The Midlands Enlightenment and the Birmingham School of landscape 's studio in Edmund Street, BirminghamBirmingham's tradition in
applied arts such as
jewellery and
metalwork predates the Industrial Revolution, but organised activity in the
fine arts of
drawing,
painting and
printmaking began only with the town's huge growth in size and wealth in the 18th century, after the growing realisation of the importance of design skills to the town's manufacturers led to the establishment of several schools of drawing in the 1750s. The town's first known fine artists date from the period between the 1730s and the early 1760s, and were closely associated with prominent figures of the wider cultural awakening known as the
Midlands Enlightenment. The first record of an artist working within Birmingham comes from the writer
Samuel Johnson, who knew an Irish painter in Birmingham in the 1730s who taught him how to "live in a garret at eighteen pence a week". The portraitist
Edward Alcock was living in Birmingham in 1759 and 1760 when he painted a portrait of the enlightenment poet and landscape gardener
William Shenstone; and he still had strong links with the town in 1778, when he was commissioned to paint a portrait of
Matthew Boulton and to draw pictures to be reproduced by
polygraph in Boulton's factory. ,
Distant view of Birmingham (1828). Particularly significant was
Daniel Bond, whose career started as a painter and japanner in Boulton's
Soho Manufactory, but who is recorded as exhibiting landscapes at the
Society of Artists of Great Britain in
London by 1761. He was to exhibit over forty works in London over following decades and it is with him that emerges the distinctive
Birmingham School of
landscape painting, whose influence was to last into the mid 19th century. Bond taught drawing and had a wide influence within the town – a pupil of his exhibited
A Drawing of Landscape after Mr Bond of Birmingham at the
Free Society of Artists in London as early as 1763. and whose elder brother
Joseph Barber had established his own academy of drawing in Great Charles Street by 1780, which was continued after his death in 1811 by his son
Vincent Barber. Among Joseph Barber's pupils was
Samuel Lines, who established another academy in nearby
Newhall Street in 1807. It is through these networks of teaching that the Birmingham tradition of landscape was developed and sustained, with notable later figures including
Thomas Baker and
Thomas Creswick – a pupil of both Lines and Barber, who was to become a notable
Royal Academician in the 1850s and 1860s. ,
Rhyl Sands (c.1854). The landscape artists of the Birmingham School were distinguished primarily by their shared technique, The tradition of artists from Birmingham travelling to
North Wales to seek the rugged rural scenes that formed the accepted idea of
picturesque landscape was established by the 1790s and would continue into the 19th century, but early Birmingham School artists were also exploring the tension between picturesque rusticity and novelty, sophistication and the artificial by the late 18th century, and by the 1820s were examining how the traditional language of landscape art could be applied to the rapidly industrialising Birmingham area, through emphasising or exaggerating the rural characteristics of Birmingham's hinterland, presenting the town as a feature within a wider picturesque natural landscape, or depicting the tension between the area's rural and urban features. In 1841 Cox returned to Birmingham to live in
Harborne and concentrate on painting in
oils. Long overshadowed by the fame of his earlier watercolours, these later works have more recently attracted attention as "one of the greatest, but least recognised, achievements of any British painter." Cox's technique and approach in paintings such as
Rhyl Sands (c. 1854) – described by the
Tate as "without parallel in British landscape painting of the 1850s" – have led to his being seen, particularly within
France, as an important precursor of
Impressionism. His pictures were exhibited in
Paris to wide acclaim in 1855
Institutional development ,
Allegory of Science and Wisdom (1798), depicting the values of the
Midlands Enlightenment in the shadow of the tower of Birmingham's
St. Philip's Church Artistic activity in late Georgian Birmingham was not restricted to landscape painting. A century later the London-based
Magazine of Art could describe Birmingham as "perhaps the most artistic town in England", and the changes that would result in this transformation had already started by the 1780s. A local trade directory of 1785 lists twenty four professional artists, including the
portraitist James Millar, the
still life painter
Moses Haughton and the
portrait miniature painter
James Bisset. Of widest influence was the
Birmingham School of
engravers – a separate group to the landscape artists but emerging similarly from the drawing academies of
