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Hélène Binet At St Anne’s, Limehouse

September 14, 2024
by the gentle author

An exhibition opening today St Anne’s, Limehouse, and running until 14th March offers an opportunity to view Hélène Binet‘s magisterial photographs of Hawksmoor churches, shown previously at the Venice Biennale.

This is a rare chance to visit one of Hawksmoor’s most mysterious churches. Today and until to Saturday 21st September it is open from 10am-4pm, excluding Sunday, and open on Friday 20th until 8pm. Thereafter, the exhibition is open Fridays and Saturdays 10am-4pm.


Christ Church, Spitalfields (Courtesy of Ammann Gallery)


St George’s, Bloomsbury (Courtesy of the artist)

St Anne’s, Limehouse (Courtesy of Ammann Gallery)


St George-in-the-East, Wapping (Courtesy of the artist)


St Anne’s, Limehouse (Courtesy of the artist)


St George’s, Bloomsbury (Courtesy of Large Glass Gallery)


St Alfege, Greenwich (Courtesy of the artist)


St Mary Woolnoth, Bank (Courtesy of the artist)

Photographs copyright © Hélène Binet

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The Secrets Of  St Anne’s, Limehouse

Nicholas Hawksmoor’s Churches

John Thomas Smith’s Antiquities Of Old London

September 13, 2024
by the gentle author

For good reason John Thomas Smith acquired the nickname ‘Antiquity Smith’ – while working as Keeper of Drawings at the British Museum, between 1790 & 1800, he produced a large series of etchings recording all the antiquities of London, from which I publish this selection of favourites today

Old houses in the Butcher Row near Clement’s Inn, taken down 30th March 1798 – the right hand corner house is suggested to have been the one in which the Gunpowder Plot was determined and sworn

A Curious Pump – in the yard of the Leathersellers’ Hall, Bishopsgate

Sir Paul Pindar’s Lodge, Half Moon Alley, Bishopsgate

A Curious Gate in Stepney – traditionally called King John’s Gate, it is the oldest house in Stepney

London Stone – supposed to be the Millinarium of the Romans from which they measured distances

The Queen’s Nursery, Golden Lane, Barbican

Pye Corner, Smithfield – this memorialises the Great Fire of 1666 which ended at Pye Corner

Old house in King St, Westminster – traditionally believed to have been a residence of Oliver Cromwell

Lollards’ Prison – a stone staircase leads to a room at the very top of a tower on the north side of Lambeth Palace, known as Lollard’s Tower

Old house on Little Tower Hill

Principal gate of the Priory of St Bartholomew, Smithfield

Savoy Prison – occupied by the army for their deserters and transports

Mr Salmon’s, Fleet St

Gate of St Saviour’s Abbey, Bermondsey

Rectorial House, Newington Butts

Bloody Tower – the bones of the two murdered princes were found within the right hand window

Traitors’ Gate

The Old Fountain in the Minories – taken down 1793

The White Hart, Bishopsgate

The Conduit, Bayswater

Staple’s Inn, Holborn

The Old Manor House, Hackney

Dissenting Meeting House at the entrance to Little St Helen’s, taken down 1799

Remains of Winchester House, Southwark

London Wall in the churchyard of St Giles Cripplegate

London Wall in the churchyard of St Giles’ Cripplegate

Figures of King Lud and his two sons, taken down from Ludgate and now deposited at St Dunstan’s, Fleet St, in the Bone House

Images courtesy Bishopsgate Institute

You may also like to take a look at

John Thomas Smith’s Ancient Topography

John Thomas Smith’s Vagabondiana

John Thomas Smith’s Vagabondiana II

John Thomas Smith’s Vagabondiana III

Some Favourite Nicholas Borden Paintings

September 12, 2024
by the gentle author

You are all invited to the opening of Nicholas Borden’s STOKE NEWINGTON PAINTINGS at Everyday Sunshine Gallery, 49 Barbauld Rd, Stoke Newington, N16 0RT, tonight, Thursday 12th September from 6:30pm

In celebration of Nicholas’ new exhibition, I have selected some of my favourite paintings from the past eleven years that I have been following his work.

