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Ahead of the UAE’s 48th National Day celebration, art house founder Alison Collins reflects on her journey in the country

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00:00In those days, people used to make paper aeroplanes out of your visa,
00:05and literally, whoever was sponsoring you,
00:08they would make a paper aeroplane and fly it from the balcony.
00:12I arrived in March of 1976.
00:17In those days, people used to make paper aeroplanes out of your visa,
00:22and literally, whoever was sponsoring you,
00:25they would make a paper aeroplane and fly it from the balcony.
00:29And you had to catch it downstairs because you had to come in with it,
00:33but it had to be... Can you imagine that?
00:35I mean, it was just an amazing thing.
00:37I arrived here and there was sunshine and smiles,
00:40people with, I don't know, just a spirit.
00:45There was this wonderful feeling of something happening.
00:48Everybody who arrived here in those days became part of it.
00:52You were part of this incredibly exciting, evolving story.
00:58And you really did feel as though, you know, you had a part to play.
01:03It was incredibly good fun.
01:05I just was captivated by these buildings.
01:08There was just something so right about them.
01:13They really grew out of the sand.
01:16There was a couple of absolutely delightful gentlemen,
01:20the Fallichnaus brothers, and they were tea importers.
01:23I used to sit with them and chat and talk about things,
01:26and people had time for each other in those days.
01:28You know, there was an awful lot more interaction
01:31between the various kind of communities and the jobs
01:34and the things that people were doing.
01:36So I said to them, you know, I've fallen in love with these buildings.
01:39One day when I went past, they said, we found you a house.
01:43And I said, well, that's just wonderful.
01:46But I said, I know the kind of rents that houses are, you know,
01:52and it was way beyond...
01:53At this stage, my husband hadn't joined me, and I said,
01:57but they said, no, no, for you the rent is different.
02:00You're having a local rent.
02:03So they negotiated for me to have this house.
02:08We moved in here in 1978 with a six-month-old baby,
02:17and it became home.
02:19In 1979, there was a knock on the door,
02:23and this big, this lovely guy said,
02:26you don't know me, but I've been told that you're a lady who likes art.
02:31And I said, well, I do. I love art.
02:33And he said, well, I'm a painter.
02:35And his name was Julian Barrow.
02:36I was lazy to find out that he was actually a very famous British painter.
02:40But he said he would love to show these paintings.
02:43And, you know, did I think that we could do it together?
02:46And I said, well, why not?
02:48The big room where the wind tower is was Armadulis.
02:52I said, I'll tell you what, we'll put them up in Armadulis.
02:55So we put all of it.
02:56It was about a month later he came back in November of 1979.
03:02And he put all of the, we put the furniture in the garden.
03:05We put the paintings on the wall.
03:07And I just sat in the garden and hand-writ
03:10invitations that I'd made with a little printer down the road.
03:13And I passed them out to friends and said,
03:15pass these on to your friends.
03:16And everybody turned up for a party, basically,
03:20to have a look at some really lovely paintings of Dubai.
03:23And I sold the lot.
03:25So that was the beginning of the Armadulis Gallery.
03:28And it was called the Armadulis Gallery
03:30because the first exhibition I ever did was in my Armadulis.
03:33And it just all evolved from there.
03:36It was a great, but as the city evolved, you know,
03:40it was a very, very close knit community in those days.
03:44Then we were aware one day of a big kind of rumble in the area.
03:51And there was dust everywhere.
03:54We went up on the roof and all we could see over towards the mosque
03:59where all of the big, big buildings were, were bulldozers.
04:04And they were demolishing a great sector of the old quarter.
04:11And we found out to make way for the new ruler's office,
04:15which was much needed.
04:17We sort of thought, well, you know, how long have we got here?
04:20And we only had another 18 months.
04:22And then we had an eviction order as well.
04:25And left here with, I mean, the children wept.
04:27I wept. Everybody was kind of...
04:30And then about four months later,
04:32I had a phone call from my then landlord,
04:36who said, Alison, I've got great news. You can move back.
04:39I just said to my husband, look, I'm sorry, I've got to try and do this.
04:44I want to make that house into a permanent gallery.
04:48On November the 2nd, 1989,
04:50we opened as the Imaginers Gallery Limited Liability Company.
04:54And that was the beginning of a new, another new era.
04:57People say to me, gosh, you've seen some changes.
05:00And I say, well, yeah, but I, you know, and I was part of the changes,
05:03but they didn't happen overnight.
05:05And that spirit is still there.
05:09And that is what I hope Dubai hangs on to,
05:12is this wonderful open-mindedness
05:16to the possibilities that can make life better.
05:21At the same time, keeping, you know, their feet on the ground
05:24as to where they came from, because those old values,
05:27you know, those Bedouin values
05:31of caring for your neighbour and being open-hearted,
05:36that is, I think, so important to the core of Dubai as it goes forward.
05:43Yes, it's the most incredibly contemporary city now,
05:47but the underlying foundation of it
05:54was born from things that had got a lot of integrity.
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