Cameo Corner , 1919
83 x 55.5 cm (h x w)
Lithographic poster

© David Bomberg estate

Originally printed by W R Frick, a Smithfields lithographer, then reproduced in a limited edition of 150 in 1983, this poster was commissioned by the Polish-Jewish poet Moshe Oved (Edward Goodack, aka Good), a founder member of the Ben Uri Art Society, as an advertisement. Oved's jewellery shop 'Cameo Corner', at 1 New Oxford Street, offered 'all sorts of barbaric and beautiful things ... at prices within reach of all', and numbered Queen Mary among its customers. The model in the foreground, seen stringing 'rare beads', is Bomberg's first wife, Alice Mayes. Pictorial devices, such as the bold bissection of the background, and retention of sharp-edged geometric forms, can be found in contemporaneous works including the painting Ghetto Theatre (1920) and the gouache Canal Bank, France (1920).

Ausgestellt von

Ben Uri Research Unit

Mehr von Ben Uri Research Unit

Stalin's Revenge , 2017
120 x 100 cm (h x w)
acrylic on linen
Ben Uri Research Unit
Vertical Movement , c. 1950s
118 x 98.5 cm (h x w)
Oil on canvas
Ben Uri Research Unit
Portrait of a Woman verso Gipsy , n.d.
32.5 x 25.5 cm (h x w)
Watercolour on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Verso Gipsy , n.d.
32.5 x 25.5 cm (h x w)
#Watercolour on Paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Wounded (Portrait of a man in a cap) , n.d.
54.5 x 37 cm (h x w)
oil on paper on board
Ben Uri Research Unit