1 - National Portrait Gallery
Hubert Leslie was a World War I veteran who cut silhouettes on Brighton Pier, on the south coast of England, during the 1920s and 30s. When he died, in 1976, he left to the National Portrait Gallery a set of duplicate albums containing some 20,000 silhouettes. Charles never met him, yet regards Leslie as his first teacher; he learned his craft by studying these albums in the archive room.
The albums are not on public display, but you can make an appointment to see them in the archive room if you wish to see this extraordinary and little-known collection close up.