Arnold Circus, Boundary Estate, 2021

Meynell Rd, Hackney, 2021

Fleur De Lys St, Spitalfields, 2013

Princelet St, Spitalfields, 2013

Victoria Park by Regent’s Canal, 2021

On a 254 bus, 2024

Kelly’s Pie & Mash, Roman Rd, 2022

Regent’s Canal, 2021

Ten Bells, Spitalfields, 2022

Liverpool St Station, 2023

Leopold Buildings, Columbia Rd, 2021

Poole Rd, Hackney, 2021

Hackney Rd and beyond, 2021

Wishful thinking, 2021

St Paul’s Cathedral

St John of Jerusalem, Hackney, 2021

Gawber St, Bethnal Green, 2021

Sclater St Yard, Spitalfields, 2023

Wishful Thinking, 2021

Garrick Theatre, Charing Cross Rd, 2021

The Golden Heart, Spitalfields, 2023

Liverpool St Station, 2019

Waterloo Station, 2019

Wentworth St, Spitalfields, 2019

Terrace Rd, E9, 2019

St Peter’s Bethnal Green, 2019

Charing Cross Rd

Canal from Cat & Mutton Bridge, Broadway Market

Shoreditch High St

Paintings copyright © Nicholas Borden

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Twenty New Paintings by Nicholas Borden

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Catching Up With Nicholas Borden

Nicholas Borden, Artist

Nicholas Borden’s East End View

Nicholas Borden’s Winter Paintings

Nicholas Borden’s Spring Paintings

Nicholas Borden’s New Paintings

Nicholas Borden’s Recent Paintings

Crowdfund Report

September 11, 2024
by the gentle author

David Hoffman’s photograph of anti-racists occupying Brick Lane to prevent the National Front from setting up its stall following the racist murder of Altab Ali, a Bengali garment worker, in 1978

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Our crowdfund closed yesterday and, thanks to the generous contributions of 180 readers of Spitalfields Life, we raised £10,952 in twenty-eight days. Consequently, I am overjoyed to be able to confirm that David Hoffman’s exhibition of his Whitechapel photography ENDURANCE & JOY will open at the Museum of the Home on 15th October and run until 30th March. After the exhibition closes, David’s framed photographs will become part of the Museum’s permanent collection as the legacy of our project.

Over coming months, there will be a programme of events, discussions and lectures accompanying the exhibition at the Museum which we will announce shortly and we look forward to welcoming you to these.

Thank you to all our donors without whom none of this would be happening:

Sarah Ainslie, Sophie Alderson, Kate Amis, Elizabeth Aumeer , Kate Bacon, Joan Bailey, Michael Bareham, B Y Beech, M Boulesteix, Iain Boyd, Michael Jake Brown, Jonathan Bunn, Jonathan Cherr, Colin Childerley, John Clark, Michael Coleman, Harriet Coles, Nicola Crosse, Charlotte Crow, Rosie Dastgir, Maura Dooley, Josephine Eglin, Laurence Elks, Marion Elliot, Barbara Emami, Sally Fear, Gillian Figures, Deborah Finkler, Linda Florio, Laura L France, Nora Franglen, Vivian French, Louise Fry, Chris Gad, Jon Gertler, Deby Goldsmith, Andrew Jamieson-Greaves, Tracey Gregory, Jayne Hamilton, Mark Hamsher, Georgette Harrison, Julia Harrison, David Heath, Stella Herbert, Angela Mary Hobsbaum, Graham Hollis, Charlotte Ruth Hope, Lorelei Hunt, Jessica Hunter, Brian Hurwitz, Joan Isaac, Jane James, Chrina Jarvis, Annie Johns, Andrew Jones, Ron Joyce, Frances Homan Jue, Hilda Kean, Michael Keating, Sonja Khambatta, Niall Kishtainy, Leah Kloss, Vivien Knott, Sumitra Lahiri, Bridget Leach, Marie Lenclos, Jenny Linford, Martin Ling, Sarah Ludford, Imogen Malpas, Anne-Marie Marriott, Brian Mcauley, Jill Mead, Nigel Mellor, Shio Miyazaki, Daniel Moorey, Barry Mordsley, Maria Morgan, Jeremy Musson, Mysore, Rachel Nolan, Gilbert O’Brien, Vivienne Palmer, Monica Paolini, Peter Parker, Miss ME Percival, Chris Plumley, Kate Pocock, Jeffrey Ian Press, Jonathan Pryce, Anthony Quinn, Miss Helen E Rimell, Gilda Williams Ruggi, Jennifer Russell, Jane Ryan, Adam Scorer, Julie Scott, Mary Scott, Chris Sharp, Irina Shumovitch Mick Skipworth, Rob Small, Mary Smith, Rachel Darnley-Smith, A Sparks, Louise Stack, Lawrence P Stevenson, Graham Styles, Steve Szilagyi, Farokh Talati, Pen Thompson, Sophie Thompson, Susan Tiffin, Toby Titter, Christopher Turner, Simon Walker, Arabella Warner, Nicky Webb, Simon Wedgwood, Charlie De Wet, Katherine West, Jane Williamson, Jill Wilson and those who chose to remain anonymous.

