This exhibition highlighted the artistic works created by Paul Drury during the Second World War, which only became publicly known in the 1980s. Aged 35 at the outbreak of the War, Paul Drury was deemed unfit for active service due to visual impairment. Instead, he and his wife, the painter Enid Solomon, volunteered at Queen Mary’s Hospital, Roehampton, where he created numerous drawings of patients and hospital equipment. Known as a talented portrait artist, Drury managed to sympathetically portray his sitters at the hospital, who often had suffered physical or psychological trauma.