A Battery Shelled

A Battery Shelled is a 1919 painting by the English artist Wyndham Lewis. It depicts a scene from the Western Front of World War I. It was commissioned for the proposed Hall of Remembrance.

A Battery Shelled
ArtistWyndham Lewis
Year1919
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions182.8 cm × 317.5 cm (72.0 in × 125.0 in)
LocationImperial War Museum, London

Description

A number of men are seen working and moving around in a grey, cratered landscape with improvised buildings and shattered trees. Brown, stylised smoke pillars are coming out of the ground. To the left, in front of a pile of ammunition boxes, are three officers with calm and serious postures, each looking in a different direction. The officers largely have normal human traits, while the soldiers who populate the rest of the scene lack individual features. The Imperial War Museum's object description defines their unnatural, mostly light brown bodies as "marionette-like".[1]

Creation

The painting was commissioned by the British War Memorials Committee. The committee had been created in 1918 with the aim to create a Hall of Remembrance with British war paintings celebrating heroism and self-sacrifice. The inspiration came from the Renaissance, and the dimensions of the commissioned paintings were based on Paolo Uccello's The Battle of San Romano at the National Gallery. The commissions included some of the most prominent British modernist painters at the time. The Hall of Remembrance was never realised and the paintings were transferred to the Imperial War Museum.[1] Lewis served in the Royal Artillery at the Battle of Passchendaele and could draw from this experience when making the painting.[2]

See also

References

  1. "A Battery Shelled". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
  2. Prodger, Michael (2017-06-29). "The art of Wyndham Lewis is hard to love but impossible to ignore". New Statesman. Retrieved 2017-11-12.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.