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We were humbled by our supporters magnanimous comments.

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Very much looking forward to this exhibition. As a former squatter (in South London) it’s always great to see what the “little people” can achieve! – Kate Bacon

Appreciate your generosity of time to arrange this exhibition – Jennifer Blain

Thank you for all the memories from an East Ender born 1935 – Ron Joyce

Best of luck with the exhibition- it sounds wonderful! If it’s still on when I’m next in London, I will look forward to seeing it – Frances Homan Jue

Love the life in these photographs, these people deserve to be celebrated & remembered – Jayne Hamilton

Such a valuable collection of photographs – Peter Jackson

Looking forward to a great exhibition – Brian Mcauley

This exhibition will be unmissable so thank you and David for making this happen for us – Charlie de Wet

Such great photographs- a fascinating record of a particular place – deserve an exhibition – Jenny Linford

Looking forward to seeing this book as an ongoing part of the Spitalfields Life publication list. Great news! – Jane James

It’s exciting to visit events which share the experiences of other Londoners, both those born here and those who have made their way here from other places – Charlotte Ruth Hope

The Gentle Author is a positive force for good and enhances our daily breakfast. If we can encourage him to do another volume following his first publication and launch as before with a wonderful party – Juliet Wrightson

Good luck 😊 – Joan Bailey

Fantastic project – Mark Hamsher

A wonderful reminder for my grandchildren and future generations. All for it and wish I could cross the pond to see it! – Susan Tiffin

I am happy to support this incredible photographer and wish you well with the exhibition – Linda Florio

The Gentle Author has shared a heart full of individuals and stories about the East End in the most captivating and honourable manner. My understanding and appreciation of this colourful, creative weaving has enriched my life and imagination. May the exhibit reach many more! – Laura L France

Look forward to seeing the exhibition! – Michael Keating

Looking forward to seeing these wonderful photographs … good luck! – Raju Bhatt

Nearly there! – Louise Stack

Your daily article starts my day and tells me England still holds a lots of joy and life – Colin Childerley

Wishing you the best of luck… and looking forward to the exhibition! (fingers crossed..) – Vivian French

Good luck – Chris Gad

All good wishes for the book launch and the exhibition – Julia Harrison

I’m a huge fan of the Gentle Author’s projects! – Sarah Ludford

Good luck – a permanent exhibition would be really appropriate for this excellent collection of images – John Gillman

Pleased to help support an exhibition of David’s powerful images that movingly capture the atmosphere of my teenage years in East London – Julian

Wonderful to put the ‘little people’ on the map! – Stella Herbert

Love David’s photography and look forward to a wonderful showcase exhibition. What a time to be living in and documenting the East End. Hope very much to hear stories attached to the images – Jill Mead

