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Lambeth school of art hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy
RM2A5YM7K–His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales laying the first stone of the Lambeth School of Art.
RMRY9RHF–An Associate of the Royal Academy Inspecting the Lambeth School of Art, Engraving 1884, UK, Britain, British, Europe, United Kingdom, Great Britain, European
RMF7NCP2–His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales laying the first stone of the Lambeth School of Art.
RM2B00XEB–Maghreb: ‘North African Man in Travelling Costume’. Watercolour painting by William Wiehe Collins (1862-1951), c. 1900-1910. William Wiehe Collins (1862 - 1951) was a painter of landscapes, figure and architectural subjects, and naval scenes. He studied at Lambeth School of Art, 1884-85, and the Academie Julian, Paris, France. Collins exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1890, and other London galleries. He was elected as a member to the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolors in 1898.
RF2DE0PD1–Arthur Rackham illustration from Comus by John Milton entitled Sweet Echo.
RM2T1DM1G–His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales laying the first stone of the Lambeth School of Art, [London], 1860. 'The laying of the foundation-stone...by his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, who for the first time took part as a principal in a public ceremony, was a graceful commencement of his public duties, and a welcome declaration of the interest he takes in the furtherance of the study of art among his future subjects, and of a warm desire for the improvement of the manufacturing and commercial destinies of the country at large...His Royal Highness, accompanied by Sir C. Phipps, Colonel Bra
RF2DE0PCP–Arthur Rackham - The Shipwrecked Man and the Sea from Aesop's Fables - 1912
RME0RN79–Jan. 20, 1960 - Lambeth Council;s First Schools Art Exhibition ''Te Refugees'': The Lambeth Council's first Schools Art Exhibition opened this morning at the Assembly Hall, Lambeth Town Hall. It includes paintings - drawings potato outs pottery - woodcarving etc. Photo shows ''The Refugees'' - the work of Veronica Ward an Maureen Carthcart - both and both of the Vauxhall Maner Secondary Modern School - at the exhibition today.
RF2F2B4NK–An art teacher works alone in a classroom in a newly rebuilt primary school in south London, UK.
RME0RKM7–Jan. 01, 1960 - Lambeth Council's First Schools Art Exhibition Christ on a Donkey : The Lambeth Council's first Schools Art Exhibition opened this morning in the Assembly Hall, Lambeth Town Hall. It includes paintings, carvings, potato cuts, pottery, woodcarving etc. Photo shows visitor looking at Christ on a Donkey - The work of Helen Bone and Susan Sherwood, both 14. and both of Vaux Manor Secondary Modern School. at exhibition today.
RMWA1MKE–c1900 - A terracotta bas relief by George Tinworth ( 1843 – 1913) Sculptor & English ceramic artist who worked for the Doulton pottery factory at Lambeth, England
RF2F5PMHN–bookplate design 'from among the books of Jeanne Jardiner' by Olive Allen from 1901 The Studio an Illustrated Magazine of Fine and Applied Art
RMJ430GF–Lambeth Ragged School. Doughty Street by J.D. Wingfield, 1848
RF2F6RJ1X–The North Hall, Launceston, Fiction and Fact personal Bookplate by Olive Allen from 1903 The Studio Magazine of Fine and Applied Art
RMRN8Y18–Harvest, by John Walter West, 1916
RMDDWT4R–AN ASSOCIATE OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY INSPECTING THE LAMBETH SCHOOL OF ART, ENGRAVING 1884, UK, britain, british, europe
RM2HX5E8P–Their First Big Job -- 23-year-old ex-serviceman Charles Feeney is painting a mural entitled 'Democracy' for the exhibition. It is designed to emphasise the co-operation necessary between the citizen and his elected councillors. Sixteen students of the Art Department of the Brixton School of Building are helping to build a full-scale exhibition for Lambeth Council's Civic Week which opens in the Town Hall on Sept 18 to 26. Working in a large, disused A.R.P. depot at Brixton, they are painting murals, building stands and frames, and designing sets which will show the history of Lambeth and the
RM2CFNFYH–Pether Henry - Lambeth Palace - British School - 19th Century
RM2DYJEB6–Lambeth ‘Ragged School‘ (London)- women teaching girl students
RM2CF11GP–Dugdale Thomas Cantrell - Lambeth - British School - 19th Century
RMHX29C2–Lambeth Ragged School. Doughty Street by J.D. Wingfield, 1848
RM2AXJGM8–International studio . BELGIUM—FRONT VIEW BY ROBERT P. BAKER drawn and modelled. When but a boy of tenhe studied at the Lambeth School of Art (Lon-don), continuing at the City and Guilds TechnicalInstitute. Later he expended five years at theRoyal Academy Schools. His art training nevercost him a penm—prizes, medals and scholarshipshaving deluged him from the start. At the ageof twenty-one he assisted Adrian Jones of Chelsea,London, on the huge Quadriga which now sur-mounts the famous arch at Hyde Park Corner, The principal figures in the composition are wellover life-size and with Michelangel
RF2F59W1F–Circular Art nouveau ship and lighthouse bookplate with motto ‘Pour dyeu et Mamye’ for banker Robert and Evelyn Benson by Laurence Housman
RMKF056K–Festival of Britain, South Bank, Lambeth, London. The New School Pavilion adjoining the Waterloo Bridge Gate. Photographed in 1951.
