EXHIBITIONS
RECENT PAINTINGS Including PAINTINGS OF THE BALLET by CLIFFORD HALL
Held at the Leger Gallery, 13 Old Bond Street, London W1, November - December 1938
©2018 - 2024 Estate of Clifford Hall
1. Café table
2. Rue Norvins
3. L'après-midi d'un faune
4. Dancers leaving the stage - Covent Garden
5. Dancer in make-up
6. Kingston Bridge
7. Rue St. Vincent
8. Danseuse - Le Cent Baisers (water-colour)
9. Dancers resting (water-colour)
10. Bull Fight - Marseilles (water-colour)
11. The Landscape painter
12. Three clowns (water-colour)
13. Pilar Lopez (water-colour)
14. Cimarosiana (water-colour)
15. Les Cent baisers- Rue de deux
16. The Dressing-table.
17. Boats at Hampton Court
18. Riabouchinska in "Les Sylphides"- Covent Garden
19. Contre jour
20. Wargrave
21. Leo Kersley in practice costume
22. Strand-on-the-Green
23. Trubka and his tigers at Olympia
24. The Wood
25. Spectre de la Rose-Petroff and Rabouchinska (Gouache)
26. La danseuse
27. Three Apples Lent by WILLIAM STRANG Esq.
28. Jeanette sleeping
29. Gitanes
30. The front - Southsea
31. The Divan
32. Seal High Street
33. The Great Carmo's Circus (water-colour)
34. Le Cent Baisers (water-colour)
35. Hampton Court Fair (water-colour))
36. At the Zoo (water-colour)
37. Dancer in practice costume
Picture Details:
The exhibition consisted of 22 oil paintings and 19 watercolours:
Sizes were not included in the catalogue; prices were.
Oils Guineas
FOREWORD
This, the fourth* one-man exhibition in London of Clifford Hall's painting, covers the period of the past three years.
As may be seen from the present show, Ballet has been one of his chief interests during this time.
Although still a young man, Clifford Hall has received much official recognition, for amongst the Museums who have accepted his work are: The Victorian and Albert Museum, The Brooklyn Museum of Fine Arts, U.S.A., Altrincham Municipal Art Gallery, etc.
Notes:
* It was actually his fifth if the one at the St Martin's Gallery, 33, St Martins Court, Charring Cross Road, London WC2 in 1929 is counted. The reason for it not being counted at the time was possibly that it wasn't a gallery in W1 and was therefore not considered a West End gallery.