This is a great project, part of the heritage of the East End – Vivienne Palmer

Dear Gentle Author, Good luck (as ever) with this important fundraiser. I was in the East End in this period (and now). All the best – Pen Thompson

Good luck! – Jeremy Musson

Amazing project, all the best 🙂 – Jessica Hunter

Let’s get this exhibition out for all to see! – Andrew Jamieson-Greaves

Fingers crossed! – John Clark

Good luck, I hope you will be successful – Bridget Leach

Do hope this exhibition DOES go ahead. Inter alia I was a squatter in East London in the 1970s etc. Seems as if that radical past is often ignored although important history  – Hilda Kean

Good luck! – Chris Plumley

Good Luck. I look forward to seeing the exhibition – Elizabeth Aumeer

Good luck with reaching the target and look forward to seeing the exhibition and finished book! – Mary Scott

Terrific images – I look forward to you reaching your target and then the exhibition – Iain Boyd

A great exhibition cause – Ann Gallagher

I think these photos are a valuable record of life at that time and should be kept and be available to the public – Marion Watson

Such beautiful photographs connecting us to an (almost) lost world and preserving the memory of the people who inhabited it – Josephine Eglin

Looking forward to the book and the exhibition David. Wonderful – Sarah Ainslie

The East End has a great cultural history which should be preserved and displayed as much as possible – we owe thanks to the Gentle Author for helping us achieve that and to David Hoffman for these photos – Barry Mordsley

Love this idea – thank you! – Nicky Webb

This is a great project, more power to your elbow – Brian Hurwitz

Good luck with this project! I hope you raise enough to be able to put the exhibition on – Jill Wilson

Would love the photographers to be permanently exhibited in this beautiful museum 😊. Good luck! – Jennifer Russell

It will be a powerful exhibition and a magnificent addition to the collection – Linda Grandfield

I cant wait to see this exhibition realised. Important work and proud to support – Kate Amis

Can’t wait to see this gorgeous work on the walls. Much love. xx – Miss Helen E Rimell

Wonderful photos that deserve a place to call home – very much looking forward to seeing them in situ – Arabella Warner

Wonderful images – Mysore

Great photographer, discovered via a peerless blog – Anthony Quinn

Wonderful photos of a lost world – Laurence Elks

It is important that the widest audience possible be made aware of this particular exhibition – I look forward to seeing it myself – Chrina Jarvis

Thank you for bringing such important photography to light – Farokh Talati

Looking forward to seeing this wonderful collection of photographs on display. We must treasure our history – Barbara Emami

I hope to see the exhibition in person! – Jonathan Cherr

Good Luck, David. Really looking forward to it – Sally Fear

Good luck – looking forward to seeing the exhibition – Julia Gay

This sounds amazing, sorry I can’t contribute more. Will definitely come and see it though – Penny Russell

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Pavement Pounders

September 10, 2024
by the gentle author

Last chance! Our crowdfund closes this afternoon at 3pm

CLICK HERE TO HELP ME STAGE DAVID HOFFMAN’S EXHIBITION IN OCTOBER

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The work of Geoffrey Fletcher (1923–2004) is an inspiration to me, and today I am publishing his drawings of London’s street people in the nineteen sixties from  Geoffrey Fletcher’s Pavement Pounders of 1967.

Charlie Sylvester -“I’m Charlie Sylvester, Charlie of Whitechapel. I’ve been on the markets over forty years. I can’t keep still too long, as I have to serve the customers. Then I must take me pram and go fer some more stock. Stock’s been getting low. I go all over with me pram, getting stock, I sell anythin’ – like them gardening tools, them baking tins and plastic mugs. All kinds of junk. Them gramophone records is classic, Ma, real classic stuff. Course they ain’t long playing? Wot do you expect? Pick where you like out of them baking tins. Well, I’ll be seeing you next you’re in Whitechapel. Don’t forget. Sylvester’s the name.”

