Edwin La Dell

Thomas Edwin La Dell ARA (7 January 1914 – 27 June 1970) was a British printmaker, lithographer, illustrator and painter active during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s.

[3] After attending Sheffield School of Art, in 1935 he won a scholarship to study at the Royal College of Art under John Nash; he later became head of the Department of Lithography at the college[4][5] from 1948 until his death in 1970.

[7] La Dell was appointed as an official war artist during the Second World War, working on both public murals and camouflage,[1] but his best known works are those from the post-war era, in particular the lithographs he created for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, for the School Prints scheme,[1] for Lyons Tea Rooms and his own series of Oxford, Cambridge, Kent and New York.

His work was exhibited throughout the world during this period under the auspices of the British Council.

[8] One of the artists La Dell worked with during the war was Charles Mozley, whose wife's sister, Joan Kohn, married La Dell in 1940.