Amy Julia Drucker

1873–1951

Born in London to a family of German Jewish descent, Amy Julia Drucker studied at the Lambeth School of Art and then earned her living as a painter, exhibiting widely in England and around the world. Adventurous, she traveled across the globe, painting in China, Brazil, Ethiopia (where she produced a portrait of the Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie), and Palestine, where she taught drawing in Jerusalem. Drucker painted emotional scenes of poverty, immigration, and hardship, often locating them in London’s East End. She also produced lithographs, woodcuts, and drawings.

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Air Raid Shelter

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This scene in a bomb shelter during World War I is characterized by the empathy and intimacy with which many of Amy Julia Drucker’s London paintings were imbued. The children stand out amid the masses…