Peanuts, Tower Hill – “We’ve only been doin’ this for a few months, me peanut pram and I. I only comes twice a week, Saturdays and Sundays. Sundays is best. It’s a hot day. Hope it will stay. I’m counting on it. How many bags do I sell in a day? I’ve never counted ’em. All I want is for to sell ’em out.”

Doing the Spoons, Leicester Sq -“I’ve been in London since 1932, doin’ the spoons, mostly. I does it when I’m not with the group – if they’re away or don’t show up. I’m about the only spoon man left. No, the police don’t bother us much – they know we’re old timers. We’re playing the Square tonight, later when the crowds will come.”

The Man with the X-Ray Eyes – “It’s the facial characteristics. I can usually guess within a year. It’s the emanations – that’s why they call me the man with the X-ray eyes.  I’ve been doing it thirty-two years. Thirty -two years is a long time. I’m off-form today. Sometimes I am off-form and then I won’t take their money. I’m in show business. You see me on TV before the cameras. My show took London, Paris and New York by storm.”

Selections from ‘The Merry Widow,’ Oxford St – “You need a good breath for one o’ these. It’s called a euphonium. Write it down, same as when a man makes a euphemism at dinner. If I smoked or got dissipated, I couldn’t play. I can’t play the cornet, as it is, but that’s because I only have one tooth, as I’ll show you – central eating, as you say, Guv. I come from Oldham. When I was a boy of ten, I worked in Yates’ Wine Lodge, but I broke the glasses. I’m seventy-three now, too old for a job. But I don’t want a job, I have this – the euphonium. Life is an adventure, but things is bad today. People will do you down and not be ashamed of it. They’ll glory in it. Well, that’s it. My mother-in-law is staying with us so we have plenty to eat. She gives me the cold shoulder. I’m going for a cuppa tea. Have a nice summer and lots of luck.”

Lucky White Heather – “I’ve been selling on the London streets all my life, dearie. Selling various things – gypsy things – clothes pegs – it used to be clothes pegs. The men used to make them, but they won’t now – they’re onto other things. There wasn’t much profit in them, either. You sold them at three ha’pence a dozen. That was in the old days, dearie. Now I could be earning a pound while you’re drawing me. We comes every day from Kent. People like the lucky heather. But I’ll give you the white elephant – they’re very lucky. If they weren’t, we wouldn’t be selling them on the streets of London now, would we, dearie?”

Pavement Artist at Work, Trafalgar Sq – “I’ve been away two years, I haven’t been well, but I’m back again now. I’ve worked in other parts, but nearly always in London. Used to be outside the National Gallery, where I did Constable. I used to do copies of Constable. I do horses, dogs and other animals. The children like animals best, and give me money. I’m only playing about today, you might say. I haven’t prepared the stone. It gives it a smooth surface, makes the chalks sparkle. Makes them bright and clear, y’know. These pastels are too hard. I like soft ones, but everything’s gone up and I can’t afford them. Oh yes, I always clean off the stones. I won the prize for the best pavement artist in London.”

L.S.D. the Only Criterion, Tavistock Sq – “I’ve been here thirty years. I became a combined tipster and pavement artist because I had the talent, and because I believe in independence. Some people buy my drawings. I don’t go to the races now. I used to – Epsom, Ascot and all that. I have my regulars who come to see me and leave me money in my cap. That’s what it’s for. The rank and file are no good. It’s quiet Saturdays except when there’s a football match – Scoltand, say – and they stay round here. Weather’s been terrible – no-one about. Trafalgar Sq is where the money is, but they fights. I’ve sen the po-leece intervene when they’ve been fighting among themselves, and they say, ‘ere, move on, you?’ It’s money what’s at the bottom of it. Money an’ greed. Like I’ve got written here.”

