Crowborough Community Centre, Crowborough, TN6 1FE
Price
Members free. Visitors £8 payable at the door.
The Roaring Twenties was a loud and boisterous decade, marked by novelty, modernity and huge social, technological and economic change. It spawned a generation of wealthy and privileged Bright Young Things, who were determined to shock and to break with the conventions of the past.
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As its name suggests the Roaring Twenties was a loud and boisterous decade, marked by novelty, modernity and huge social, technological and economic change. Following the dark days of the Great War, it spawned a generation of wealthy and privileged Bright Young Things, who were determined to shock and to break with the conventions of the past. This was a period of enormous vitality not only in social but also in art and design. Fashionable society was captured by portraitists such as John Lavery and Cecil Beaton, who brilliantly captured the glamour of the age. Leisure, pleasure and the excitement of jazz, along with the speed of city and travel, were captured in paint by Burra, Roberts and Nevinson. Furniture and decoration showed the influence of avante-garde styles, such as Cubism and Vorticism, while the discovery of Tutankhamun’s Tomb ushered in an obsession with all things Egyptian and Oriental. Jo Banham is a freelance curator, lecturer and writer, and is a regular and popular speaker for Arts Societies. She has held posts of the Head of Learning and Access at the National Portrait Gallery, Head of Public Programmes at Tate Britain and from 2006 to 2016 Head of Adult Learning at Tate Britain. She has also been Curator of Leighton House and Assistant Keeper at the Whitworth Art Gallery. She is a Director of the Victorian Society Summer School and has published on many aspects of Victorian and early 20the century decoration and interiors. Refreshments are provided after the lecture