Hester Sainsbury

[5] Her group was known before the war as the Clarissa Club, which she and another dancer, Kathleen Dillon founded and ran at 71 Royal Hospital Road, Chelsea.

[6] The whole of the October 1915 issue of Others magazine was devoted to "The Choric School", with contributions by Sainsbury and the poets Ezra Pound, Kathleen Dillon and John Rodker.

[7][8] Sainsbury became a successful artist and print-maker in the 1920s, being known among other things for using an engraving tool that cut multiple parallel lines rather than the usual one.

[2] She and Etchells moved away from London's artistic scene to France House, East Hagbourne, Oxfordshire, which he personally restored.

[10][11] Her artistic career largely came to an end on moving to Berkshire, though she illustrated an edition of Torahiko Kori's works, published in Tokyo in 1936.

Photograph of Henry Scott Tuke with his sister's four children [c.1899] Photographer Unknown. (from left) Hester Margaret Sainsbury, William Tuke Sainsbury, Geoffrey Harrington Sainsbury, Henry Scott Tuke, Philip A Sainsbury at Mawnan Smith