To recapture the spirit of the Edwardian era (1901-10), it is necessary only to look at the romantic country houses built by the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens and the fashionable portraits painted by John Singer Sargent. (Sargent, an American, lived in London for many years.) They reflect a world of wealth and privilege that changed forever after World War I (1914-18).
The English art world had begun to undergo changes early in the century with the introduction of modern art movements. Walter Richard Sickert returned to London from Paris in 1905 to found the Camden Town Group of painters, who produced realistic depictions of everyday life. In 1910 the artist and critic Roger Fry arranged the first large-scale exhibition in London of work by the French postimpressionists. The impact was felt immediately by a new generation of students at the Slade School of Art, who rapidly aligned themselves with the modern movements. Of these, the vorticists, led by Percy Wyndham Lewis, were perhaps the most important in establishing a London-based group of abstract artists.
For a brief period in the 1930's, London competed with Paris as the center of the European art world. Artists and architects fleeing repressive governments settled in England. Among them were the German architect Walter Gropius, the Russian sculptor Naum Gabo, and the Dutch painter Piet Mondrian. This internationalism was reflected in the publication of the art journal Circle in 1937. The journal was a survey of international constructivist art, a popular modern art movement.
Two influential British figures were the painter Ben Nicholson and his wife, the sculptor Barbara Hepworth. During the bombing of London in World War II, they moved to the village of St. Ives, in Cornwall. There they established an artists' colony that was continued by a younger generation of artists, including the painters Roger Hilton and Peter Lanyon.
Internationalism has been the keynote of English art since 1945. Many English artists have lived and worked in other countries. The towering achievement of the sculptor Henry Moore is recognized worldwide. His works, with their curved shapes and interplay of solids and space, greatly influenced his contemporaries. Anthony Caro taught sculpture and created his welded metal works in both England and the United States. The earth artist Richard Long worked with the natural landscape to create innovative outdoor artworks in Europe, North and South America, Africa, and elsewhere.
Among painters, Francis Bacon gained an international reputation for his extremely powerful and often disturbing images. David Hockney, who moved to California in 1964, is perhaps the best known of the English artists who have settled abroad. His paintings, photographic collages, and other works show his mastery of different styles and mediums.