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When I met Ken White

[cryout-multi][cryout-column width=”2/3″]If you have been to Smiles Centre, you may have seen a painting on the wall in our corridor. This painting is by Ken White and its actually a painting of the old power station in Moredon, Swindon. I haven’t been in Swindon long enough to know about the station but a lot of our patients have told me all about it. The picture has two young boys on their bikes which Ken explained was actually a self portrait of himself as a kid. I was really pleased to have Ken paint a picture for us and it hangs proudly on the wall, it feels like we have a real piece of Swindon history. It was a real pleasure meeting Ken, I know that he was happy with the treatment we provided to him and I hope to see him many more times in the coming years as a patient at Smiles Centre.

About Ken:
He was born in Swindon in 1943, is one of Britain’s most successful artists. His work is well known to any Swindonian because he is the man behind the distinctive murals which sprung up all over the town from the late 1970s but he is also an internationally acclaimed artist who is perhaps most famous for his work for Richard Branson’s Virgin companies, most notably his design of the Virgin Atlantic ‘Scarlet Lady’.Ken left school at the age of 15 and followed in his grandfather’s and father’s footsteps – into an apprenticeship at Swindon Railway Works. He started as a rivet hotter but became a signwriter in the carriage and wagon works “because I was fed up with the burns on my legs”. The move encouraged Ken to take more of an interest in art and he studied and passed ‘O’ and ‘A’ level Art in evening classes. Against his parents’ wishes, but with the encouragement of fellow students Ray (‘Gilbert’) O’Sullivan and Rick Davies (later of Supertramp fame), he then decided to take the chance on his talent providing a living, and he enrolled on a four-year full-time course at Swindon Art School. He had an undoubted talent, but renowned for an outstanding dedication to learning his craft. “The caretaker would have to tell me to leave in the evenings”, he recalled to us. On completion of the course, he moved to London to do exhibition work for the British Council, but he returned to Swindon in 1978 because he did not want his children to grow up in the capital. After a few months out of work, he landed a place on a job creation scheme for Thamesdown Community Arts. It was then that he painted first mural – a view of the Golden Lion Bridge on the end of a house in Fleming Way. Little did he know what an effect it would have on the rest of his life. Paint and pharmaceutical company Bayer featured the mural in a poster advertising campaign, and suddenly Ken’s work was beginning to receive interest from far afield. He received about £25 for the work and, as he desribed “…a mural painter overnight – albeit a poor one!” In the meantime Ken had met Richard Branson when the now-famous entrepreneur launched his first enterprise – a magazine called ‘The Student’. Ken recalls that he sent Branson – who was aged about 16 at the time – a drawing of Dudley Moore for publication in his magazine. It was an acquaintance he would renew a few years later. When Branson set up his Town House recording studio in London he commissioned Ken to decorate the outside of the building. The result was a stunning 3D scene which so impressed the Virgin boss that he asked Ken to do yet more work. But this time he had to turn down the work as he was already committed to another job. Branson employed another artist but was disappointed with the outcome and contacted Ken again. This time he paid a retainer to ensure that he could always rely on Ken’s availability in the future. Since then Ken White’s work has adorned the walls of Virgin establishments throughout the world, including record shops, hotels and airport lounges. With the launch of Virgin Atlantic in June 1984, Ken produced what is probably his most well-known work – the ‘Scarlet Lady’ emblem which features on all the airline’s aircraft. His reputation has grown with commissions from organisations such as Madame Tussauds, and in addition to the more than 80 murals he has completed, Ken continues to produce his own paintings on canvas. He recently completed a series about his early life in Swindon’s railway works. But he is best known in Swindon for his murals. During the early 1980s Swindon became famous for the many examples of Ken’s work around the Town. Alas, some of his murals have been lost due to redevelopment.

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©Calyx Pictures.
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