Explore Enid Marx’s Influence on Modern British Design
Explore Enid Marx’s Influence on Modern British Design
Step into a world of abstract design in this major exhibition, the first to explore the influential patterns of Enid Marx and her community, as well as their impact on modern British design in the 20th century.
From Tube Seats to Textiles: The Work of Enid Marx
Marx is best known as the designer of woven London Underground (Tube) seat moquette fabric and as an illustrator of children’s books. However, she was also a prolific producer of hand block-printed textiles (ca.1925–1940) and later designs for fabrics woven for the public (ca.1936–1947).
Meet the Craftswomen Who Shaped British Design
While works of Marx’s contemporaries at the Royal College of Art, St Ives School and Bloomsbury Group, such as Eric Ravilious, Paul Nash, Bernard Leach, Michael Cardew and Roger Fry, are well known, Marx’s close community of craftswomen and designers, including Ethel Mairet, Phyllis Barron, Dorothy Larcher, Katherine Pleydell-Bouverie and Norah Braden have sometimes been sidelined. Their approaches to handmade pattern and texture show how design acted as forms of personal, national and imperial expression, as well as embodying a series of double meanings reflecting queer identifications, intimacy and kinship.
A Landmark Exhibition Featuring V&A Loans
With major loans from the V&A and other national collections, this exhibition will chart Marx’s life through fabric, tracing the geopolitics of British design and the lasting impact of her work.

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Visitor information
Address
Compton Verney House, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, CV35 9HZ
01926 645500
Opening times
Wed – Sun, 10am-5pm
Mon – Closed, except bank holidays.
Tue - Closed
Galleries open from 10.30am