RFT5W3A8–Nautical School is a foundation school for boys and a coeducational sixth form located in the Blackfriars area of the London Borough of Lambeth, vinta
RF2EJP6N9–Lambeth Walk local history mural, Vauxhall, South London, Lambeth, england
RM2R8Y48F–St. Ann's Royal Asylum, Brixton, 1857. In 1800 '...the governors [of St. Ann's Society] determined to open a country asylum for the entire maintenance and education of 20 additional boys and girls, and Brixton-hill was chosen for the site of the new school. The present building was erected in 1829: it is a handsome edifice of three stories, surmounted by a cornice and parapet, and fronted centrally by an Ionic portico and pediment...The health of the children was reported to be good, and every means had been adopted to improve their intellectual culture - a reading-room, library, and museum ha
RM2PFYCK9–View of Lambeth Palace on Thames 1820s by David Cox
RMDDP3AT–Stockwell Grammar School, Lambeth, London, c1850. Artist: George Barnard
RMWA1N2T–c1900- A book spine illustration featuring George Tinworth ( 1843 – 1913) Sculptor & English ceramic artist who worked for the Doulton pottery factory at Lambeth, England
RF2ERP5K0–design for a catalogue cover by Lancashire-born British illustrator Olive Allen, from 1900 The Studio an Illustrated Magazine of Fine and Applied Art
RFWR86BM–Tilting at the ring: 'A moment of interest' Crecy Prize drawing. Horses 1888
RF2EJ9266–Mercury, God of merchandise look on with favourable eyes, illustration from ‘The field of Cloves’ by English playwright, writer and illustrator Lauren
RMRN8Y15–John Hassall was born 1868 in Deal, Kent, and died 1948. He designed posters for the Underground Group from 1908-1913. John Hassall was one of the most influential British poster artists of the early twentieth century. After an eventful youth, spent variously as a student in Europe and a farmer in Canada, he became a regular contributor to The Graphic magazine. By 1900, Hassall was an established illustrator, cartoonist and poster designer. His most famous posters were for household products, theatre productions and railway companies, including 'Skegness is So Bracing', commissioned in 1908 f
RF2F35P34–two female figures reflected in water woodcut bookplate, designed for Hannah Brace by writer and illustrator Laurence Houseman
RMC8FHTY–University of The Arts London, Wilson Road, Camberwell, London Borough of Southwark, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
RF2ERP6E6–tired child at desk studying with master holding cane above, bookplate for Harold Drummond Angus, by Olive Allen of Launceston, from 1900 The Studio a
RM2DYJEB1–Lambeth ‘Ragged School‘ (London)- men teaching boy students
RM2CG1F72–Grimshaw Louis - Lambeth Palace London - British School - 19th Century
RM2DYH188–Lambeth Ragged School. Doughty Street by J.D. Wingfield, 1848.
RM2CFNFYC–Pether Henry - Lambeth Palace from the Thames - British School - 19th Century
RM2AWW8HA–The history and antiquities of the parish of Lambeth, and the archiepiscopal palace .. . astyleportico of the Corinthian order raised upon steps. The columnsare fluted, and in point of detail differ materially from the speci-mens of the same order which we have been in the habit of see-ing in the buildings erected after the Italian school. What-ever might have been the defects of the style of building whichin the present day has given place to the elegant and lessformal introductions of Grecian art, the architect of the pre-sent building has not made the most felicitous choice in thepeculiar e
RM2CFN715–Stanley Caleb Robert - the River Thames with Lambeth Palace - British School - 19th Century
RFDK2JC2–Thomas Sturge Moore Woodcut entitled Pan as an Island
RM2CFNFNX–Pether Henry - View of the Thames at Lambeth Palace by Moonlight - British School - 19th Century
RM2CFN6RH–Stark James - Lambeth from the River Looking Towards Westminster Bridge - British School - 19th Century
RMWA1MP5–c1900 - A rare and unusual hand-coloured photograph of George Tinworth ( 1843 – 1913) Sculptor & English ceramic artist who worked for the Doulton pottery factory at Lambeth, England
RMDDP358–The Freemasons' Charity School for Girls, Westminster Bridge Road, Lambeth, London, 1814. Artist: John Pass
RM2CF1HN3–Goff Frederick Edward Joseph - St Thomas' Hospital and Lambeth Palace - British School - 19th Century
RMDDP3AN–Stockwell Educational Institute, Stockwell, Lambeth, London, c1860. Artist: William Dickes
RMRN8Y14–Alfred Leete was a well-known comic illustrator, whose work included cartoons, postcards, book illustrations and posters which he designed for the Underground Group from1915-1928. His most famous poster, 'Your Country Needs You' (1914) first appeared on the cover of the weekly magazine 'London Opinion' before being adapted for use as a recruitment poster. It is probably the best-known war poster of all time and has inspired many adaptations.
