A tribute to my friend Alan
Chipperfield who passed on the other day. Alan and I had been getting
together on Monday afternoons for several years now for the practice
of painting portraits.
It started when I was told of this
elderly gentleman who wanted to learn to paint portraits, and I soon
found was that what he really wanted to paint a surprise portrait of
his son, the internationally renowned architect Sir David
Chipperfield.
We discovered that we had many things
in common in our backgrounds, and Monday afternoons developed into a
regular painting sessions along with cups of tea and coffee and
discussions of everything under the sun, and which stopped for very
few things... Monday afternoons were for painting!
Alan's house was a heritage house circa
1812, and he operated his antiques and restoration business from
there, and as there was nowhere inside suitable for our painting we
always worked outside which was not easy but that is the way he
wanted it.
He was a remarkable individual, growing
up in England in the 1930's, evacuated during the war as a child,
becoming a successful businessman before emigrating to Australia and
spent the last decades of his life working with antiques.It would take a couple of books to
describe him, and fortunately there are a couple of autobiographical
books that he did write. One of them is titled “A face in the
Crowd' describing his life up until his move to Sydney over 25 years
ago.
Here are some photos. my portrait of
Alan, Alan working on portraits at the back of his house, some of his
antiques and upholstery and what he did it on... never a person to
spend money unnecessarily!
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