New Society of Artists
The New Society of Artists was formed in London in 1921. Its primary aim was to give a chance for artists whose work had not been accepted by the Royal Academy (RA) to exhibit their work in London and, later, in the provinces. In 1932 it became the United Society of Artists. The last known exhibition was in Margate in June 2017.
History
[edit]The formation of the New Society of Artists (NSA) was announced in 1921. It was initially intended for artists whose works were “crowded out” from hanging by the RA,[1] and to give artists in the provinces a chance to exhibit in London.[2] The Provisional Council consisted of The Hon. John Collier, Mr Alex Maclean, Mr C R Chisman, Mr Henry S Kortright, Mr Percy Edsall and Mr Stafford Leake.[3][4]
The inaugural exhibition was to have been at the Guildhall Art Gallery on 8 June,[5] but instead it opened at the Royal Society of British Artists in Suffolk Street, not far from the RA, on 3 July.[6] The location had been hired for five weeks each summer thanks to the efforts of Charles Robert Chisman[7] and Percy Edsall, “both secretaries of well-known art societies”.[5]
A Yorkshire newspaper reported that the exhibition opened with nearly 400 paintings and drawings, “and a very ordinary lot they are, showing in several instances marked imitative tendencies”.[4] One of the most prominent exhibitors was the Welsh artist Miss Margaret Lindsay Williams, with two works: “Lorenzo Babini” and “The Imprisoned Soul”.[8] Charles de Lacy reported that there had been a rush for membership of the new society.[6]
The following year, the first provincial exhibition of works by NSA members was opened by the Mayor on 10 February at the Museum and Art Gallery, Burton on Trent.[9] In April, a second such exhibition was opened in Worthing; it was greeted with lukewarm praise in the local press.[10] In June 1922, the second annual exhibition opened. It was “an improvement on the first, and less like a collection of Academy crowded-outs. Women provide much of the quality…” [11]
In 1923, the Westminster Gazette commented:
At the Suffolk-street Galleries there is the exhibition of the New Society of Artists. “New,” in this connexion, means lately formed, the general character of the work being that of a not very recent Academy exhibition. With the best will in the world it is impossible to say that the technical standard is high, too many of the works, particularly in portraiture, suggesting the anxiety of immature artists to come before the public.[12]
Others took a more parochial view. The Hampstead News, for example, said that "There is much in it to interest residents in Hampstead and St John's Wood, as so many well-known artists from these parts have sent exhibits. The Hanging Committee ... have done their work well".[13]
The regional exhibition in February 1924 was held in Northampton.[14] From there it moved to Cheltenham in March.[15]At the 1924 annual exhibition in London, excellent portraits by W Howard Robinson, Frank E Beresford, A Jonniaux and E Newling were highlighted among the 400 exhibits.[16]
The fifth annual show opened as usual at Suffolk Street in June 1925. One reviewer commented:
Members of the New Society pride themselves that their work does not belong to the modern school of painting. When they paint a spade it looks like a spade, and no one could possibly mistake it for a banana. There is, among the 334 paintings shown at the exhibition, a refreshing lack of attempt at subtlety.[17]
A significant change came in 1926, when the annual London show opened in January instead of the summer.
In June 1932 the annual exhibition opened in London, but this time under the name of the United Society of Artists; members were entitled to use the post-nominal UA.[18]
The main reasons for the name change were
The United Society of Artists, hitherto styled the New Society of Artists, has decided to disuse the latter title because, as the Society was established in 1921, it is no longer appropriate. It was also found to be inconvenient, as it gave the erroneous impression that it is a body of so-called “advanced” artists, which is not the case. The aim is rather, while interfering in no way with the freedom of the members, to adhere to and if possible develop the best traditions of British Art, in preference to imitating those of Continental nations. An additional reason for the change of name was to avoid any misunderstanding due to the use of the word New, which is part of the title of an older and more distinguished Art Society.[19]
The Society's 65th Annual Exhibition was held in London from 30 January to 10 February 1985, with an entrance fee of £1.[20] The last known exhibition was in Margate in June 2017.[21] A large number of the Society's annual exhibition catalogues is held at the National Art Library in London.[22]
Known NSA/UA members
[edit]Compiled from exhibitors mentioned in reviews of NSA exhibitions.
