Fitzrovia, 1900-1950: An Artist's Domain

Fitzrovia by Ruth Artmonsky

Fitzrovia is a notional area not to be found on any official document and, indeed, was not so called until the 1940s, named by a habitue at the Fitzroy Tavern, the journalist-cum-member of parliament, Tom Driberg. It was, for some half century, a haven for artists. This was partly due to the cheap accommodation it offered, along with cheap cafes and food shops, many run by French and German refugees, several of generous nature when it came to impoverished artists. But even more significant was the siting of the Slade School of Fine Art, just across Tottenham Court Road, in Gower Street. Founded in 1871, it offered a more liberal education than that provided by the Royal Academy Schools.

Fitzrovia, 1900-1950: An Artist's Domain
A social history of the area of ​​London known as Fitzrovia and the artists that frequented and inhabited it.
Ruth Artmonsky
2025
80 pp

ISBN: 

978-1738501625
£10