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Shopfronts of London: Artist Eleanor Crow's view

来源:BBC 作者: 时间:2019-10-09 Tag: 点击:

 

Artist Eleanor Crow's watercolours celebrating the beauty of London's classic shopfronts are going on display in the capital.

 

Arthur's Cafe, Kingsland Road, Dalston

 

Arthur Woodham opened his own café in 1948, having previously worked in his father's cafe of the same name just down the road.

Young Arthur ran his for 70 years until he was 90, along with his wife, Eileen, and in recent years grandson James.

Spotless and serving up home-cooked breakfasts followed by traditional lunches with hand-cut chips, this celebrated destination was frequented by loyal customers for seven decades until its closure in 2018.

Barneys Seafood, Chamber Street, Tower Bridge

 

Tucked under a railway arch near the Tower of London, this legendary eel, fish and shellfish shop attracts hordes of East Enders, eager for eels freshly boiled on the premises.

The founder, Barney Gritzman, was the brother of Solly Gritzman, owner of the famous Tubby Isaac's jellied eel stall. Barney opened his business before the start of World War Two and it has been run by the Button family, trading under the name Barneys, since 1970.

C W Tyzack, Kingsland Road, Shoreditch

 

Cecil Tyzack founded his business in 1936 and his shop, further down the Kingsland Road than Arthur's Café, is still open, although it is no longer owned by the Tyzacks.

The family name lives on as a hand- and power-tool manufacturer, Tyzack Machine Knives.

Cecil was born into a branch of the Tyzack family of saw makers who came to London from Sheffield in 1839. They manufactured and sold tools from a succession of shops in Old Street until the beginning of this century.

Today vintage Tyzack tools are popular with collectors.

Daniel Lewis & Son, Hackney Road, Cambridge Heath

 

This was London's oldest ironmonger, originally founded by Presland & Sons in 1797, purpose-built as a shop and factory.

In the 1890s it became W H Clark Ltd.

Daniel Lewis, who joined as a junior in 1948, took on the business in 1971 and continued trading under the Clark name.

Daniel's son, David, worked there from 1992 and renamed it after his father in 2002.

In 2012, he was forced to close when council regulations prevented customers parking and restricted deliveries.

Since I painted it, the shopfront has been replaced by a new replica, which is a close copy of this Georgian original.

Until the end, the original interior, with all its fittings and the manufacturing workshops at the rear, survived, revealing how the business evolved, supplying first the coach-building industry and then metal fabricators, architects and sculptors.

The Cookery, Stoke Newington High Street, Stoke Newington

 

This drawing shows an uncharacteristically short queue. Often the line of customers extends all the way down the street, which is always a good sign - revealing that the meat is worth the wait.

I cherish this frontage, with its mid-century script in red on a glazed background, red canopy and grinning butcher mannequin, welcoming customers inside.

Sewell's, Plaistow Road, Plaistow

 

This florist in Plaistow has been run by the Sewell family since the 1930s and is celebrated for its ingenious window displays.

I painted it during the Tour de France when the window featured two bicycles adorned with flowers beneath strings of bunting - all in yellow and adorned with Union Jacks in support of our team.

The wide pavement allows for a cheerful array of bedding plants outside to greet customers before they enter the fragrant interior, filled with buckets of cut flowers.

Syd's, Calvert Avenue, Shoreditch

 

London's oldest coffee stall has been open for a century and is still run by Sydney Tothill's granddaughter, Jane.

This mahogany refreshment stall is one of my favourite London landmarks. It has moved from its pitch only once, to feature in the film Ebb Tide, starring Chili Bouchier, in 1931.

The stall opened 24 hours a day during World War Two, when the War Office brought Syd's son (also Syd) back from a secret mission to ensure the supply of hot tea to the ambulance and fire brigades during the London Blitz, after Syd senior was traumatised by a bomb that exploded nearby.


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