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Rebel Art Centre 

The Rebel Art Centre was a short-lived affair, founded by Wyndham Lewis in London in March 1914 as a meeting place for artists to discuss revolutionary ideas and teach non-representational art. By the summer of 1914 the Centre, based at 38 Great Ormond Street in London, had closed down as a result of internal disputes. Yet, in those brief months, it had hosted an exhibition of sculptures by the prodigiously talented Henri Gaudier-Brzeska and a lecture by the writer Ezra Pound. Originally set up as a rival to Roger Fry’s art and design collective Omega Workshops, the Rebel Art Centre pursued a hotly militant form of Futurism that was to become known as Vorticism. Its members numbered the Omega defectors Frederick Etchells, Cuthbert Hamilton and Edward Wadsworth and the painter Kate Lechmere. The centre featured geometric murals painted by Lewis and screens designed by Christopher Nevinson. Little collective art was produced at the centre, but it became the early headquarters of the Vorticists and the radical art publication Blast.
 

Wyndham Lewis, Workshop, circa 1914-5
Wyndham Lewis
Workshop
circa 1914-5
 
Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson, La Mitrailleuse, 1915
Christopher Richard Wynne Nevinson
La Mitrailleuse
1915
 
Edward Wadsworth, The Port, circa 1915
Edward Wadsworth
The Port
circa 1915