| The Twenty One, 21 Charlotte Street, Brighton, BN2 1AG, United Kingdom enquiries@thetwentyone.co.uk Tel: 01273 686450 10.30am-6pm |
News |
|
![]() | ||
|
In Memory of Roy BradleyRoy Bradley Andy's Great Uncle - Roy Bradley had a bench installed in the Royal Pavilion gardens in 1994 in memory of him (Decorative Artist to the Royal Pavilion 1946-76)
Roy Bradley, restorer and artist, born London 6 May 1913, Decorative Artist Royal Pavilion Brighton 1946-76, died Brighton 25 July 1992. Article taken from: The Independent - Saturday 15th August 1992 Roy Bradley was the prime executant of the brilliant and innovatory restorations of the interiors of the Royal Pavilion at Brighton that were accomplished, in the teeth of fierce political opposition in the post-war years, during the directorate of Clifford Musgrave. Musgrave fought subtly and tenaciously; he was able, as a chief officer directly responsible to Brighton Council, to argue the case for restoration (as opposed to the continued indiscriminate and damaging use of the building as a local assembly rooms) face to face with his masters – in a way that would today, after the recent absorption of the Royal Pavilion’s curators into a bureaucratic mass department by Brighton council, be completely impossible. Words, however, were immeasurably strengthened by the transformations effected by Roy Bradley before the eyes of Musgrave’s adversaries. The grime of age, nicotine and smoke was gradually removed to reveal the refulgent colours of the original decorations, and the gaps caused by decay and depredations were filled by the masterly painting, carving and gilding of Bradley and his gifted assistant Derek Smith. By the time Bradley retired in 1976 a dingy, maltreated and generally scorned edifice was well on the way to becoming what is now generally recognized as the most resplendent of all British palatial interiors. The magnitude of the task may be measured by how much still remains to be done, 46 years after Bradley became “Decorative Artist” to the Pavilion, as the post was then known. When I became Director of the Pavilion in 1968, I was astonished that so much had been effected with such scanty resources; when I came to know Roy Bradley, the explanation was clear. He was modest to the point of invisibility, but his personality strongly impressed itself upon all who came into contact with him. It was amusing, instructive, and touching to see how every member of the conservation team that was gradually built up around him adopted his softly spoken, judicious, and courteously dignified manner. All that he did, he did “beautifully”. A natural scholar, meticulous in preserving what could be preserved, he brought to the task of interpretation and re-creation a formidable array of talents. There is always a big gap in conservation and restoration work between the scientific survey of the evidence and its interpretation; for the latter task higher qualities than objective assessment are needed. That gap was bridged by Bradley’s knowledge, taste and flair, coupled with a marvelous sensitivity and finesse in execution, and – most of all – with a humility before the artifact. He avoided the pitfalls both of over-restoration, and of aesthetic timidity in interpreting what had been, by any measure, pretty strong stuff. Some compromises had to be made; I remember how he regretted having had to re-create the marvelous pink and blue corridor wallpaper in oil rather than in the dry freshness of the original gouache (the walls were nightly imperiled by tombola stalls and potted palms). But were action was free, thee were no compromises. After his retirement from Brighton, he did some work at Buckingham Palace. But from the day when, to use Musgrave’s words, he “walked in out of the blue and asked for a job”, and was “excessively modest” about his abilities, the Pavilion was his life; especially after his wife’s death in 1987, he visited it frequently. The Royal Pavilion, and Brighton, should remember him with gratitude. – John Morley Artist mourned
An Artist who spent 30 years restoring the inside of Brighton Pavilion has died aged 79. Roy Bradley, used to take sandwiches on to scaffolding when he worked at the Pavilion because he hated climbing up and down ladders. He took on the job of restoring the Pavilion’s majestic walls, ceilings and columns in minute detail after it was used by troops during the Second World War. Friends have paid tribute to his patience and modesty during the long hours he spend repainting. Roy, of Ditchling Crescent, Hollingbury, retired in 1976 but could not keep away from his life’s work. Pavilion officials would find him quietly wandering around remembering his efforts.
My Great Uncle - Roy Bradley had a bench installed in the Royal Pavilion gardens in 1994 in memory of him (Decorative Artist to the Royal Pavilion 1946-76) The bench was donated by his children: Ben, Bridget & Beatrice (seen above)
The view from Roy's bench in The Pavilion gardens |
|
| Copyright © The Twenty One, 2012 | 21 Charlotte Street, Brighton, BN2 1AG, United Kingdom |