Modern Art Gallery

Jack Bilbo was born Hugo Baruch in Berlin in 1907. He took the name Jack Bilbo in 1933, after his family’s theatre outfitting business was confiscated by the Nazis. He was forced to flee to France, then Spain, before settling in London in 1936. A self-taught artist, he began to paint and sculpt and soon exhibited his work in London, but in 1940 was interned as an enemy alien on the Isle of Man. During his internment he met other artists, and this led to his founding the Modern Art Gallery after his release. Many London galleries had closed because of the bombing, but Bilbo felt that art must not be a war casualty, as artists create civilization so he opened his gallery in London in 1941. The Modern Art Gallery became a mecca for refugee artists like his friend Kurt Schwitters and many young British painters. As well as his own paintings, Bilbo exhibited works by Picasso alongside unknown artists, and held evening events of readings of Dadaist poetry and his own macabre and fantastic stories.

After the war, the gallery closed and he moved to Weybridge where he created giant primitive figures in cement in the garden of his home. Local hostility led to these works being destroyed by dynamite after he left England. He moved with his wife to the South of France in the 1950’s and eventually returned to his native Berlin where he died in 1967. A retrospective exhibition in 1988 at England & Co led to the acquisition by the British Museum of Bilbo’s ink drawings for his book 'Out of My Mind'. A second exhibition, Jack Bilbo & the Moderns: The Modern Art Gallery 1941-48, was also curated by Jane England at England & Co in 1990, when Bilbo’s own works were hung alongside those of some of his artists, re-creating in effect his own gallery. Bilbo’s work was also included in the exhibition Obsessive Visions: Art Outside the Mainstream at England & Co Gallery in 2001.

Number of Artists referenced: 11