Skip to content

✌🏼 Free Shipping on orders £20

Visitors Book

Visitors Book

By: Turner, Jon Lys
Genre:
  • Art & design styles: from c 1960
Regular price £11.99
Sale price £11.99 Regular price
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

Quick, only 2 items left in stock!

  • Free UK shipping on orders over £20
  • Order before 1pm for same day dispatch
Sold and shipped by SpeedyHen
Payment & Security
Payment methods
  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Bancontact
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Maestro
  • Mastercard
  • Shop Pay
  • Union Pay
  • Visa

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

Visitors Book

Visitors Book

Regular price £11.99
Sale price £11.99 Regular price

Denis Wirth-Miller and Dicky Chopping were a couple at the heart of the mid-twentieth century art world, with the visitors'' book of the Essex townhouse they shared from 1945 until 2008 painting them as Zeligs of British society. The names recorded inside make up an astonishing supporting cast - from Francis Bacon to Lucian Freud to Randolph Churchill to John Minton. Successful artists, although not household names themselves, writing Dicky and Denis off as just footnotes in history would be a mistake. After Denis''s death in 2010, Jon Lys-Turner, one of two executors of the couple''s estate, came into possession of an extraordinary archive of letters, works of art and symbolically loaded ephemera the two had collected since they met in the 1930s. It is no exaggeration to state that this archive represents a missing link in British art history - the wealth of new biographical information disclosed about Francis Bacon, for example, is truly staggering.


The Visitors'' Book is both an extraordinary insight into the minutiae of Dicky and Denis''s life together and what it meant to be gay in pre-Wolfenden Britain, as well as a pocket social history of the era and a unique perspective into mid-twentieth century art. With reams of previously unseen material, this is a fascinating and unique opportunity to delve into post-war Britain.