"Mrs Watson loves driving her coach. She drives from Addlestone to Stevenage every day. The 70 miles take 3½ hours, and she has 15 minutes to check the money. Her husband drives a bus".
Despite an early crash that prevented her becoming a professional musician, Serena Wadham was a lifelong motorcycling enthusiast and belonged to at least one women's biking organisation.
Four policemen talk together outside an illegal squat in Ilford. Three faces look out from the building, one person has a loudspeaker and posters in the window declare 'Occupied by London Squatters'.
Since the early 1920s the Women's pond has been a secluded oasis popular with North London women for both swimming - especially after the pike were removed - and socialising.
Written on the back of the print by Serena Wadham:
'Suffragette (v old)
Dame Margery Corbett-Ashby, suffragist, 98. Speaking at Women's Action Day on 27-11-80.'
Written on the back of the print by Serena Wadham:
'Boulez conducting the BBC Symphony Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall, London.
Note that his conducting technique is quite unique: he can & does conduct 4 players at once. Each in a different …
A typed label fixed to the back of the print reads:
'British Writers:
Mary Stott
OPS Mary Stott, British writer and journalist whose latest book "Women Talking" was released by Pandora in 1987. She was the Editor of the Guardian Women's Page from…
Mariella Novotney, Sixties mini-icon and author of the novel, 'King's Road', who briefly amused the media with her Barbarella-like look and comic utterances such as "I'm only good at two things. One is writing; the other is making love".
Written on the back of the print by Serena Wadham:
'Midge McKenzie, director checks the framing of a shot during the making of a TV commercial.'
A British feminist and film-maker, McKenzie made her name with 'Women Talking' (1970)-interviews with…