The Senefelder Club is an organization formed in London in 1909 to promote the craft of art reproduction by the process of lithography.
The club provided a forum for the artists to meet and exchange information on this heretofore semi-secret process.
[4] Joseph Pennell was elected President and Hartrick, Jackson and Kerr-Lawson formed the Committee.
[4] In 1958 the Club was renamed the Senefelder Group when members included Edward Ardizzone, James Fitton, Phyllis Ginger and Henry Trivick, who was then Chairman.
[4] The British watercolorist and lithographer Anthony Raine Barker was an enthusiastic supporter and member of the club's committee in the 1920s.