Morgan was commissioned to illustrate a number of books published by
private presses. For the
Samson Press she produced the frontispiece for ''Duke Hamilton's Wager
in 1934 and Pictures and Rhymes'' in 1936. these are her best known works. The main body of her work drew upon the landscape and buildings around Petworth and the neighbouring
South Downs. Her work was inspired by that of Macnab,
Percy Douglas Bliss and the Sussex-bred
Eric Ravilious. Throughout the
Second World War she worked as a
Land Girl just outside Petworth. Her record of those years was published by the
Whittington Press in 2002 as
The Diary of a Land Girl, 1939-1945. Her prints are held in the collections of the
Victoria and Albert Museum and the
British Museum in London, the
Ashmolean Museum in
Oxford, and the
Fitzwilliam Museum in
Cambridge, among others. In 2015 an exhibition, "A Study in Contrast:
Sybil Andrews and Gwenda Morgan", was held at the
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria in
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, comparing and contrasting the fellow Grosvenor School artists. Some of her prints are on permanent display in the
Leconfield Hall, Petworth, to which Morgan gave a substantial bequest on her death. Wood engravings from the original Morgan blocks are being sold in aid of the Leconfield Hall. Kevis House Gallery in Petworth hold the largest collection of the artist's work. Three of Morgans engravings are illustrated in the book 'Sussex Landscapes: Chalk, Wood and Water', published for the eponymous exhibition at
Pallant House Gallery in 2022/23. The book contains an essay 'Eric Ravilious and Gwenda Morgan. A New Age of Wood Engraving' by Dr. Lydia Miller. == Affiliations ==