NSA members (1921-1931)
[edit]- Alfred Lys Baldry
- Edith Isabel Barrow[23][24]
- Daisy Radcliffe Beresford[23][25]
- Frank Ernest Beresford
- William Ramsden Brealey[26]
- Beatrice Bright[27]
- Louis Burleigh Bruhl[15]
- Herbert Ashwin Budd[23]
- Alice Mary Burton[15]
- George Edmund Butler[23]
- Conrad Hector Raphael Carelli[28]
- Ernest Albert Chadwick[29]
- Maurice Chesterton[30]
- Charles Robert Chisman
- John Collier
- Gordon Coutts
- Frederick Thomas Daws[23][31]
- Mary Ella Dignam[32]
- Percy Edsall
- Augustus William Enness[33]
- Leonard John Fuller[23][34]
- Clive Gardiner
- Henry George Gawthorn[23][35]
- Lewis Taylor Gibb[36]
- Jessie Gibson
- Denis J Gill
- Stanley August Grimm[37][38]
- Florence Eliza Haig[23]
- Henry James Haley
- Sara Westralia Hall[32][39]
- Ernest Llewellyn Hampshire[29]
- Arthur William Head[15]
- Hilde Hechler[40]
- William Egerton Hine[23][41]
- Jamison Howell[42]
- Eric Hesketh Hubbard[11][43]
- Robert Morson Hughes[23][44]
- Cecil Ackland Hunt[16][45]
- Alfred Jonniaux
- Sydney Percy Kendrick[42]
- Erna Hoppe Kinross[11][46]
- Henry Somers Kortright[47]
- Llewelyn Stafford Leake[12]
- Gerard Leigh-Hunt[15]
- Peter Leslie[48]
- Guy Lipscombe[42]
- Stanislaus Soutten Longley[49]
- William Luker[29]
- Alexander (Alex) Maclean
- William Matthison[50]
- Florence Marks[15]
- Charles Stephen Meacham[51][52]
- Frederick Howard Michael[23][53]
- Harry Robert Mileham[23]
- Arthur Croft Mitchell[4][54]
- Mariquita Jenny Moberly
- Robert Morley[29]
- Thomas Edwin Mostyn
- Bernard Munns[42][55]
- Herbert Waterford Neville[29][56]
- E Newling
- E L Norris[37]
- William Edward Parkinson
- M Peploe-Earle
- Hedwig Esther Pillitz[32][57]
- Hettie Tangye Reynolds[58]
- William Howard Robinson
- WIlliam B Rowe[59]
- Vivian Desmond Ryan[4][60]
- Eva Savory[29]
- Laurence J. Scott
- Lady Nora Scott
- Edward Seago
- G L Sheppard[29]
- Kenneth Denton Shoesmith[4][61]
- Louis F Silas
- Phyllis Simpson
- Leonard Frank Skeats[15]
- Eric Slater
- Mabel Mary Spanton
- Nathaniel Sparks
- Harold Speed
- Phoebe Stabler
- Henry Straker[14]
- Kathleen Sturgeon
- Anne Style
- Robert John Swan
- Henry John Sylvester Stannard
- Edward Spilsbury Swinson
- Vere Temple
- Duff Tollemache[4][62]
- Marianne Lucy Trench
- Arthur Twidle
- Frederick Dudley Walenn (Principal of the St John's Wood Art School)
- J L Walker
- Catherine R. Walton
- Margaret Raymond Wansey[32][63]
- Emily Warren[29]
- Marjory Violet Watherston[23][64]
- Elizabeth Watson
- Muriel, Lady Wheeler
- Dulcie Whetham
- Edwin Whitney-Smith
- Kate Stanley Wilkinson
- Charles Wills
- Winifred Wilson[37][65]
- Roland Wheelwright[29][66]
- Margaret Lindsay Williams
- Margaret Evangeline Wilson
- W P Caton Woodville[29]
- Lilian Yeend-King[29]
- Ethel Lucy Adam
- Wilhelmina Rose Aitken
- Anne Anderson (Mrs Alan Wright)
- Alfred Lys Baldry
- Harry Banks
- Isabel Bannister
- Daisy Radcliffe Beresford
- Frank Ernest Beresford
- Capt. B H Bevan-Petman
- Clifford George Blampied
- Alfred Richard Blundell
- Alfred Edward Borthwick
- Lady DM Bower
- Beatrice Bright
- Nicholas Bristowe
- James Stuart Campbell McEwan Brown
- Charles Buchel
- James Ed Callahan
- Colin Cairns Clinton Campbell
- Ernest Albert Chadwick
- Albert Chanler
- Lena Chevalier
- The Hon John Collier
- M I Cotton
- Marion E L Cox
- Edward Rimbault Vere Dibdin
- Sara Beatrice Dibdin