The Best Friend You Have is Jesus – “Forty years I’ve been selling plants in London, and for over thirty years the Lord’s work has been done. In 1935, I was backing a dog – funnily enough it was called ‘Real Work’ – at New Cross. All at once, a small voice, the voice of the Lord, spoke to me and said ‘Abel (My name is Abel), I’ve got some real work for you to do.’ I gave up drink and dogs and got the posters on the barrow – the messages. I’ve been thousands of miles all over London doing the work of the Lord. London is wicked, and it’s getting worse. But God is merciful, and always gives a warning. It’s like Sodom and Gomorrah. The Lord says ‘Repent’ before His wrath comes. He could destroy London with an earthquake. Remember Noah? – how God wanted them to go in the Ark? But they wouldn’t. They said, ‘We’re going to have a good time…’ The Lord could destroy London with His elements. It dosen’t worry me as I’m doing the Lord’s work. Let these iris stand in water when you get ’em home.”

One Minute Photos, Westminster Bridge – “‘Happy Len,’ they call me, but my real name’s Anthony. Fifty years on the  bridge. 1920 I came, and my camera was made in 1903. It’s the only one left. I have to keep patching it up. The man who made it was called ‘Moore,’ and he came from Dr Barnardo’s. They sent him to Canada, and he and a Canadian got together, a bit sharp like, and they brought out this camera. Died a millionaire. I’m seventy-three, and I’ve seen some rum ‘uns on the bridge. There was a woman who came up and took all her clothes off, and the bobby arrested her for indecent behaviour. Disgraceful. The nude, I mean. She was spoiling my pitch.”

Music in the Strand – “I had to make some money to live, and so I came to play in the streets. I’ve never played professionally, I play the piano as well but I never had much training. I’m usually here in the Strand but sometimes I play in Knightsbridge, sometimes in Victoria St. There’s not so many lady musicians about now. I only play classical pieces.”

 

Horrible Spiders – “Christmas time is the best for us, Guv, if the weather ain’t wet or cold. Then the crowds are good humoured. I like my picture and I’m going to pick out an extra horrible spider for you in return. I’ll tell you a secret – some of the spiders ain’t made of real fur. They’re nylon. But yours is real fur, and it’s very squeaky.”

Salty Bob – “Come round behind the stall and have a bottle of ale. It’s a sort of club, a private club. It’s a grand life sitting here drinking, watching the world go by. I’ve been selling salt and vinegar for fifty years and I’m seventy now. I’ve seen some changes. Take Camden Passage, it’s all antiques, like Chelsea, none of the originals left hardly. Let me pour you another drink. Here we are snug and happy in the sun. I’ve just picked up nine pounds on a horse, and I’ve got another good one for the four-thirty. Next time you’re passing, join me for another drop of ale. No, you can’t pay for it. You’ll be my guest, same as now, at our private club behind the bottles of non-brewed, an’ the bleach.”

Don’t Squeeze Me Till I’m Yours – “That’s a German accordion – they’re the best. Bought it cheap up in the Charing Cross Rd. I do the mouth organ too, this is an English one – fourteen shillings from Harrods. I began with a tin whistle and worked me way up. I’ve a room in Mornington Crescent. My wife died, luvly woman, thrombosis. I could see here everywhere, lying in bed and what not, so I cleared out. I got to livin’ in hostels. But I couldn’t stand the class of men. I work here Mondays, Fridays sometimes. I also work Knightsbridge and ‘ere. I work Aldgate Sundays. I do well there. I gets a fair livin.’ So long as I’ve got me rent, two pounds ten, and baccy money, I don’t want nothing else.”

A Barrel Organ Carolling Across a Golden Street – They received their maximum appreciation in the East End, in the days when the area was a world apart from the rest of London, and the appearance of a barrel organ in Casey Court, among patrons almost as hard pressed as the organist, meant an interval for music and dancing, while the poor little monkey, often a prey to influenza, performed his sad little capers on the organ lid.

Sandwich Man – Consult Madame Sandra – “It’s a poor life, you only get twelve shillings and sixpence a day and you can’t do much on that now, can you, sir? It was drink that got me, the drink. When I come off the farms, I became a porter at Clapham Junction, sir. I worked on the railways, but I couldn’t hold my job. So I dropped down, and this is what I do now. All you can say is you’re in the open air. Sometimes I sleep in a hostel, sometimes I stay out. Just now I’m sleeping out. It was the drink that done it, sir.”

