearsed and imagined. Bicycles are everyday objects for most of us: practical tools for traveling to and from work or the shops, as well as devices that we use for exercise or for fun. However, they are also semiotically flexible vehicles for a range of associated meanings, and so function as expressive devices. The type of bike we ride, the way we ride it and the clothing we wear comprises a rich assemblage of signs about class, gender, race, nationhood, and politics as well as individual personality.

The type of bike we ride, the way we ride it and the clothing we wear comprises a rich assemblage of signs about class, gender, race, nationhood, and politics as well as individual personality.

Ai Weiwei, the exiled Chinese artist now living in the U.K., has made extensive use of bikes in his art and observes, “The bicycle is very symbolic in China because it’s just like grass really, it belongs to ordinary life and the way we grow up, and yet a bicycle is also a luxury and practical.” Whereas the bicycle was once closely associated with Communist China’s social and economic system due to Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping’s promise to put a ‘Flying Pigeon’ brand bicycle in every home, now, in China as elsewhere, car ownership has become a powerful symbol of affluence and social progress. As a consequence, those who ride bikes are increasingly either members of the affluent middle classes or those people too poor to afford a car or motorbike; among other things, this shift is an indication of the way that the symbolic significance of the bicycle is in perpetual motion.

Ai has produced an ongoing series of spectacular, intricate sculptural works assembled from dozens, hundreds, or sometimes thousands of identical bikes, which invite us to read them as commentaries on wasteful industrial over-production among other possible interpretations. Moreover, given that they are made from and named after ‘Forever’ bikes, the most ubiquitous Chinese brand, we might also understand these works as an ironic commentary upon the Chinese government’s expansive ideological project.

Every day for nearly two years, the Chinese artist and dissident Ai Weiwei cataloged his inability to leave the country by leaving bouquets of flowers in a bicycle basket outside his compound. Image: Ai Weiwei, Flickr

On a smaller scale, one of Ai’s most moving bicycle works, “With Flowers,” draws out another symbolic dimension of the bicycle. Combining digital photography with public sculpture and performance art, “With Flowers” was produced after the Chinese government confiscated his passport in 2011, banning him from traveling outside China. In protest at the injustice of this lockdown, Ai placed his bicycle in the street outside his studio gates in Beijing and every day for nearly two years, he placed a bouquet of flowers in the basket, and posted a photograph of the flowers online. In a very simple way, the association of the bicycle with free movement takes on a renewed political significance in this work which also represents a quietly defiant insistence upon beauty in the face of political repression. More pointedly, “With Flowers” invokes indirectly the Hundred Flowers Campaign in which, for a brief period in the 1950s, Mao Zedong solicited criticism of the Communist regime with the literary quotation, “Let a hundred flowers bloom; let a hundred schools of thought contend.”

The bicycles that recur throughout Ai’s work can also be understood as making a more specific reference to the injustices of the Chinese state, serving as memorials to Yang Jia, a Beijing resident who was arrested in 2007 for riding an unlicensed bicycle and who was the subject of “One Recluse,” a 2010 documentary by Ai. Having made allegations of police brutality after his arrest, Yang was subsequently executed in 2008 after he attacked a police station in revenge, killing six police officers and wounding another. With the trial held behind closed doors, Yang’s case became a cause célèbre since, for some commentators, his action was seen as a form of protest against an oppressive regime.

Thus, for Ai, as for the suffragists of the late 19th and early 20th century, the bicycle is deployed in his work as a tool with which to protest against inequality and express a demand for a new social order. From the late 19th century onwards, the attraction of cycling for many of its advocates was that the greater physical mobility offered by bicycles and tricycles would engender greater social mobility. Most notably, perhaps, it offered women a degree of personal mobility that was previously only available to men. This sense of exhilarating possibility is captured in “Hyde Park Bicycling Scene,” the delightful 1896 actuality by early filmmaker Robert W Paul, which shows women happily wheeling past horse-drawn carriages and male cyclists.

Hyde Park Bicycling Scene (1896)
“Hyde Park Bicycling Scene,” by early filmmaker Robert W Paul shows women happily wheeling past horse-drawn carriages and male cyclists.

For its advocates, the bicycle promised to transport its rider to a more equal future, but for various reasons, we have yet to arrive there. Women remain less likely to cycle than men, while, as the transportation equity advocate Melody Lynn Hoffmann has observed, “Mainstream bicycle culture and advocacy in the United States is dominated by middle- to upper-class white bicyclists.” Nevertheless, against the grim background of the current global catastrophe, there is some small cause for hope in the current renewal of enthusiasm for cycling. The lockdown imposed in various countries around the world in order to control the spread of the virus has become a grand, accidental experiment with living in a non-car-dependent world. It poses the challenge of how to embrace what Greater Manchester’s mayor Andy Burnham terms “a new normality” that encompasses a “national re-evaluation of work,” sustainable energy policy, improved internet connections and better walking and cycling networks.

Just as the Covid-19 crisis has revealed in the starkest terms the inadequacy of laissez-faire capitalism, nationalist exceptionalism and libertarian ideology when faced with a large-scale crisis, it has also revealed the possibility that the pandemic need not be followed by a return to business as usual.

Reports have indicated that a key reason the U.K. government was reluctant to introduce lockdown measures in response to the spread of Covid-19 was that (alongside an ideological commitment to protecting the economy above all else, and an ill-conceived strategy of ‘herd immunity’ advocated by the country’s chief scientific adviser) they believed that the population would not comply with what the prime minister described as draconian measures. What the collective public response has demonstrated however, is that people will willingly change their behavior radically, en masse, and almost overnight, if persuaded that it is socially necessary. This is cause for hope not just in relation to the current pandemic but also in relation to the catastrophic threat posed by global heating which, it seemed until just a few months ago, was unstoppable due to people’s intransigence and self-interest.

Just as the Covid-19 crisis has revealed in the starkest terms the inadequacy of laissez-faire capitalism, nationalist exceptionalism and libertarian ideology when faced with a large-scale crisis, it has also revealed the possibility that the pandemic need not be followed by a return to business as usual. At a moment in which it seems that the dystopian futures imagined by science-fiction films and speculative literature could be realized, the proliferation of bicycles on the quiet, empty roads around us presents us with an almost utopian counter-image of a different, slower, calmer social order that is well within our reach.

In his history of cycling, “King of the Road,” published in the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis, Andrew Ritchie observed that this mundane, over-familiar machine, that was by then over 150 years’ old, retained its power to transform the world: “We take the bicycle too much for granted, but at the same time, we in England do not use it enough. It is a simple machine. But it could have a far-reaching and revolutionary effect on the world in the next century.” Perhaps it is time for a revolution.


Bruce Bennett is Senior Lecturer and Director of Film Studies at Lancaster University. He is the author of “Cycling and Cinema.”

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