Ziegler was born in London in 1903 and studied at the Central School of Arts and Crafts. He subsequently (from 1927 to 1930) studied at the Royal College of Art under William Rothenstein, whom he recalled as ‘a lively and inspiring Principal’.
The late 1920s was a rich period to attend the RCA : the likes of Bawden, Ravilious, Mahoney, Sorrell, Bliss and Freedman had already completed their formative studies and, in what was to prove the golden age of the Royal College of Art, their influence can be seen in Ziegler’s early work. Later on the influence of his fellow Jewish artists - Joseph Herman, Bernard Meninksy, David Bomberg, Mark Gertler, Emmanuel Levy and Fred Ulhman, all of whom he empathised with and wrote about with enthusiasm, came increasingly to the fore (see ‘Archibald Ziegler, Jewish Artists in England’, Studio International, vol 153-154, 1957).
After leaving the RCA Ziegler taught drawing and painting at St. Martin’s School of Art (where he was a visiting instructor for Figure Drawing and Painting) and Art History at Morley College in London and for the Worker’s Educational Association. His work was widely reproduced in publications including Illustrated London News, Country Life, Architectural Review, Mater Builder, Architecture Illustrated, Studio Artist, Courier,6 London Mercury, Leader, Bookman and The Artist.
His Royal Academy
exhibits (which between 1931 and 1970 numbered 12) were
mostly of his locality: Chelsea in the 1930s, Hendon and Hertfordshire
in the 1940s and Hampstead from the 1950s onwards.
In the final year of his life, 1971, Ziegler was given an
exhibition at Kenwood House, London - the first living
artist to be so honoured.
The catalogue opens with the statement
that (even during his own life time) “Zielger is an unfashionable
artist”. The text continues, “He is also a dedicated one,
to whom the latest manifestations of the avant-garde may well
be of interest but of little immediate attraction: a traditionalist,
who believes, naturally, in experiment, but who has never Hampstead Heath Centenary Exhibition / Archibald Ziegler,’ page
1.)
This statement - which might equally be used to describe many of his contemporaries who have also slipped from view during their own life time by virtue of being reactionary rather than avant garde - also explains precisely why such artists are now slowly re-emerging to re-charm the public eye. In Ziegler’s own words: “Experiment is an important element in art, but it must be based on continuity rather than on a violent break with all that has gone before.” (Archibald Ziegler, quoted by John Jacobson, ‘A Hampstead Heath Centenary Exhibition / Archibald Ziegler’.