Matchseller – “I was a labourer – a builder’s labourer – an’ I come frae Glasgow. I’ve not been down here in London verra long – eight years. Do i like it here? Weel, the peepull, the peepull are sociable, but they not gie you much, so you only exist. Just exist. I don’t sleep in no hostel, I sleep rough. I haven’t slept in a bed in four weeks. I sleep anywhere. I like a bench in the park or on the embankment. I like the freedom. Anywhere I hang my hat, it’s home sweet home to me.”

A Romany – Apart from the Romany women who sell heather and lucky charms in such places as Villiers St and Oxford St, the gypsies are rapidly disaapearing from Central London. Only occasionally do you see them at their traditional trade of selling. lace paper flowers of cowslips.  Modern living vans are invariably smart turn-outs that have little in common with the carved and painted caravans of fifty years ago. They are with-it-gypises-O! Small colonies can still be found on East End bombsites, which the Romanies favour for winter quarters.

‘A Tiny Seed of Love,’ Piccadilly – “Oh yes, Guvnor, they’re good to me if the weather’s fine. Depends on the weather. I can’t play well enough, as you might say. I used to travel all over, four or five of us, saxo, drums, like that. Sometimes there was as many as eight of us. Then it got dodgy. I’m an old hand now. I’ve settled down. I got two rooms at thirty-two bob a week, Islington way. Where could you get two rooms for sixteen shillings each in London? I can easily get along at the price I pay. What’s more, I’ve married the woman who owns the house, too. She’s eight years older than I am, but we get along amicable.”

You may also like to read

Down Among the Meths Men with Geoffrey Fletcher

and take a look at

John Thomson’s Street Life in London

Henry Mayhew’s Street Traders

Cyril Mann, Painter

September 9, 2024
by the gentle author

Our crowdfund remains open until tomorrow Tuesday 10th September at 3pm

CLICK HERE TO HELP ME STAGE DAVID HOFFMAN’S EXHIBITION IN OCTOBER

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Tubby Isaac’s Jellied Eel Stall, Petticoat Lane, c. 1950

After serving as a Gunner in the Royal Artillery in World War II, Cyril Mann returned to live in a tiny flat in Paul St with his wife Mary and small daughter Sylvia in 1946. Close to where the Barbican stands today, this area at the boundary of the City of London had suffered drastic bomb damage and much of it remained a wasteland for decades. Roving around these desolate streets as far east as Spitalfields, Cyril Mann discovered the subject matter for a body of works which became the focus of a major exhibition at the Wildenstein Gallery in 1948.

Losing his hair in his thirties, Cyril Mann had the look of a man older than his years. Through the Depression he had been unemployed and close to starvation, yet thanks to a trust fund set up by Erica Marx he entered the Royal Academy Schools at twenty years old in 1931. For one so young, he had already seen a great deal of life. At twelve, he had been the youngest boy ever to win a scholarship to Nottingham College of Art, before leaving at fifteen to be a missionary in Canada. Quickly abandoning this ambition, he became a logger, a miner and a printer, until returning to London to renew his pursuit of a career as an artist. Ever restless, he moved to Paris after three years at the Royal Academy and there he met his first wife Mary Jervis Read.

Forced to leave his wife and baby when he was called up in 194o, Cyril Mann did not paint at all for the duration of the war. Back in London and battling ill-health, he set out to make up for lost time. The fragmented urban landscape of bombsites that was familiar to Londoners was new to him and, turning his gaze directly into the sun, he sought to paint it transfigured by light. Channelling his turbulent emotion into these works, Cyril Mann strove to discover an equilibrium in the disparate broken elements he saw before him, and many of these paintings are almost monochromatic, as if the light is dissolving the forms into a mirage.

