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HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT
Country Life UK
|February 02, 2022
Many will have wondered what lies behind the huge windows of the Victorian-era studios on one of London’s busiest roads. Rosie Paterson takes a peek

Of course, it wasn’t always like this. When the terrace was built in 1891, it looked out onto a narrower street—horse-drawn carriages clip-clopping by—a line of mature trees and the grounds of St Paul’s School beyond. It was designed by architect Frederick Wheeler for fine-art publisher James Fairless, although the latter had no intention of living there and the houses, named St Paul’s Studios, were marketed to bachelor artists living and working in Kensington and Fulham. Previous residents of note include Ruby Levick (1871–1940), a Welsh sculptor and medallist, and William Logsdail (1859–1944), whose oil painting St Martin-in-the-Fields (1888) is in Tate Britain’s collection. Years after Fairless sold the freeholds, non-artists started to move in, such as Dame Margot Fonteyn (1919–91), who used the space at number eight as a dance studio.
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