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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Walter Sickert, Study for The Old Bedford, 1894, c.
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Walter Sickert, Study for The Old Bedford, 1894, c.

Walter Sickert

Study for The Old Bedford, 1894, c.
Pencil on paper
31.7 x 19.8 cm
12 1/2 x 7 3/4 in
Copyright The Artist
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Walter Sickert, Study for The Old Bedford, 1894, c.
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Walter Sickert, Study for The Old Bedford, 1894, c.
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Music hall was the pre-eminent metropolitan popular entertainment of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and its performers ranged from bawdy public-house turns to the early celebrities of Hollywood...
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Music hall was the pre-eminent metropolitan popular entertainment of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and its performers ranged from bawdy public-house turns to the early celebrities of Hollywood such as Charlie Chaplin. Sickert went to halls on London’s peripheries at Shoreditch, Canning Town, Camden Town, as well as those in the West End such as the Oxford on Oxford Street, the Empire in Leicester Square and the Middlesex (or ‘Old Mo’) in Drury Lane. ‘He came because he loved it, because it was moving with a colourful, romantic life of its own’, Emmons wrote. For long periods of Sickert’s career, beginning in 1884 or so, Sickert visited the music halls and there made drawings and etchings from life.

The gallery afforded cheap seats for music hall’s least affluent patrons. This drawing depicts the gallery at the Bedford Music Hall in Camden Town. A motley crowd, reflected by a large mirror on the left, is packed into tight rows. Two lean against the front of the balcony, the head of one framed beneath a handrail. The classical architecture—swags, pilasters, friezes—is a flamboyant kind typical of pleasure palaces. This drawing dates from 1894 or so when the original Bedford was still standing, while Sickert’s etchings of the same subject were made some years after it had been demolished and rebuilt more grandly. They consequently became depictions of the ‘Old’ Bedford. Sickert’s decision to etch this subject suggests a partiality for both the lost building and his earlier paintings and drawings of it, which he made in several versions [Baron 2006, no. 97]. It is not known when Sickert began work on the large plate, but he adopted it as one of the Carfax series of etchings, reworked it extensively, and it was published in 1915.
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Provenance

Ruth and Joseph Bromberg
The Fine Art Society, London, 2004
The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, Los Angeles, May 2004

Exhibitions

London, The Fine Art Society, The Ruth and Joseph Bromberg Collection of Sickert Prints and Drawings, 21 Sept. – 21 Oct. 2004, cat. no. 38

London, Piano Nobile, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, 26 Sept. – 19 Dec. 2025, no. 9

Literature

Ruth Bromberg, Walter Sickert: Prints: A Catalogue Raisonné, Yale University Press, 2000, cat. no. 130e, p. 132, incorrectly captioned fig. 131a (illus.)
The Ruth and Joseph Bromberg Collection of Sickert Prints and Drawings, exh. cat., The Fine Art Society, 2004, cat. no. 38, p. 38 (col. illus.)
Kate Aspinall, Luke Farey and Stuart Lucas, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, exh. cat., Piano Nobile, 2025, no. 9, p. 40 (col. illus.)*
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