Tomorrow I’ll say goodbye to a
friend I made while writing Real Port Talbot.
Ray Davies Snr was a retired steelworker
who painted as a hobby, recreating the town’s lost history in acrylic and
canvas. Streets and seascapes, hotels and docklands, rivers, bridges and
railways. I met Ray for the first time last year at the house in Port Talbot he
used as his painting studio. He made me a frothy cappuccino sprinkled with chocolate and tucked a napkin onto the
saucer that was printed with a Welsh red dragon and Bore Da! (Good morning.)
As
I sipped he placed painting after painting in front of me, each one a story,
each one a piece of magic to conjure the town I remembered from my childhood. A week or
so earlier he’d asked me, via Facebook, if he could use one of my photographs
of old St Baglan Church to paint a picture. And suddenly there it was, so much
more than its original self, layers of shadow and sunlight, all shades of green
nudging the worn inscriptions on old stones.
Would you like it?’ he said.
‘I… you mean… but how can…’ The
stuttering went on for some time.
An astonishing gift from someone
I had only just met, a gift offered with such humility and generosity that I
almost cried.
Ray died on 12th April.
The last word he said to me was, ‘Thanks’. I’d asked him if I could use a photo
of one of his paintings in Real Port Talbot and he thanked me. Thank you, Ray. For the cappuccino and our brief friendship. For the history and vibrancy and sensitivity in your paintings that will always remind me of you.
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