Associated Links
- Ditchling Museum | Church Lane Ditchling Sussex BN6 8TB
- Exhibtion including Gill at Aylesbury | Clear Skies and Storm Clouds Exhibition celebrates locally-inspired artists An art exhibition at Buckinghamshire County Museum beween 10 February and 2 June 2007, offers a unique opportunity to see how the county's landscape has inspired four of the best-known artists working in the 20s and 30s, between the two major World Wars. The exhibition showcases work by various artists who had connections with Buckinghamshire, including John Nash, who grew up in Iver Heath, lived in Meadle from 1922 - 1939 and was an official war artist in both World Wars; his older brother Paul, best known for his modernist, surrealist work; stone carver and sculptor Eric Gill, who lived at Pigotts, North Dean, near High Wycombe, from 1928 until his death in 1940; and Clare Leighton, the acclaimed wood engraver who lived at Monks Risborough from 1931 until 1939.
- Notre Dame University Library | An important collection of Gill material
- The Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic | Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic
- Victoria and Albert Museum | V&A
- The British Museum | The British Museum, Great Russell Street London WC1B 3DG
- Gill at the V&A: New Gallery | Ruth Cribb, assistant curator in the Sculpture Department of the V&A writes about the place of Gill in the V&A new 20th century Sculpture Gallery
- Gill 'in a strange land' | Gill's reliefs for the Palestine Archaeological Museum (now the Rockefeller Museum), Jerusalem, 1934. The reliefs were carved with the help of Gill's assistant Laurie Cribb. Before setting off, Gill spent a day in the British Museum looking for inspiration.
- Pruden and Smith silversmiths, Goldsmiths and Jewellers | Anton Pruden is the grandson of Dunstan Pruden, silversmith in the Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic. He has maintained his grandfather's tradition of fine handmade silversmithing.
- Maggs Rare Books | London Book Dealers specialising in Gill and related printed work
- Harry Epworth Allen | Gill corresponded with Harry Epworth Allen in the 1930s