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Design of three waiters serving in a cafe

Drawing
1928 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Geoffrey Houghton Brown was a mural painter in the 1920s and 1930s who once shared a studio with Rex Whistler. This is one of thirteen designs [E.415-427-1987] for mural decoration in the Blue Train Restaurant, Stratton Street, London. This fashionable restaurant was owned by an Italian named Savrani. Through the agency of the Marchese Malacreda, a noted contemporary decorator, he commissioned Geoffrey Houghton Brown to provide and execute murals on the theme of travel. The artist, with a team of three Chinese assistants, who doubled as theatrical scene painters, painted the murals in oil and turpentine directly onto the white-painted walls. The theme was the Blue Train which ran to the South of France. The large drawings relate to the scene in the bar area, which was known as the Merry-go-round. The site became Langan's Brasserie; all decorations have disappeared


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleDesign of three waiters serving in a cafe (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Pen and indian ink, wash, bodycolour and chinese white.
Brief description
Design of three waiters, serving in a café, for mural decoration in the Blue Train Restaurant, Stratton Street, London, 1928, by Geoffrey Houghton Brown (1903-1993)
Physical description
Wash drawing of three waiters, serving in a cafe. They are all wearing a blazer and an apron around their waist. The figure on the left is facing away from the viewer, the other two can be seen to be wearing a bow tie. The central figure is leaning down with a plate in his hand.
Dimensions
  • Height: 40.7cm
  • Width: 35cm
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Summary
Geoffrey Houghton Brown was a mural painter in the 1920s and 1930s who once shared a studio with Rex Whistler. This is one of thirteen designs [E.415-427-1987] for mural decoration in the Blue Train Restaurant, Stratton Street, London. This fashionable restaurant was owned by an Italian named Savrani. Through the agency of the Marchese Malacreda, a noted contemporary decorator, he commissioned Geoffrey Houghton Brown to provide and execute murals on the theme of travel. The artist, with a team of three Chinese assistants, who doubled as theatrical scene painters, painted the murals in oil and turpentine directly onto the white-painted walls. The theme was the Blue Train which ran to the South of France. The large drawings relate to the scene in the bar area, which was known as the Merry-go-round. The site became Langan's Brasserie; all decorations have disappeared
Collection
Accession number
E.420-1987

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Record createdJuly 27, 2000
Record URL
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