Born in Chile in 1904 (to Scottish parents), Peggy moved as a child to London. A student of the Royal College of Art in the 1920s, her contemporaries included Eric Ravilious, Edward Bawden, Enid Marx and Helen Binyon. Peggy travelled extensively throughout her life, she captured places, people and scenes of everyday life with an intuitive perception. The portraits she painted are highly original; the designs she created for the wallpapers and ceramics that furnished her interiors are uniquely styled. Following WWII she began producing patterned tiles, adapting the design skills she had taught in the classroom, and up to the 1950s her colourful and decorative tile murals, commissioned by Carters of Poole, were used in a range of newly constructed buildings. Her success in this area prompted her to experiment with wallpaper design, creating a diverse body of work that carries echoes of an artist and designer whom she admired greatly, William Morris. Combining biography with a critical analysis of her work, this richly illustrated book aims both to celebrate Peggy's life and remarkable career and to bring it to the attention of a new generation. AUTHOR: James Russell is a widely published author on the subjects of art and history; he has written articles for World of Interiors, Eye Magazine, Ultrabold, British Archaeology, Countryman, BBC History and Illustration Magazine. His most recent books include The Art of Edward Seago (Lund Humphries, June 2014), and Eric Ravilious: Wood Engravings (Mainstone Press, 2013). He has given lectures at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Maritime Museum amongst others and is co-curating the Peggy Angus Exhibition, at the Towner, Eastbourne (Summer 2014). SELLING POINTS: ? A monograph of the artist and designer Peggy Angus, published to accompany a major exhibition at the Towner (Museum of Contemporary Art for the South East), Eastbourne in 2014 118 colour and 28 b/w illustrations