Wadsworth was now the beneficiary of a £250 a year income – probably via a trust fund set up by his aunt Annie – making him financially independent of his father. He attended
Bradford School of Art before earning a scholarship to the
Slade School of Art, London and spent some time at
Le Havre, prior to the start of the autumn term in 1909. His contemporaries at the school included
Mark Gertler,
Stanley Spencer,
CRW Nevinson,
William Roberts and
Dora Carrington – 'one of the greatest student classes in the history of English art schools'. and his tutors
Henry Tonks and
Philip Wilson Steer exhibited in an 'impressionist' style with the
New English Art Club whilst stressing the discipline of drawing as 'an explanation of form, analysing its construction, preparation and direction [the direction of the bones]' in their teaching. Although the cohort at the Slade was socially diverse, Wadsworth's closest friends - C.R.W. Nevinson and Adrian Allinson were from similarly wealthy backgrounds. Wadsworth's lecturer in art history at the Slade was
Roger Fry who brought the work of European modern artists such as
Cezanne,
Gauguin and
Van Gogh to London in a major exhibition 'Manet and the Post-Impressionists' at the Grafton Galleries towards the end of 1910. Barbara Wadsworth in her biography, ''A Painter's Life. Edward Wadsworth'' describes him as slowly developing in style and choice of media whilst at the Slade, yet only really making a real aesthetic leap when he met up with
Wyndham Lewis. In 1911 he had met Fanny Mary Eveleigh – a professional violinist and ten years older than Wadsworth – and they married in April 1912, prior to Wadsworth completing his time at the Slade. They set up home in Gloucester Walk off of
Kensington Church Street. Wadsworth was starting to exhibit and had a work included in Fry's 'Second Post Impressionist Exhibition' in January 1913. This exhibition brought '
cubist' pictures by Picasso and Braque to London and Wadsworth was included in ' The English Group' that included Bloomsbury artists such as
Duncan Grant, Wyndham Lewis, and Stanley Spencer ==Futurism and Vorticism==