Joseph Barber,
Vincent Barber and
Samuel Lines. Formed around the younger Barber's pupils
William Radclyffe,
James Tibbitts Willmore and
John Pye, and Lines' pupil
William Wyon, this group were to dominate high-quality European printmaking in the 1850s and 1860s and revolutionise the art of book illustration, bringing contemporary art to a much wider public than ever before. The first decades of the 19th century saw the gradual development of the institutions that would come to dominate the artistic life of Victorian Birmingham. In 1809 a group of eight artists including
Samuel Lines,
Charles Barber and
Vincent Barber opened an academy of
life drawing in Peck Lane, now the site of
New Street railway station. This held its first exhibition of members' work in 1814 as the
Birmingham Academy of Arts, and was refounded as the
Birmingham Society of Arts under the patronage of wealthy local businessmen in 1821. ' 1829
New Street home The society was dogged by continual tension between its two roles: to its members the society was primarily for promoting Birmingham's artists and exhibiting their work, but to its wealthy patrons its importance was more as a training ground for designers needed for the town's manufacturing industries. This gave rise to a temporary split in 1821 over the patrons' decision to hold an exhibition of old masters instead of members' works. the patrons forming the
Society of Arts and Government School of Design - later the
Birmingham School of Art - while the artists formed the separate
Birmingham Society of Artists, which received royal patronage in 1868 as the
Royal Birmingham Society of Artists. By the 1820s Birmingham was supporting a vigorous market for contemporary art. While most British towns other than
London relied on
booksellers and
carvers-and-
gilders for the sale of pictures, Birmingham had specialist
art dealers such as Allen Everitt – whose ''Artists' Repository and Exhibition of Pictures
in Union Street opened in 1811 and which held regular exhibitions from 1817 – and Jones' Pantechnetheca'' in New Street, which opened in 1824 and where the walls of the picture gallery were "hung with a succession of paintings by the most able ancient and modern masters". An 1819 letter to the painter
John Constable remarked that "we have picture sellers everywhere in Birmingham". Gillott in particular had one of the largest and most important collections of the day. An early patron of
Turner, he lay at the centre of a nationwide network of dealers, collectors and artists. With this growth in Birmingham's artistic organisation came a more established artistic community. Birmingham had had only four professional artists in 1800, but by 1827 the overwhelming majority of the 67 local exhibitors at that year's Society of Arts exhibition were earning their living from the arts, as
portraitists,
miniaturists,
engravers, or painters of
still life or
landscape.
Helen Allingham was the first of a notable series of woman artists to study at the School of Art from the 1850s, that later featured
Florence Camm,
Kate Bunce and
Georgie Gaskin. The most prominent members of a generation of young painters from the School of Art were elected as the Society of Artists' first associates in the 1860s, including
Walter Langley,
William Wainwright,
Frank Bramley and
Edwin Harris. Of these the most significant was Langley, whose move to the
Cornish fishing village of
Newlyn in 1882 made him the first of the
Newlyn School of
plein air painters. Although he was later joined by Harris, Bramley, Wainwright and numerous
London artists including
Stanhope Forbes, Langley's work remained vital to the image of the Newlyn School and was matched only by that of Forbes for substance and consistency. His watercolour ''In faith and hope the world will disagree. But all mankind's concern is charity
was singled out as "a beautiful and true work of art" by Leo Tolstoy in his book What is Art?'' and in 1895 Langley was invited by the
Uffizi in
Florence to contribute a self portrait to hang alongside those of
Raphael,
Rubens and
Rembrandt in their collection of portraits of great artists. At a time when the controversial new movement was still exciting the hostility of the London press, the 1852 exhibition of
Millais'
Ophelia at the annual exhibition of the
Birmingham Society of Artists provoked the radical
Birmingham Journal – the town's most popular newspaper – to display a front page article analysing the picture, praising its "erratic genius" and "independent thought" and contrasting it with the "traditions of the schools" and the "slavish reproduction of the academy models". Further Pre-Raphaelite works were sought the following year, with
Holman Hunt's
