Chiswick School of Art

The Chiswick School of Art, sometimes called the Chiswick School of Art and Science, was an art school in Bath Road, Bedford Park, London, from 1881 until 1899, which was then merged into the Acton and Chiswick Polytechnic. In 1928, it became the Chiswick Polytechnic.

School of Art, Stores and Tabard Inn by Thomas Erat Harrison, 1882

Origins edit

 
Maurice Bingham Adams's map of Bedford Park, 1897

The development of Bedford Park as a garden suburb was made possible by the creation of the District Line in 1869. The lead developer was Jonathan Carr, who in 1875 bought 24 acres (9.7 ha) of land just north of the new Turnham Green Station. The City of London was then thirty minutes away by steam train.[1]

The school was planned to help to give the new garden suburb a sense of community. The arts and crafts architect Maurice Bingham Adams was commissioned to design a School of Art building, which was completed on Bath Road in 1881, near the new Tabard Inn, Richard Norman Shaw's St Michael and All Angels Church, and a shop.[2]

The school was formally opened on Saturday, 19 November 1881, and this was followed by an evening party with the Conservative member of parliament Alexander Beresford Hope presiding.[3]

The new building was illustrated by Thomas Erat Harrison in a book of 1882 called Bedford Park.[2]

History edit

At the outset, the school taught "Freehand drawing in all its branches, practical Geometry and perspective, pottery and tile painting, design for decorative purposes – as in Wall-papers, Furniture, Metalwork, Stained Glass".[4]

By 1887, the name of the school had become the Chiswick School of Art and Science, and in November of that year new classes were announced in Chemistry, Steam, and Electricity.[5]

In 1899, the school was taken over by Middlesex County Council to become part of the new Acton and Chiswick Polytechnic. In 1928, the two branches of this were separated, so that the building in Bedford Park became the home of the Chiswick Polytechnic.[4]

The building was destroyed by a V-1 flying bomb in 1944,[6] but a new Chiswick Polytechnic rose from the ashes. In 1976, this was merged into the West London Institute of Higher Education. In the 1980s, the site was acquired by Arts Educational Schools.[7]

Notable students edit

Students included Jack Butler Yeats, his sisters Elizabeth and Susan Yeats,[7] and Bruce Angrave.[8]

Gallery edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gillian Clegg, People, Brentford and Chiswick Local History Society, archived June 2021, accessed 11 August 2022
  2. ^ a b John Charles Dollman, Berry F. Berry, et al., Bedford Park (Harrison and Sons, 1882) OCLC 193146366
  3. ^ “CHISWICK SCHOOL OF ART”, The Morning Post, Monday 21 November 1881, p. 3: “CHISWICK SCHOOL OF ART. On Saturday evening the Chiswick School of Art was formally opened. A soirée was held at the school, at which Mr. Beresford-Hope, M.P., presided...”
  4. ^ a b 1881 – Chiswick School of Art, Bedford Park, London, Archiseek, 26 August 2009, accessed 11 August 2022
  5. ^ “CHISWICK SCHOOL OF ART AND SCIENCE, BEDFORD PARK. NEW CLASSES now FORMING on CHEMISTRY, STEAM, and ELECTRICITY. Intending Students are requested to enter their names at once.” Acton Gazette, Saturday, 5 November 1887, p. 4
  6. ^ Chiswick School of Art, Artist Biographies, accessed 11 August 2022
  7. ^ a b W B Yeats Bedford Park Artwork Project, wbyeatsbedfordpark.com, accessed 11 August 2022
  8. ^ Dr Bex Lewis, Bruce Angrave (b 1914; d.1983), drbexl.co.uk, 24 July 2009

51°29′46″N 0°15′11″W / 51.496°N 0.253°W / 51.496; -0.253