During these years, Cyril Mann’s life underwent dramatic change. He obtained a teaching job at the Central School of Art in 1947 and exhibited at the prestigious Wildenstein Galery, showing his new works in 1948. Yet at the same time, his marriage broke down and he found himself alone, painting in the tiny flat in Paul St. Whilst critically acclaimed, his exhibition was a commercial failure because, in post-war London, nobody wanted to see images of bombsites and consequently these important works became forgotten.

Yet, through his struggle, Cyril Mann’s work as an artist had acquired a new momentum and, after 1950, a bold use of colour returned to his painting. In 1956, he was offered a flat in the newly-built modernist Bevin Court built by Tecton in Islington, where today a plaque commemorates him. In 1964, he moved east to Leyton and then Walthamstow,where he died in 1980.

At a time when all other artists turned away from painting the London streets, Cyril Mann made it his subject. While these pictures may not have suited the taste of the post-war capital, they comprise a unique body of work that witnesses the spirit and topography of these threadbare years. As his second wife, Renske who met Cyril Mann in 1959, assured me, “I believe he is the most significant London painter of the nineteen-forties, post-war.”

Cyril Mann preparing for his exhibition at Wildenstein Gallery in 1948

St Paul’s from Moor Lane, 1948

Cyril in his crowded flat in Paul St, c. 1950

Christ Church Spitalfields seen across bombsites from Scrutton St

Christ Church Spitalfields seen over bombsites from Redchurch St

Bomb site in Paul St with cat, c. 1950

Christ Church Spitalfields seen from Shoreditch

Bomb sites around Paul St, c. 1950

Christ Church Spitalfields from Worship St, c. 1948

Streetscape with red pillar box

East End shop

Trolley bus in Finsbury Sq, c. 1949

Finsbury Sq, c. 1949

Finsbury Sq, c. 1949

Red lamp post, Old St

 

Bombsite at Old St

Cock & Magpie, Wilson St, Shoreditch

St Michael, Shoreditch, c. 1948

St Michael and St Leonard’s Shoreditch from Leonard St, c. 1950

 

Angel Islington from City Rd, 1950

St James Church, Pentonville Rd, Islington, 1950

Cyril Mann (1911-1980)

Images copyright © Estate of Cyril Mann

Paintings by Cyril Mann can be seen at Piano Nobile Gallery

The Brady Girls At The Brady Centre

September 8, 2024
by the gentle author

P. Lipman’s kosher poultry shop. One of the last remaining shops in Hessel St, Whitechapel.

Our crowdfund remains open until Tuesday 10th September at 3pm

CLICK HERE TO HELP ME STAGE DAVID HOFFMAN’S EXHIBITION IN OCTOBER

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The Brady Girls with The Beatles, 1964

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How glorious it is to publish these joyful photographs of the Brady Girls’ Club  which are now the subject of an exhibition WE ARE THE BRADY GIRLS until 28th September at the Brady Centre, 192-196 Hanbury St. E1 5HU.

The Brady Girls’ Club ran from 1920 to 1970. Led by Miriam Moses OBE JP – the first female mayor of Stepney – the Club supported the community during the war years and after, offering shelter and practical help to hundreds of young women and families.

The exhibition features a collection of photography which was rediscovered in 2016 and has inspired a project funded by the Rothschild Foundation Hanadiv Europe to record video histories of former members of the Brady Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs.

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The Brady Girls dance

A Brady Club Social

The Brady Girls and Prince Philip

The Brady Girls drama class

The Brady Girls perform Shakespeare

The Brady Girls on holiday in Oberhofen, 1961

A Brady Girls hairdressing session

At the Brady Girls canteen

The Brady Girls at the beach

The Brady Girls sack race, 1941

The Brady Girls at Bracklesham Bay, August, 1948

The Brady Girls’ camp

The Brady Girls as flappers

The Brady Girls dance class, 1940s

The Brady Girls play at being mothers

The Brady Girl guides

The Brady Girls climb the stairs in Hanbury St

Photographs courtesy The Brady Archive