The 'East London Group': Difference between revisions

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File:TheRedHut Steggles.JPG| 'The Red Hut' by Harold Steggles 1931
File:TheRedHut Steggles.JPG| 'The Red Hut' by Harold Steggles 1931
File:RayleighMount-Essex.jpg|‘Rayleigh Mount’ by Walter Steggles 1936
File:RayleighMount-Essex.jpg|‘Rayleigh Mount’ by Walter Steggles 1936
File:MillAtUpminster.JPG|The Mill at Upminster by Lilian Hawthorn (nee Leahy) of the [[The 'East London Group']] ELG
File:MillAtUpminster.JPG|The Mill at Upminster by Lilian Hawthorn (nee Leahy).
File:ChudeleyMill-Derbyshire.jpg|Cluddeley Mill, Wrockwardine, Shropshire by Harold Steggles of the [[The 'East London Group']]
File:ChudeleyMill-Derbyshire.jpg|Cluddeley Mill, Wrockwardine, Shropshire by Harold Steggles.
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Revision as of 22:51, 28 March 2018

The East London Group was one of the most innovative art movements to have flourished in the UK in the first half of the Twentieth Century. As a movement it bubbled up organically from classes at the Bow & Bromley Evening Institute in East London in the early 1920s, supported by an inspirational teacher John Cooper. A forerunner of the group, the East London Arts Club exhibited at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1928 with members work soon being shown at the National Gallery Millbank (now the Tate). The ELG were regular exhibitors at the prestigious Lefevre Galleries in the West End throughout the Thirties.

Our focus on Chimni is the work undertaken by ELG members to depict houses and street scenes. For a wider appreciation of the East London Group we would recommend the East London Group Website


ELG Paintings of Houses

A celebration of art projects where the house is both the subject and the canvas.

ELG Paintings of Shops & Flats

Other ELG Paintings of Buildings

Other Interesting Web Sites

The East London Group Website http://www.eastlondongroup.co.uk

See Also In Chimni

ChimniWiki Page: Houses As Art

ChimniWiki Page: Red Houses

ChimniWiki Page: Blue Houses

ChimniWiki Page: Black Houses

Other Interesting Web Sites

Books We Liked

References

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