Strayed Sheep being singled out as "one that ought to be studied ... with an intelligent appreciation of its peculiar beauties and special teachings." Birmingham's natural sympathy for emerging radical art movements was driven partly by the town's distinctive social and economic structure. During the 19th century the artistic tastes of England's landed aristocracy remained focused on
old masters and established
classical models, and these in turn provided the cultural template for the small number of vastly wealthy new mill owners of the growing textile towns such as
Manchester, who modelled themselves on existing aristocratic patterns of patronage. By contrast the more broadly based economy of Birmingham was built upon on small units of production and a skilled craft-based workforce, leading to an unprecedented demand for modern paintings from the rapidly expanding and newly wealthy middle class, and a widespread belief in the moral and political implications of visual aesthetics, influenced by
Augustus Pugin and the
Gothic Revival and driven by its direct relevance to Birmingham's day-to-day economic reality. It was from this environment that
Edward Burne-Jones emerged to become the most influential of all Birmingham artists, establishing himself as the dominant figure of late-Victorian English art and bringing the spirit of the Pre-Raphaelites decisively into the mainstream. Born on
Bennetts Hill in 1833 he studied at
King Edward's School, the
Birmingham School of Art and
Exeter College, Oxford, where he became a key member of the
Birmingham Set and met his lifelong friend and collaborator
William Morris. Leaving Oxford without graduating, he fell under the influence of
John Ruskin and worked in the studio of
Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Burne-Jones' early work was heavily influenced by Rossetti, but by the 1860s he was increasingly incorporating the influence of painters of the early
Italian Renaissance, and himself becoming an influence on younger artists such as
Walter Crane and
Simeon Solomon. He retired from public exhibition for much of the 1870s, but his return in 1877 was to prove a sensation, with him established as probably the most celebrated artist of his generation. He was to be widely influential on the
Symbolists, the
Aesthetic movement, and
Art Nouveau.
The Birmingham Group ,
Hortus Inclusus (1898) The 1890s saw the emergence of a loosely connected group of like-minded radical artists who would later become known as the
Birmingham Group. All had studied at the
Birmingham School of Art after the reorganisation of its teaching methods by
Edward R. Taylor in the 1880s, and all had been deeply imbued with the philosophy and practices of the
Arts and Crafts Movement, of which they were to become leading exponents. Many went on to teach at the school and become associated with other more formal organisations such as the
Birmingham Guild of Handicraft or the
Bromsgrove Guild. Breaking down the distinction between the fine and applied arts was a key aim of the movement, and Birmingham Group artists practiced across a variety of disciplines, producing
stained glass,
jewellery,
metalwork,
embroidery, hand printed
books and
furniture as well as pictures. In painting they emphasised the role of a picture in the context of a wider work or space, often producing
murals or
frescos for specific buildings, presenting easel pictures in custom-built frames considered integral to the work of art, and working in exacting media such as
tempera or
watercolour on
vellum, where the creation of the materials was an essential part of the creation of the work. ,
Self-Portrait (1901)The first indication of the rise of a distinctive group artists was the 1893 commission of a set of murals for
Birmingham Town Hall from artists including
Kate Bunce,
Henry Payne,
Charles March Gere,
Sidney Meteyard and
Bernard Sleigh, while most were still students. The group's greatest collective work was the later decoration of the interior of the chapel of
Madresfield Court near
Malvern in 1902, which featured frescoes and stained glass by Payne, an altarpiece by Gere and a crucifix designed and made by
Arthur and
Georgie Gaskin. The key individual artist however was
Joseph Southall, arguably the most important of all Arts and Crafts painters and the leader of the revival of painting in
tempera in the late 1880s. Although he never taught at the School of Art, he provided training in tempera techniques at his studio in Edgbaston to other group members such as
Arthur Gaskin and
Maxwell Armfield, and exhibited widely internationally, particularly in
France, where he was widely admired. While the influence of
Burne-Jones and the
Pre-Raphaelites on the Birmingham Group is clear, modern scholarship has also seen links with later movements in art. The
Last Romantics exhibition at the
Barbican Art Gallery in 1989 positioned the group as the link connecting the
romanticism of the Pre-Raphaelites to that of the later
symbolists of the
Slade School.
