21
July 2025

Women Artists of the 1930s

Welcome to The Arts Society Nidd Valley (Harrogate Evening Group)
Monday, July 21, 2025 - 19:30
Christ Church
Church Square, The Stray Harrogate HG1 4SW
Online Event

Two brilliant female artists - Tirzah Garwood and Suzanne Cooper - whose work is finally getting its due.

Two brilliant female artists - Tirzah Garwood and Suzanne Cooper - whose work is finally getting its due.

Tirzah Garwood, wife of Eric Ravilious, was an English surrealist to whom Lewis Carroll would have felt akin. Before she was twenty-two she was making bold, intricate wood-engravings. When Eric died in 1942, Tirzah began making collages and oil paintings. Colourful, fantastical, and slightly sinister, they show toy soldiers and giant hornets, tiny houses and huge kittens. 

As a student at the Grosvenor School in the 1930s, Suzanne Cooper was showing wood-engravings, and paintings, comparable to those of Christopher Wood, in West End Galleries. Then came the war. Cooper married, and laid aside her artistic ambitions. Her first solo show, 25 years after her death, at the Fry Art Gallery in 2018, was greeted by critics as ‘revelatory’, and a ‘rare and exciting event’. It’s a joy to celebrate these two brilliant artists, especially as Suzanne Cooper was Lucy's mother-in-law. 

THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

Ms Lucy Hughes-Hallett

Lucy Hughes-Hallett is a cultural historian and biographer. Her book on Gabriele d’Annunzio, The Pike, was described in The Sunday Times as ‘the biography of the decade’. It won all three of the UK’s most prestigious prizes for non-fiction - the Samuel Johnson Prize, the Duff Cooper Prize and the Costa Biography Award. Her other non-fiction books include Cleopatra and Heroes

She also writes fiction. Her novel, Peculiar Ground, is largely set in the 17th century, and narrated by a landscape designer loosely based on the great diarist John Evelyn. It was described as 'almost Tolstoyan in its sly wit and descriptive brilliance' (The Guardian) and 'full of drama, vivid characters, wit, gorgeous writing and fascinating detail’. (New York Times).  In her short story collection, Fabulous, she retells fables from classical mythology, relocating them to modern Britain.

A Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and of the Historical Association, she has written on books, theatre and the visual arts for publications including The Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Observer, The New Statesman and the TLS. She was Chair of the Judges for the 2021 International Booker Prize.