Omega Workshops

The Omega Workshops were a design enterprise by members of the Bloomsbury group, set up as a company by the critic Roger Fry. Works were shown anonymously, marked only with the letter omega. It was founded in 1913; Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant produced designs for Omega, and Wyndham Lewis was initially part of the operation. Lewis however split off at an early stage, taking with him several other participants. Omega closed in 1919, but became influential in interior design in the 1920s. Edward Wolfe worked at the Omega Workshops handpainting candle-shades, trays and decorating furniture. Wolfe died in 1982, he was one of the last of the Bloomsbury painters. A revival of interest in Omega designs in the 1980s led to a reassessment of the place of the Bloomsbury group in visual arts.

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
guanacaste
advanced combat optical gunsight
second avenue line
guanacaste (tree)
british computer society
ticonderoga
royal statistical society
guanacaste national park
oval
lavos
tippecanoe
attribution
bcra
the people who grinned themselves to death
caldwell county
brcko
butterfly (disambiguation)
rift valley lakes
now that's what i call quite good!
steatosis
that dog.
national school
jazz royalty
dylan moran
selection algorithm
bijeljina
almanac singers
sukhoi su 30
sukhoi su 33
aidc ching kuo
prussian people
mbda mica
terry major ball
fezzan
photogrammetry
multidenominational school
glenn hoddle
karri turner
slidecage
latymer
american parliamentary debating association
tenere
list of people who died of starvation
604 (album)