Early 20th-century art After the
Arts and Crafts and Pre-Raphaelite triumphs of the late 19th century, the early 20th century was marked by a prevailing conservatism among Birmingham's major artistic institutions. The Arts and Crafts consensus established at the
School of Art and
Royal Birmingham Society of Artists in the 1880s held firm, and new generations of painters tended to either maintain an academic figurative style –
Bernard Fleetwood-Walker being among the more notable examples – or prosper elsewhere. In 1925 the Birmingham Post published an editorial asking "why is it that Birmingham has ceased to count as an important centre of Art?", criticising the RBSA as being controlled by "a small group of men who have arrogated to themselves the responsibility for deciding what is and isn't art ... entirely out of sympathy with modern movements ... having stood still for at least twenty years" By 1930 even
Solomon Kaines Smith, the keeper of the
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and himself hardly a radical figure, was commenting in the
Birmingham Post that "you are actually reducing and throwing back the possibilities and progress of your own city by basing yourself solely on 1890". The opening of the
Ruskin Galleries in
Chamberlain Square by John Gibbins in 1925 provided an outlet for the gradual emergence of more progressive generation of Birmingham artists. In the same year The
Artist-Craftsmen Group presented an exhibition at the gallery of work "done in the white heat of experiment" and subsequently renamed themselves the "Modern Group". The gallery's immediate impact was noted in the national press in 1926: "when Birmingham seemed hopeless and the modernists felt like exiles in the desert, a miracle happened .... Mr Gibbins has almost revolutionised the artistic life of Birmingham". and
Henry Tonks, who became a stalwart of the
New English Art Club and was to train an entire generation of English modernists at London's
Slade School of Art around the start of the 20th century, was brought up in a family of Birmingham brass foundry proprietors. ,
In the Hold (c. 1914)The most radical artist associated with the city during this period was David Bomberg, who was born to a
Polish-
Jewish family on Sutton Street in the
Lee Bank area of Birmingham in 1890. Growing up in
Whitechapel in the
East End of London he returned to Birmingham to train as a
lithographer before studying under the Birmingham-born
Henry Tonks at the
Slade School of Art. Loosely associated with the
vorticist movement, he was one of the few English artists to wholeheartedly embrace
cubism and
futurism in the years leading up to the
First World War, painting a series of strikingly angular works before his disillusionment with the mechanised slaughter of World War I led him to develop a more representational style from the 1920s onwards. Virtually forgotten by the time of his death in 1956, his influence has grown since.
The New York Times described him as a "neglected British genius" in 1988, and by 2006
Richard Cork could remark that Bomberg was "now considered one of the most important and influential British painters of the twentieth century". Birmingham's
printmaking tradition revived with a generation of influential
etchers in the 1930s.
Henry Rushbury worked under
Henry Payne and illustrated notable books on the architecture of
Paris and
Rome before becoming Keeper of the
Royal Academy from 1949 to 1964.
Gerald Brockhurst – dubbed a "young
Botticelli" when he entered the
Birmingham School of Art at the age of 12 – became one of the best known and most celebrated
portraitists, first in
England and then in the
United States, painting over 600 portraits including those of
Marlene Dietrich and the
Duchess of Windsor. He is best known for his etchings, however, which are "among the most suavely realized and technically adept works of art in any period" and "epitomize an elegance and panache that we associate with the decades between the two world wars."
The Birmingham Surrealists ,
The Strange Country (1940)The most sustained challenge to Birmingham's conservative Arts and Crafts consensus in the first half of the 20th century came from the
Birmingham Surrealists, who emerged as a group from 1935 and whose leading figures included the painters
Conroy Maddox,
John Melville and
Emmy Bridgwater, the art critic
Robert Melville and later the artists
Desmond Morris and
Oscar Mellor. John Melville had been one of the "harbingers of surrealism" in Britain, being identified as a surrealist by 1932, and he and Maddox did much to advance British surrealist practice by introducing the principle of visual distortion. The early years of the group were marked by a conscious rejection not just of Birmingham's artistic conservatism – John Melville having six paintings banned from an exhibition at
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery in 1938 for being "detremental (sic) to public sensibility" – but also what they saw as the inauthenticity of the
Surrealist Group in England, which had formed in
London around
Roland Penrose and
Herbert Read. The London group, it was felt, "did not understand surrealism", reducing it to a mere continuation of English
romanticism, and the Birmingham artists concentrated instead on building links with what they saw as the more authentic surrealists on the continent. This culminated in the open letter sent by Maddox and the Melvilles refusing to exhibit at the 1936
London International Surrealist Exhibition, decrying the presence of "artists who in their day to day activities, professional habits and ethics could be called anti-surrealist". ,
Untitled (1941), Pen and ink on paperThe relationship between the surrealists of London and Birmingham improved greatly with the arrival in London in mid-1938 of the Belgian
E. L. T. Mesens, who had some sympathy with the Birmingham artists' views and both he and Melville exhibited in the
Living Art in England exhibition of 1939. The major Birmingham artists joined the Surrealist Group in England over the following year and were to form the group's most dynamic members during
World War II and through the subsequent years of the decade.
