“There is”, wrote ‘Tis’ (Colour Magazine, September 1916), “that picture of his entitled ‘The Listener’. It represents apparently a coster girl listening to the love offer of a coaster. But they are not really coster types, nor are their costumes really coster costumes. Strang s’en fiche: he was concerned with the great fundamental of love-making: he, according to his own explanation, was intent only upon things that matter; hence the plain background, the diagrammatic still-life, the contempt for textures”.
It was in works like this that Strang returned to the interests that had stimulated his most successful early works, the ‘Adam and Eve’ series (1899-1901), where his concern was primarily in simplifying form and colour, and subordinating technique to serve the expressive needs of the subject. The Post-Impressionist exhibitions of 1910 and 1911 had revived this interest, in more contemporary terms, and introduced to him the possibility of a more arbitrary use of colour. The work of Augustus John is an obvious influence in the choice and composition of the coster girl, whilst the still-life of fruit and vegetables relate to an earlier work by his Slade contemporary, W.Y. MacGregor, ‘The Vegetable Stall’ (1884, National Gallery of Scotland).