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Seven and Five Society


Seven and Five Society


The Seven and Five Society was an art group of seven painters and five sculptors created in 1919 and based in London.

The group was originally intended to encompass traditional, conservative artistic sensibilities. The first exhibition catalogue said, "[we] feel that there has of late been too much pioneering along too many lines in altogether too much of a hurry." Artist Ben Nicholson joined in 1924, followed Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth, and changed the society into a modernistic one and expelled the non-modernist artists. In 1935, the group was renamed the Seven and Five Abstract Group. At the Zwemmer Gallery in Charing Cross Road, London, they staged the first exhibition of entirely abstract works in Britain.

Name

The first intention of the group was to include seven painters and five sculptors (‘VII and V’). This became ‘Seven & Five’ and, after a suggestion by Nicholson, simply '7 & 5'.

Exhibitions

Members

References

Further reading

  • Glazebrook, M. (1980). "Introduction". The Seven and Five Society, 1920–35 [exhibition catalogue Parkin Gallery, London, 9 January – 10 February 1980 and regional tour, 1979–80]
  • Harrison, Charles (1994) [1981]. English Art and Modernism : 1900-1939 (2nd ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300059861.
  • Bowness, Alan (1973). Ivon Hitchens. Introductory essay by T. G. Rosenthal. London: Lund Humphries. ISBN 978-0853313540.
  • Lewison, Jeremy (1993). Ben Nicholson (Repr. with corrections. ed.). London: Tate Gallery. ISBN 978-1854371300.
  • Causey, Andrew (May 2008). "Seven & Five Society (active 1919–1935)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/96398. Retrieved 18 July 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • The Fine Art Society (2014). The Seven and Five Society 1920–1935. London: The Fine Art Society. ISBN 978-1907052439


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Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Seven and Five Society by Wikipedia (Historical)