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New English Art Club 

Founded in London in 1886 as an exhibiting society by artists influenced by Impressionism and whose work was rejected by the conservative Royal Academy. Key early members were Whistler (although he soon resigned) Sickert and Steer. Others in the first show included Clausen, Stanhope Forbes and Sargent. Initially avant-garde the NEAC quickly became increasingly conservative and Sickert and Steer formed an 'Impressionist nucleus' within it, staging their own show London Impressionists in 1889. NEAC remained important as showcase for advanced art until 1911 when challenged by the Camden Town Group and London Group, and continued to be influential into the 1920s with artists such as Augustus John and Stanley Spencer exhibiting. It still exists, now preserving the Impressionist tradition.
 

Walter Richard Sickert, Minnie Cunningham at the Old Bedford, 1892
Walter Richard Sickert
Minnie Cunningham at the Old Bedford
1892
 
Philip Wilson Steer, The Beach at Walberswick, ?circa 1889
Philip Wilson Steer
The Beach at Walberswick
?circa 1889
 
Sir George Clausen, The Girl at the Gate, 1889
Sir George Clausen
The Girl at the Gate
1889