Lectures
All society lectures start at 11.00am at the Victoria Hall.
Members should apply to the Membership Secretary for PRIOR PERMISSION to
bring guests as restrictions will apply to the numbers using the hall. A fee of £7 is
charged for each guest and guests must be booked in by the Monday prior to the
lecture.
Preceded by the AGM
23 October 2025
ANNALIE TALENT
Becoming Jane Austen: The Birth of a Literary Superstar
I write only for fame… Jane Austen
Detail of a portrait of Jane Austen.
From a watercolour by James Andrews of Maidenhead based on an
unfinished work by Cassandra Austen. Public domain
The start of the new membership year 2025/26
27 November 2025
MARIE-ANNE MANCIO
The History of American Art in 25 iconic works
To celebrate the 250th
anniversary of the
Declaration of
Independence in America,
explore 25 iconic works
including Grant Wood’s
‘American Gothic,’ Dorothea
Lange’s ‘Migrant Mother,’
Hopper’s ‘Nighthawks,’ of
American art.
Nighthawks by Edward Hopper, 1942, Edward Hopper. Public domain
There is no meeting in December.
January 22nd 2026
Ian Swankie
Battersea Power Station – the Four Iconic Chimneys
This is a talk about just one building. It has 60 million bricks, four chimneys and an
amazing story to tell.
Planned in the 1920s, the massive
power station operated for fifty years
but was then abandoned for the next
forty years while dozens of ideas were
proposed for its use.
It is now a Grade 2* listed building and
has been brilliantly converted into a
landmark development including
residential, retail, offices and leisure
which all still reflect its industrial
heritage.
In this sumptuously illustrated talk, Ian will take us on an armchair tour of this
famous site.
A view of Battersea Power Station in 2008, when not in active service and before major
redevelopment of the area.
Photo: Gaetan Lee from London
February 26th 2026
Sarah Burles
Les Trois Grandes Dames of Impressionism
The Impressionists were an
innovative and radical group of
artists whose took Paris by storm in
the 1870s. Using new colours and
techniques, they created paintings
of modern life which shocked and
horrified the art establishment.
From the start the group included
women artists but their contribution
to Impressionism has often been
overshadowed by their male
contemporaries. Marie
Bracquemond, Berthe Morisot and Mary Cassatt all exhibited regularly at the
Impressionist exhibitions alongside artists such as Monet, Renoir and Degas.
Marie Bracquemond Under the Lamp Public domain
March 26th 2026
Mary Alexander
The Waldorf Hotel: The extraordinary story of two iconic hotels built on Astor
Feuds, Fortunes and Art Patronage.
Immortalised in Cole Porter’s lyrics “You’re the top!
You’re a Waldorf salad”, the Waldorf Astoria hotel,
New York was ‘home in New York to the stars’,
international celebrities and world leaders.
Built at the height of the Depression and famous
before it opened, its glittering Jazz Age interiors
were created by leading European designers, artists
and sculptors.
The Waldorf Astoria, New York. After 1898
April 23rd 2026
Juliet Heslewood
Fathers: artists’ portraits of their own fathers
So many portraits of artists’ fathers show them sitting
still, wearing dark suits and reading a newspaper.
But further research reveals broader aspects of how
artists have viewed their parent – not always with
filial affection.
Daniel Huntington: Portrait of the Artist's Father 1889
May 28th 2026
Mary Branson
New Dawn: A Monument to Women’s Suffrage, Houses of Parliament
This talk informs people about my artist process and
what was involved in making this public work of art. I
will start the talk with an introduction to my artistic
practise, then go on to describe how I won the national
competition to be artist in residence for Women’s
Suffrage in Parliament.
I go on to talk about the brief and how I came up with
the concept for the monument and how the artwork
was created.
I will end with a video showing the piece being
unveiled for the first time to the public.
New Dawn. Artist Mary Branson 2016 Medium Metal and illuminated glass sculpture
June 25th
Alice Foster
The Art of Partying – a feast for the eyes
From Greek Mosaics in the second
century, through weddings in the Bible,
Renaissance allegories of refinement and
excess, sixteenth century peasant parties
out of doors, eighteenth century
harlequins, to the celebratory styles of
twentieth century painters, the depiction of
parties has always been popular in the
history of Western Art.
Alice Foster traces the variety of
merrymaking, banqueting, dances and
music in a feast of colour.
A late Roman-Republican banquet scene in a fresco from Herculaneum, Italy.
Public domain
July 2027 No meeting
August 27th 2026
Raymond Warburton
Basquiat and Banksy - Superstars of Street Art
This lecture looks at the art of Banksy and Jean-Michel Basquiat. What binds them
together is ‘street’ or ‘graffiti’ art?
Banksy is British, out of Bristol, and emerged in the 1990s with a stencil-based
approach to street art. His work pops up in the most surprising places. Most
memorable are large rodents, girls with balloons and flower-throwing freedom
fighters. Some see Banksy as a prankster but with increasingly serious cultural or
socio-political points to make. The picture that shredded itself at Sotheby’s in 2018
is a good example. Banksy remains, anonymous despite his popularity.
Born in Brooklyn in 1960, Jean-Michel Basquiat was an American artist who rose to
success during the 1980s as part of the neo-expressionism movement. He died in
1988
September 24th 2026
Brain Stater
From negative to positive: photography’s long road to recognition as Art
John Ruskin, the leading critic and aesthete, wrote
in the 1850s that photography could never be Art.
This lecture traces the struggle to overturn that view,
beginning with the Pictorialist school of Victorian
photographers and closing with the recent
emergence of photographic art inspired by digital
technology.
Along the way we examine the contested virtues of
colour images and the present revival of old-
fashioned film cameras.
I Wait. Model is Rachel Gurney. Albumen print, 327 x
254mm (12 7/8 x 10"). Photo: Julia Margaret Cameron.
Public domain
The start of the new membership year 2026/27
October 22nd 2026
Cindy Polemis
Miniature portraits: Tiny treasures close to our heart
From diplomatic gifts to tokens of love,
between the 16th-19th centuries
miniatures were commissioned as small
portraits which could be held in the
hand or placed inside lockets creating
an intimate relationship between the
owner and sitter. I will look at the history
of these tiny treasures of art.
François Clouet - Henri II of Valois and
Caterina de' Medici, Surrounded by
Members of Their Family - Unknown author.
Public domain
November 26th 2026
Elizabeth Gowing
‘The Silver Thread: silver filigree and traditional arts in Kosovo’
From the early Kosovan silver mines which are
mentioned in Dante, through the twentieth
century politics over Kosovo’s mines which
resulted in both a war and a golf course, a silver
thread winds through Kosovo’s history.
Its most intricate tanglings are in the country’s
cultural capital, Prizren, where a seventh
generation of filigree artisans use ‘filum’ and
‘granum’, zigzags, ‘mouse-tooth’ designs and
other twists and turns to magic lacy creations
from dull sticks of raw material.
The results – in boxes, buttons, jewellery,
religious ornamentation and the talismans of
superstition – are a fine narrative of Kosovo’s
history and traditions.
Medieval panagiarion Serbian. Photo: JohnGotten. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike
4.0
December: No meeting.
Web site designed, created and maintained by Janet Groome,
Handshake Computer Training.
Graffiti: Jean-Michel Basquiat Eme Freethinker
Pen Chill Mauerpark Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg,
Germany. Photo: Singlespeedfahrer. Creative
Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedication
Sweep It Under the Carpet Banksy (2006).
Photo By GualdimG - Own work, CC BY-SA
4.0,