- Mary Ella Dignam
- Joyce Deighton Dixon
- Dudley Dixon
- Evelyn, Lady Devonshire
- Alfred Henry Dyer
- Cecilia Engel
- Charles Edwin Flower
- Amy Constance Reeve-Fowkes
- Arthur F Reeve Fowkes
- Ralston Snow Gibbs
- Phoebe Gibson
- M A Gosling
- Doris Gregory
- Henry James Haley
- Hylda G Hall
- Sara Westralia Hall
- Nora G Hamilton
- Henry Edward Hiles
- Margaret McFarlane Hurd
- Frank Jameson
- Walter Monckton Keesey
- Thomas Meikle Kelly
- Sydney Percy Kendrick
- Esther Barbara Nicloux Kerr
- Henry Somers Kortright
- Elsie Lamont
- Percy Leslie Lara
- Mabel Elizabeth Lomnitz
- Elizabeth B Macdonald
- Alexander (Alex) Maclean
- Mary Macleod
- Winifred Marshall
- Evelyn Gladys Mellersh
- Lucy Constance Marian Millett
- Mariquita Jenny Moberly
- Frances Wynne Murray
- Herbert W Neville
- J H Norman
- E L Norris
- John A (Jack) Pamby
- Josephine Paxton
- Kathleen Margaret Pearson
- Cecile A Proctor
- E J Proctor
- Councillor T Ramsden
- A Constance Richardson
- Frank O. Salisbury
- Louis F Silas
- M Stuart Smithson
- Charles Neame Spencer
- Euphans Hilary Strain
- Henry Straker
- Robert John Swan
- M Theyre
- W E Thom
- Morgan Alfred Thornley
- Herbert Alker Tripp
- Alex F Turner
- Arthur Twidle
- Joseph William Topham Vinall
- Hilda Annetta Walker
- Vernon Beauvoir Ward
- Kathleen Waters
- Evelyn Watherston
- Marjory V Watherston
- Rosa Mary Whitlaw
- Winifred Wilson
- Arthur George Witherby
- Harold J Yates
UA exhibitors/members, 1932 and later
[edit]Entries without references are derived from the 1932 catalogue.
- Anne Acheson
- Hester Elizabeth Adlercron
- M. Aitken
- Beth Amoore
- Elaine Ask[67]
- Evelin Winifred Aston
- Jean Aust[68]
- Elizabeth Christie Austen-Brown
- Stanley Nicholson Babb
- Miss G. B. Barlow
- Gertrude Bayes
- Gilbert Bayes
- E. H. Blakesley
- Barbara Blue
- Annie Bryant
- Lorna Burgoyne
- H. O. Carroll
- Mary Carruthers
- Nelia Casela
- F. E. Castle
- Edwina Chaston[69]
- Minnie Ellen Clarke
- Arthur Cotterell[70][71]
- Gordon Coutts
- Heather Craigmile[72]
- Janet Cree[73][74]
- Gerard Crichton
- Stella Rebecca Crofts
- Cedric Dawe[75]
- Rodolphe d'Erlanger
- J. Doyle
- Steve Duffy[76][77]
- Christina Dugnid
- Mary Duncan
- Dorothy Zinaida Duval[78]
- Mabel G. East
- Grace English
- Margaret Evans[79]
- Wilfred (Mick) Finn[80]
- Sydney Foley[81][82]
- Peter Foulkes (honorary)[83]
- Mary Fowdrey[84]
- Jacqui Galise[85]
- Mabel Molesworth Godfrey
- Elizabeth Goudge[86]
- L. D. Green
- Joseph Greenup
- P. M. Greenwood
- M. A. F. Grove
- C. G. Guy
- Gordon Hales[75][87]
- David Headon[88]
- Robert William Hill[89][90]
- Janet Mabel Haughton
- Louise Heertjes-Comerell
- Florence Hess
- Forrest Hewit
- Reginald Arthur Hignett
- William Eric Horsbrugh-Porter
- G. E. Hunt
- George Robert Hunt[91]
- Henry Hay Hunter[92]
- John Wilson Jowsey
- Christine Koch
- Geoffrey Lilley[93]
- M. C. Livingston
- Hermione Thornton Lofthouse[94][95]
- W. P. W. Lucas
- Arthur Stewart Mackay
- Clive Madgwick[96]
- E. Philip B. Mansel
- Franco Matania[75][97]
- J J McConnell[75]
- Kirsten Meyer
- Blenda A. R. Morgan
- Matilda Mulvey
- Ruby Mundin[98][99][100]
- Constance Bertha Nash[101]
- John Henry Norman[102]
- Bess Norriss
- A. B. Novis
- Richard Bertram Ogle
- Leigh Parry[103]
- George Malcolm Patterson
- Eric Patton[104]
- Florens Paul
- Brian Petch[105]
- Charles James Pibworth
