Pearl Binder
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Pearl Binder, Baroness Elwyn-Jones (pronounced Template:IPAc-en;[1] 28 June 1904 – 25 January 1990)[2][3] was a British writer, illustrator, stained-glass artist, lithographer, sculptor and a champion of the Pearly Kings and Queens.
Binder was a well-known character who had a lifelong fascination with the East End of London, where she settled in the 1920s. In 1974, she became Lady Elwyn-Jones, when her husband, the politician and lawyer Elwyn Jones, was appointed Lord Chancellor and made a life peer, taking the title Baron Elwyn-Jones.[4]
Early life
Pearl "Polly" Binder was born in Salford in Greater Manchester. Her father was Jacob Binderevski, a Jewish tailor[3] who came to Britain in 1890 and shortly afterwards became a British citizen. Her mother's name, origins and profession are not recorded in any of the artist's biographies.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Career
Binder moved to London after the first world war and studied art at Central School of Art and Design, with a focus on lithography.[5] In this time Binder drew scenes from everyday life in London that she made into lithographs. She published a series that illustrated "The Real East End" by Thomas Burke, a popular writer who ran a pub in Poplar at the time. Binder's illustrations are an intimate, first-hand portrayal of grimy London life in that era.[6] In 1933 Binder was one of the founders of the left-wing Artists' International Association.[7][8]
In 1937, Binder was involved in the earliest days of television broadcasting for children.[4] That year, she co-presented Clothes-Line with the fashion historian James Laver. This live six-part series was the first television programme on the history of fashion. As she did not give birth to her daughter Josephine until 6 January 1938 – less than a month after the last episode transmitted – Binder could well have been the first heavily pregnant woman to appear on television.[9]
In the course of her life, Binder travelled extensively in Russia and China, designed a musical,[10] designed costumes for a theatre company, wrote stories for children, designed a Pearly mug and plate for Wedgwood, and instigated and executed a series of armorial windows at the House of Lords.[5][11]
Personal life
In 1937, she married Elwyn Jones. They had three children: fashion historian Lou Taylor,[9] artist and activist Dan Jones,[12][13] and the children's author Josephine Gladstone,[9] whose books she illustrated. After her death, her son-in-law, Joe Taylor recalled, "She was a woman who had great concern for others, especially women - she was a very keen supporter of women's rights", always keeping the name Pearl Binder next to her husband's name on the plaque outside their flat.[3]
Death
Binder died in Brighton on 25 January 1990 aged 86, seven weeks after the death of her husband.[3][14]
Publications
As illustrator
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As author and illustrator
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- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". – Japanese translation of Dressing up, dressing down
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References
External links
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- Artwork by Pearl Binder at the Ben Uri site
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- ↑ "Pearl Binder", BFI.org.uk; accessed 11 February 2018.
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- ↑ Paul Jobling and David Crowley,Graphic Design: reproduction and representation since 1800. Manchester, New York: Manchester University Press, pg. 128; Template:ISBN
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- ↑ a b c Taylor, Lou, Establishing Dress History, chapter 2 (Manchester 2002); Template:ISBN
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- ↑ "Jones, (Frederick) Elwyn, Baron Elwyn-Jones (1909–1989)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
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- 1904 births
- 1990 deaths
- 20th-century British sculptors
- 20th-century English women artists
- Alumni of the Central School of Art and Design
- British baronesses by marriage
- British stained glass artists and manufacturers
- English children's writers
- English lithographers
- English people of Russian-Jewish descent
- English people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent
- English television personalities
- English women sculptors
- Jewish women artists
- People from Salford
- Spouses of life peers
- Women lithographers
- 20th-century British lithographers
- 20th-century British women sculptors