PERSPECTIVES IN TIME
Time present and time past
Photo by EP |
Forgive the sitter’s hand, portrayed with a technique that manages to be both tentative and laborious at the same time, but I have not yet finished. The sitter is none other than the erstwhile officer of the Indian Army (with his exotic tales of the British Raj) whom our dog, Bean, managed to introduce me to, as you may remember, in July of last year. I passed the captain again only last week in the same spot on the same street, and asked him if he would allow me to paint his portrait. Yes!
I have worked from photographs I blush to admit, and the painting depicted on the wall is a portrait of my captain, Captain Cox, as a young man. I thought it might be good to include it in my composition, though it is not displayed in the room where he sits. I felt it would lend a perspective in time.
Talking of exotic portraits, I suddenly noticed one in the form of a mural or a sophisticated piece of ‘graffiti’ this very day. It is of Billy Fury, the famous singer of the 1960s and 70s.
Photo by EP |
It is claimed that suggestions were invited, and Fury came up winner. Round the corner in the next street there used to be a Decca Recording Studio where Fury recorded some of his big hits. Laurence Olivier and full cast recorded an LP of Othello there in the early 60s, too, to which I contributed two lines, crowd noises and a tin-whistle continuo in the Cyprus scenes. By the way the road sign was stolen within days, but Billy Fury Way is now out of reach without a ladder.
Continuing the roll call of remarkable residents of NW6 (Kathleen and I are in search of the remarkable in West Hampstead so as to compile a local-history slim volume), Kathleen has discovered that a distinguished modernist poet, feminist and futurist spent her childhood and adolescence around another corner not far away – one Mina Loy, friend of Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, Jean Cocteau, Marcel Duchamp and Tristan Tzara; married to Arthur Caravan, the Dadaist poet and pugilist; proclaimed by the New York Evening Sun the exemplary ‘modern woman’; and admired by Ezra Pound and by T. S. Eliot, who, with his wife Vivien, lived in the same local street with his in-laws upon his marriage in 1915.
Mina Loy’s childhood home. Photo by EP |
Photo by EP |
A minimalist estate agent’s near West End Green. Photo by EP |
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