One day at the beginning of 1972 I drove down Motcomb Street and as they say, the sun was shining and even if the birds weren't singing, one remembered the joy of Lord Berners dyed doves at Farringdon and of course Elgar's 'Enigma Variations' was on the car radio. I noticed renovations, new paint and a 'For Sale' notice advertising a lease in Halkin Arcade just off
Like the Victorians, I have always believed that every picture has a story to tell but I was also convinced that most people didn't enquire enough about the pictures they acquired. To me it seemed that satisfaction was to be earned from a non-stop inquiry into the history of British Art and its artists. That is why I have placed such importance in well researched catalogues. Through my then background of television, Audience Research, Radio Caroline and independent Radio and Film production I already knew a large circle of artists and writers, like Tom Pocock,who I think approved of my No 1 Hero James McNeill Whistler. Even then the price was rising for etchings and the occasional drawing so my attention was directed into discovering more about Whistler's pupils-the two Greaves brothers, Henry and Walter, the Australian Mortimer Menpes and the
I had no intention of starting an art gallery but to return to the Estate Agent I said something like why not? and in April 1972 opened with Four For Whistler-the master and his four followers with an absolutely wonderful Whistler oil that I would sell for my great friend Louise Pleydell Bouverie-a portrait of her great-aunt, Louise Kinsella,entitled Rose and the Iris which came with numerous love letters from Whistler and proved to be the start of nearly thirty years of documentary story telling by exhibition. During this period and even forgetting about Winter, Spring and Summer Exhibitions, it totals up to two hundred and forty separate exhibitions. Surprisingly they all seemed to lead into each other-from 'Whistler in
I had always enjoyed great restaurants and their history and so it was natural to mount 'The Café Royalists' to recreate the atmosphere of that Edwardian age. The added generosity of Sir Charles Forte with twenty three remaining bottles of pre 1914 Absinthe from the Café Royal Cellars not only made for a great evening but caused several of mature age to think that they were going out into Regent Street with a 'Hanson' waiting. a remark made that evening "great idea but you cant repeat it." caused me to look from the Café Royal to its environs-Fitzrovia and down
Looking back, this period seems to have shot by in an aura of happiness, laughter, admiration and discovery. The idea of so many exhibitions was helped by that art historian's aid, a tiny Sony tape recorder. Most people took no notice, thinking I had merely removed it from the car for safety. however one who did notice was the heavenly Ithell Colqhoun who said"switch it off if it wasn't for the fact that I sense you love cats I'd of thrown you out" then there was Horace Brodsky who was a true friend and had an important part in the wild, brilliant Gaudier-Brzeska's short life-a patient friend and an affectionate Boswell. We often talked through the night about Gaudier and other artists like Bevan, Gore, Ginner and Gilman, Nevinson recalling for him the Slade Gang with their Black Jerseys and Scarlet Mufflers, the respectable Wyndham Lewis in his tight black suit and Ezra Pound wearing trousers made of billiard table green baize. It was all so fantastic-David Hockney in the Café Royal, the deputy chairman of Forte's asking what he would like to begin with "a couple of ounces of those black fish eggs ,pliz"was his immediate reply. then Henry Moore turning up with side of smoked salmon wrapped in the News of the World -much cheaper in Billingsgate.- The accent sometimes a bit like Sir John Rothenstein who always stated that he came from Bratford. Back to David Hockney and Mick Jagger at Reddish House with Cecil Beaton at the age of seventy paralysed, learning to draw again with his left hand-Eileen Hose (his confidant) and me making him laugh.
The Cafe Royal reminds me of identifying one day some of the characters in the painting by Adrian Allinson of 1916 including Augustus John, Dorelia, Nancy Cunard,the practical joker Horace de Vere Cole, a severe Iris Tree, art critic D.G.Konody and the artist and his mistress Mollie Mitchell Smith. "did someone mention my name?" Several times over the years I have put on exhibitions of the English futurist Claude Flight, one of these with the help of the British Council toured six venues. One can imagine my horror when in Bologna I saw from the billboard that Claude Flight was now called Claudio Vollo.Then there was the horror of a 'Flight and his Circle' lecture in Manchester when most of the audience thought I was lecturing on Evelyn Waugh and Brideshead Revisited, then on television -a pregnant silence followed ‘any questions’ then there was the Banker who wanted C.R.W.Nevinson's Banking at 4000 feet. The price was pound a foot; he offered less but I pointed out that the bi-plane in the painting was not flying at 3000 but 4000 feet!
Moments of pleasure-Sir Peter
My greatest admiration was for Wendela Boreal who had been Sickert's mistress in 1915 and who had been one of the most beautiful women of the thirties. I visited her frequently in the south of
MICHAEL PARKIN