- Marcus W. Pitts
- G H Vincent Plant[75]
- Stewart Rodgers[103]
- Dorothy Savage[84]
- K. Eileen Platt
- W. D. Pusinelli
- Omar Ramsden
- Rhys Raworth
- Michael Reilly
- K. Roberts
- Hans Royaards
- Eva Savory
- Donald Seagars[106]
- John Semmence[107]
- Joan Sawdon Smith[68]
- Tony R Smith[75]
- Yvonne Smith[108]
- Belinda Tong[109][110]
- Gladys Rees Teesdale[111][112]
- Pat Trudghill[113]
- Joyce Tully[114]
- Sherree Valentine-Daines[75][115]
- Michael Vincent[116]
- Peter Walbourn[117]
- David Innes Sandeman Wood[118]
- Harold Workman[119][120]
- Cai Yuan[75]
- Linda Zelin[121]
References
[edit]- ^ "The Art World. A Review of the Year". Westminster Gazette. 28 December 1921. p. 1.
- ^ "Ernest Albert Chadwick, RBSA RCamA RI NSA (1876-1956)". Chris Beetles Gallery. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
The society was founded to give artists living outside of London the opportunity to exhibit in the capital
- ^ "Stafford Llewellyn Leake, R.B.A. (1881-1939)". Christie's. Retrieved 20 October 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "Anti-Bolshevism in Art". The Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer. 4 July 1921. p. 9.
- ^ a b "Art's Overflow. Where Academy-rejected pictures may be seen". The Westminster Gazette. 14 May 1921. p. 4.
- ^ a b de Lacy, Charles J (4 July 1921). "Ousting "Art" Pictures". Streatham News. p. 10.
- ^ "Charles Robert Chisman Biography". Contemporary Art Society. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
- ^ "New Artists' Society". Wetsern Mail. 4 July 1921. p. 4.
- ^ "Art Exhibition in Burton". Burton Observer and Chronicle. 18 February 1922. p. 2.
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- ^ a b c "Current Art". Westminster Gazette. 26 June 1922. p. 1.
- ^ a b "Current Art". Westminster Gazette. 2 July 1923. p. 1.
- ^ "The New Society of Artists". Hampstead News. 5 July 1923. p. 4.
- ^ a b "The Artists' Exhibition". Northampton Chronicle and Echo. 28 February 1924. p. 3.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Municipal Art Gallery. An Exhibition of Paintings". Gloucestershire Echo. 14 March 1924. p. 3.
- ^ a b "Westcountry Art. Good examples in London exhibition". Western Morning News. 1 July 1924. p. 4.
- ^ "Modern Paintings. New Society of Artists' Exhibition". The Daily Express. London. 26 June 1925. p. 6.
- ^ "Coventry & District". Coventry Evening Telegraph. 11 June 1932.
- ^ a b Catalogue. United Society of Artists. 1932 Exhibition
- ^ "Mall Galleries". Illustrated London News. 1 February 1985. p. 64.
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- ^ "National Art Library". V&A. Retrieved 29 October 2024.
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- ^ "Chesterton, Maurice 1882 - 1962". Suffolk Artists. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- ^ Waters, Nick. "Portrait of an Artist: The works of Frederick Thomas Daws". Dog News. Retrieved 2 November 2024.
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- ^ "Henry George Gawthorn 1879 - 1941". Science Museum Group: Collection. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
- ^ "Lewis Taylor Gibb and a Tale of two paintings". Mersea Museum. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ a b c "Modern Art. Impressions of London Exhibitions". Sheffield Daily Telegraph. 22 January 1926. p. 4.