Robert Melville played a key role in the conception of
Toni del Renzio's publication
Arson in 1942 and Maddox was the organiser with
John Banting of 1940's notoriously confrontational
Surrealism Today exhibition. In 1947 Maddox and Bridgwater featured among only six English artists selected by
André Breton for the final
International Surrealist Exhibition in Paris, In the early 1960s he produced some of the movement's earliest works, combining the influence of his Birmingham training in
advertising and
technical drawing with the layout and structure of early
Italian Renaissance altarpieces. His presidency of the 1961
Young Contemporaries exhibition was pivotal to the emergence of British Pop Art as a coherent and widely recognised phenomenon.
William Gear – a student of
Fernand Léger and the only British member of the avant-garde
CoBrA movement – had close links with Birmingham, exhibiting with the
Birmingham Artists Committee and forming links with the
Birmingham Surrealists in the 1940s, before finally moving to the city to teach at the School of Art in 1964. Later that decade
John Salt's obsessively detailed paintings of
cars and
mobile homes in the
American landscape made him the only major English artist among the pioneers of
photorealism. More locally, the formation of the
Ikon Gallery in the 1960s provided a focus for a distinctive group of artists including
David Prentice,
Trevor Denning,
Robert Groves,
Jesse Bruton and
Sylvani Merilion. ,
The Black Assassin Saints (1982)Birmingham's highly cosmopolitan population was an increasing influence on its art in the late 20th century. The formation of the
BLK Art Group in the early 1980s by
Black British Birmingham artists
Keith Piper,
Donald Rodney and
Marlene Smith, together with
Eddie Chambers from nearby
Wolverhampton, was a pivotal point in the establishment of the non-white experience as an integral part of British culture. Members of the group acted as activists, curators and promoters to challenge the white establishment of the art world; their art drew on the language both of American
Black Nationalism and indigenous English identity, while they simultaneously challenged Black culture itself to move away from being defined by heterosexual black males. The late 20th century also saw the growth of alternative art forms. The
Birmingham Arts Lab nurtured an influential generation working in
comic art in the late 1960s and 1970s, including
Suzy Varty,
Ed Barker,
Steve Bell and
Hunt Emerson.
Graffiti (or "spraycan art") culture appeared in the early 1980s, with the area featuring in
Channel 4 documentary
Bombing. Local artists who use urban Birmingham as their canvas (this is illegal, and regarded by some as
vandalism) have included
Chu and
Goldie. Street art competitions are still regularly held at the Custard Factory. In 2002 the
Jewellery Quarter-based
Temper was the first
graffiti artist to have a solo exhibition at a major British public gallery.
Contemporary artists Today Birmingham artists work across a wide range of subjects, styles and media. Several Birmingham artists have won or been shortlisted for the
Turner Prize including the
video artist
Gillian Wearing, winner of the 1997 prize, the
abstract painter John Walker who was shortlisted in 1985, and
Young British Artist Richard Billingham, shortlisted in 2001. The
Digbeth area of the city is particularly important in Birmingham's contemporary art scene, with numerous artists and organisations grouped in and around studio complexes like the
Custard Factory, galleries such as the
media art centre
VIVID, and
artist-run spaces such as
Eastside Projects. Significant concentrations of artists, writers and curators also exist in the
Jewellery Quarter, and in
Balsall Heath,
Moseley and
King's Heath in the south of the city. A variety of contemporary public art is located around the city centre, most of it created by artists from outside the Midlands. The construction of the
Bull Ring Shopping Centre in 2003 included three light
wands which were erected at the main entrance, a huge mural on a glass
façade located at the entrance facing
New Street station and three fountains in St Martin's Square in the shape of
cubes, which are illuminated at night in different colours. Contemporary African Caribbean artists and photographers who have exhibited internationally include
Pogus Caesar,
Keith Piper and the late
Donald Rodney. ==Sculpture==