His mural for the RCA Building at the Rockefeller Center in New York (1932-3), featured in the exhibition, is among his best-known works. The display also shows one of Brangwyn's large paintings for a series of Venetian scenes formerly at Horton House in Northamptonshire.
Its Venetian Washerwomen panel is typical of Brangwyn’s large-scale paintings that impress by their sheer scale and quality of draughtsmanship.
Less imposing but equally impressive are the displays of his prints including etchings, lithographs and woodcuts. From mosques in Istanbul to hop pickers in a London railway station his work combines epic proportions and scale with an immediacy and impact.
The display also includes applied art made from Brangwyn's designs, including furniture and an important collection of ceramics.
The William Morris Gallery was opened in 1950 by the then Prime Minister Clement Attlee and is the only public museum devoted to the celebrated pioneer of the Arts and Crafts movement, who lived from 1834-1896.