RMDE2648–Kennington Schools, Camberwell New Road, Lambeth, London, 1826. Artist: G Yates
RMHT0T1D–Exterior of cottage, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1913. Artist: Unknown.
RMHT0T29–Playground on roof, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1936. Artist: Unknown.
RMDDTM1Y–'The Chapel of the Clapham Grammar School', London, c1850. Artist: Anon
RMHT0T1G–Masonry students, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1911. Artist: Unknown.
RMHT0T1E–Gymnastics by male students, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1914. Artist: Unknown.
RMRN8Y16–Waterlow and Sons, was established in 1810 and become one of the country's largest printers of stamps and bank notes as well as more general printing. It printed more pictorial posters for London Transport than any other printer.
RMHT219J–Boys playing in a fives court, Strand School, London, 1914. Artist: Unknown.
RMHT0RRP–Consulting Room, Norwood School treatment centre, London, 1911. Artist: Unknown.
RMRN8Y17–Waterlow and Sons, was established in 1810 and become one of the country's largest printers of stamps and bank notes as well as more general printing. It printed more pictorial posters for London Transport than any other printer.
RMRNHW9E–Until the entry into force, on March 2, 1916, of the Military Service Act introducing conscription, Great Britain’s World War I army was comprised entirely of volunteers. Many of the most famous wartime posters were recruitment appeals. This 1915 poster, designed and printed by Johnson, Riddle & Company of London for the Parliamentary Recruiting Committee, shows a father in the comfort of his postwar home, being asked by his children, “Daddy, what did YOU do in the Great War?” Commercial advertising in mass-circulation newspapers and magazines was a well-developed industry in Great Britain.
RMRNHW9K–When Frederick Dangerfield's factory opened in St Albans, in 1896 it was the most modern lithographic plant in England. It specialised in printing large colour advertising posters and transfers for railway coaches, buses and trams, producing many posters for London Transport. In 1940 Dangerfield's was bought by Eversheds who printed there until the late 1990s.
RMHT0T1F–Building class, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1911. Artist: Unknown.
RFRN6MXJ–London's calendar has always been full of public events. These range from large scale annual events and one-off festivals, for which thousands of Londoners take to the streets, to smaller exhibitions held at a variety of specific venues. Transport companies have always taken the opportunity to promote travel to such events through their posters. On public holidays, when there were no scheduled events to promote, posters encouraged Londoners to travel out into the countryside or to explore the city.
RMRNHWA4–The Baynard Press was established in 1894 by F Sanders Phillips. It employed highly skilled craftsmen such as Thomas Griffits and did much to advance the use of colour lithography. It printed many of London Transport's pictorial posters, often using it's own artists such as Shep. In 1960 it took over the printer Vincent Brooks, Day & son Ltd.
RMHT0RRJ–The waiting room, Norwood School treatment centre, London, 1911. Artist: Unknown.
RMHT2228–Gymnastic display at Elm Lodge Residential School for Elder Blind Girls, London, 1908. Artist: Unknown.
RMRNHWA5–This World War I poster shows a column of soldiers marching past ruins and appeals to British men to enlist in the armed forces by claiming that the only road ahead is “through darkness to light; through fighting to triumph.” Until March 2, 1916, when the Military Service Act introduced conscription, Great Britain’s World War I army was comprised entirely of volunteers and many of the most famous wartime posters were recruitment appeals. This illustration, by an unknown artist, depicts the destruction of a very old building, possibly a medieval cathedral, wrought by the Germans in Belgium or F
RMHT0T2B–Students painting a design on the ceiling, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1939. Artist: Unknown.
RMHT0T1J–Male munitions workers in Engineering Shop, School of Building, Brixton, London, 1915. Artist: Unknown.
RMHT0RP0–Boys using forges in a blacksmith's shop, Beaufoy Institute, London, 1911. Artist: Unknown.
RFRN6MXG–Before the First World War, the Underground Group had developed a reputation for commissioning successful advertising posters. Colourful designs presented London in a new light, encouraging people to take trips to the countryside, theatre or the zoo. As the war dragged on it became inappropriate to promote non-essential leisure travel. Instead, propaganda posters for display at home and abroad were commissioned.Four posters, titled 'London Memories', were sent to troops fighting on the Western Front. The posters were displayed in army billets to raise morale and to remind soldiers of home.
RMRN8Y19–The ghostly driver, artist unknown, 1912
RMHT0RNY–Boys lined up in the assembly hall, Beaufoy Institute, London, 1911. Artist: Unknown.
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