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- ^ "Sara Westralia Hall (b. 1895)". Royal Academy. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
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- ^ "William Egerton Hine (1851-1926)". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
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- ^ "Eric Hesketh Hubbard 1892–1957". Art UK. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
- ^ "Robert Morson Hughes 1873–1953". Art UK. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
- ^ "Cecil Ackland Hunt (1883-1959) - Early 20th Century Pastel". Sullis Fine Art. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
- ^ "Erna Kinross German, 1878-1964". Le Trianon Fine Art & Antiques. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
- ^ "Henry Somers Kortright 1870–1942". Art UK. Retrieved 21 October 2024.
- ^ "Peter Leslie (1877-1953)". Royal Academy. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ "Aylesbury Artist's Success". Bucks Advertiser & Aylesbury News. 22 July 1922. p. 9.
- ^ "Headington history: People: William Matthison (1853– 1926)". History of Headington. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- ^ "Charles Stephen Meacham 1860–1940". Art UK. Retrieved 21 October 2024.
- ^ "Art Exhibition at the Pump Room". Kent & Sussex Courier. 26 May 1922. p. 2.
- ^ "Explore: Frederick Howard Michael (1865-1936)". Government Art Collection. Retrieved 5 November 2024.
- ^ "Arthur Croft Mitchell 1872–1956". Art UK. Retrieved 30 October 2024.
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- ^ "Blaze of sunshine in the crypt". Huddersfield Daily Examiner. 1 February 1985. p. 10.
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- ^ a b "Artists in London show". Sevenoaks Chronicle and Kentish Advertiser. 16 June 1994. p. 11.
- ^ "Jacqui at prestigious exhibition". Brentwood Gazette. 19 June 1997. p. 30.
- ^ "Wood worth". Horley & Gatwick Mirror. 5 September 1986. p. 88.
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- ^ "Frame is the spur". Littlehampton Gazette. 18 April 1997. p. 18.
- ^ "Talens awards results". Westminster & Pimlico News. 17 February 1984. p. 7.
The president this year is Robert Hill
- ^ "Robert W. Hill 1932–1990". Art UK. Retrieved 28 October 2024.
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- ^ "London show of paintings". Eastbourne Herald. 15 July 1989. p. 49.
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- ^ "Facts about Franco Matania". askART. Retrieved 28 October 2024.
- ^ "Capital local art". Northampton Chronicle and Echo. 18 September 1987. p. 4.
Miss Mundin has been a member of the United Artists for 15 years
- ^ "Original watercolour of flowers by Ruby Mundin". WorthPoint. Retrieved 27 October 2024.
- ^ "Top flower artist has died aged 84". Northampton Chronicle and Echo. 14 March 1991. p. 3.
- ^ "'Indecent pictures' appeal win". Western Daily Press. 31 August 1990. p. 9.
Miss Constance Nash, vice-president of the United Society of Artists
- ^ "John Henry Norman 1896–1980". Art UK. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
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- ^ "Local artist exhibits in Saudi Arabia". Drogheda Argus and Leinster Journal. 4 January 1985. p. 4.
- ^ "Wartime aircraft featured in artist's latest display". Deal, Walmer & Sandwich Mercury. 18 November 1999. p. 35.
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- ^ "Sculpural art's 'purity of form'". Cambridge Daily News. 6 March 1996. p. 20.
- ^ "Members: Belinda Tong". SWA: The Society of Women Artists. Retrieved 27 October 2024.
Membership of the United Society of Artists, of which she was Chairman for a short while
- ^ "Stamford artists' exhibits". Stamford Mercury. 3 February 1984. p. 2.
- ^ "Gladys Mary Rees (1898-1985) - Signed Early 20th Century Etching". Sulis Fine Art. Retrieved 28 October 2024.
- ^ "Artist in exhibition". Biggleswade Chronicle. 23 May 1997. p. 11.
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- ^ "David Wood". The Scotsman. 20 November 1996. p. 14.
- ^ "Talens awards results". Westminster & Pimlico News. 17 February 1984. p. 7.
Harold Workman was a past president of the Society from 1956 to 1974
- ^ "Explore: Harold Workman (1897 - 1975)". Government Art Collection. Retrieved 28 October 2024.
- ^ "From sculpting hair to fashioning works of art". Stanmore Observer. 5 March 1998. p. 111.
- See also the related categories Artist groups and collectives, and Art movements.