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Lily Elsie

13 of 23 portraits by Malcolm Arbuthnot

© estate of Malcolm Arbuthnot

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Lily Elsie

by Malcolm Arbuthnot
vintage bromide print, 1915
8 1/8 in. x 6 in. (205 mm x 152 mm) image size
Bequeathed by Patrick O'Connor, 2010
Photographs Collection
NPG x135836

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Artistback to top

Events of 1915back to top

Current affairs

The Times Newspaper reports that Britain's Army is suffering from a lack of Ammunition Shells, pointing the finger of blame at the Liberal government. The Shell Scandal forced Asquith to form a new coalition government, bringing Conservatives into the cabinet and demonstrating the need to gear the whole country's economy towards the war effort.

Art and science

As the threat from aerial attack increased, the decision was made to protect the national art collections by storing them in basements or in locations outside London. On 15th October the National Portrait Gallery under the directorship of Sir Charles John Holmes closed its doors to the public and removed paintings from the walls.

International

Stalemate ensues on the Western Front and trench warfare begins as both sides take up defensive positions. While offensive strategies become futile, serious loss of life occurs with the first deployment of tanks and the use of poison gas.
Albert Einstein publishes his General Theory of Relativity, a model of gravitation and cosmology.

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Randy Bryan Bigham

21 August 2015, 03:31

This photo was taken in 1915. The dress was designed by Lucile for the London stage production Mavourneen. A similar Arbuthnott pose of Lily Elsie in this Lucile dress appeared in Vogue magazine (15 February 1916), p. 63.