It is 2024 and I am about to write about my life in London’s dockland of the 1960s to 1970.
Recalling the late 50s to early 60s encompassed a world of recovering from war, to bouts of dealing with untreatable TB, embracing among other things a world of creative art and enquiry, of building and re-building houses, of travel to and around Europe, and then the world.
I now, in the early 60s, found myself getting fat and vegetating in the country, loosening my ties with the world of art. After a world tour of drawing, and losing the facility and motivation to get back into it, it was time to change, re-invigorate, re-motivate and re-enter a more vibrant world. That meant getting back to London.
I would first have to sell the lovely one-bedroom studio home I had designed and built in isolated Berkshire countryside.
The main local housing agent in Andover declined to sell a house with only one bedroom. So I advertised it myself and sold to Francis Bacon, the painter.
I took “digs” in London’s Chelsea district, re-frequented the Limehouse area of busy dockland from which I had sailed several times as a supernumerary, and kept my eyes and ears open - especially thereabouts.
A Limehouse pub, frequented by both police and criminals, was a centre for information. And, true enough, I learned there of a warehouse shortly up for sale at auction. I bid for it and bought it. At least I now owned a large commercial studio to work in, but still nowhere in which to live.
I had bought a shell of a warehouse right on the river bank at the head of a small creek of dockland Thames. The potential to create something special there was considerable.
I drew up rough plans to convert the place into two studios overlooking the river, using a prestigious west-end firm of architects to draw up my plans for a conversion from industrial to domestic use. This was in a dockland when no-one had ventured to do this before. Planning permission was given.
Now I needed someone with general building skills to help me.
The chief of police at my “information” pub had used a first class heating engineer for a job. I met his man and we gelled. He was a Polish builder with artistic imagination. We would build the place together and then, when the project had been completed, he would return to central heating. And so it was.
There were a few old waterside houses nearby where some rich and famous resided, but my place was quite different in concept and environment. The dockers saw us as working people and absorbed us. Being rather oddities and friendly, and they being often “on the make”, made obtaining the wherewithall for building a rather underhand but locally normal way of going about things. So costs were low.
When finished, it was unique, with my one-roomed living/studio above, with a glass walled bathroom from which I could see through the studio to the river, and with an outside weathervane that transmitted wind direction directly beneath to the ceiling below.
All windows in the studio above, and the one to rent out beneath, had triple glazing. Moreover, there was a garage for a small car and bottling area for wine from casks, and all this, hidden behind an exterior that blended in so well with other adjoining walls that it was difficult to see what was what.
I could now, at last, settle down to paint and be artistically creative with dockland shapes as my theme. These paintings now sell to private collectors but which were never exhibited.
Now the end of the 1960s arrived and all changed.
In fairly quick succession came marriage, a baby, sale of the studio house to some Lord or other and a Laker Airways flight to Yale where my then wife had a post-doctoral fellowship. Another phase in my life was about to start and, as usual, it involved many changes and much good luck.
Actually it was not the end of my connection with that dockland studio home. A later owner found several of my paintings in the loft space, contacted me, and although he technically owned them we decided to share the spoils between us.
Although the wife of that owner wanted to keep the place in the 1960s style in which it was conceived and built, her husband wanted to develop it - which he did.
So it is now flats, and the newly-minted coins that we incorporated in the structure will have vanished with its demolition rubble.