He felt by promoting the use of the cheap and easily obtained new material he was making it possible for the masses to be exposed to art.
[2] He taught at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art from 1926 and wrote and organized exhibitions on linocuts.
His pupils included various now-famous print artists such as Lill Tschudi, Cyril Power, Eileen Mayo, Dorrit Black and Sybil Andrews.
Influenced by Cubism, Futurism and Vorticism, his work expressed dynamic rhythm through bold, simple forms.
[5] This print resulted from a Swiss summer holiday made by Flight and Edith Lawrence in 1933.