Arts & Crafts Stained Glass by Peter Cormack (Yale, £50 *£45)

In 1933, Frederick Glasscock, who had made a fortune from custard, opened the headquarters of his Fellowship of the Knights of the Round Table at Tintagel in Cornwall. A meeting place for this briefly popular fellowship, modelled on the Freemasons, it incorporates a mighty granite-and-marble Hall of Chivalry. This is the setting for 73 windows of great beauty by Veronica Whall that are, writes Peter Cormack, ‘probably the last large-scale depiction of the Arthurian legend by a British artist’. Her achievement brings to a stirring denouement the enthralling story of how the Arts-and-Crafts movement revitalised the art of stained glass.



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