As war broke out across Europe in 1914 the Vorticist painter Wyndham Lewis advised: ‘You must not miss a war, if one is going! You cannot afford to miss that experience’. He may have been playfully ironic, but he recognised that the Great War presented a set of complex challenges, that might make or break reputations at a critical juncture in British art. Many artists, poets and writers have had to live with the uncomfortable recognition that conflict fuels their muse, invigorating the imagination and honing their creativity. This book explores a diverse group of those artists and their work, from the conservative draughtsmanship of Scottish etcher Muirhead Bone to the irreverent angularity of the young gunner William Roberts; from th...
Equally talented as a writer and painter, Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957) was one of the most innovative a...
Much of how World War I is understood today is rooted in the artistic depictions of the brutal viole...
This study examines paintings of battle produced in Britain between c.1885 and 1919, drawing for exa...
After war broke out across Europe in 1914 the Vorticist painter Wyndham Lewis advised: ‘You must no...
The British government was slow to commission artists in the First World War. French and German arti...
Few British artists emerged from the cauldron of the Great War as radically transformed as the young...
When brothers John and Paul Nash held their first exhibition in 1913 at the Dorien Leigh Gallery in ...
Undertaken during the centenary of the First World War, this thesis endeavours to understand for the...
The First World War has been mythologized since 1918, and many paradigmatic views of it - that it wa...
Unlike other young men who eagerly rushed to the Western Front with patriotic idealism and naive her...
The 1914-18 period saw huge changes at The Glasgow School of Art (GSA) as the School, along with the...
Britain and the Widening War 1915-1916: "In a series of concise, thought-provoking chapters the au...
This paper examines the artists sent to the Western Front under Britain’s official war artists initi...
My chapter, comprising some 7,000 words with 4 plates, focussed on letters written by certain Britis...
As the First World War entered its second year Henry James lamented the failure of language to do ju...
Equally talented as a writer and painter, Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957) was one of the most innovative a...
Much of how World War I is understood today is rooted in the artistic depictions of the brutal viole...
This study examines paintings of battle produced in Britain between c.1885 and 1919, drawing for exa...
After war broke out across Europe in 1914 the Vorticist painter Wyndham Lewis advised: ‘You must no...
The British government was slow to commission artists in the First World War. French and German arti...
Few British artists emerged from the cauldron of the Great War as radically transformed as the young...
When brothers John and Paul Nash held their first exhibition in 1913 at the Dorien Leigh Gallery in ...
Undertaken during the centenary of the First World War, this thesis endeavours to understand for the...
The First World War has been mythologized since 1918, and many paradigmatic views of it - that it wa...
Unlike other young men who eagerly rushed to the Western Front with patriotic idealism and naive her...
The 1914-18 period saw huge changes at The Glasgow School of Art (GSA) as the School, along with the...
Britain and the Widening War 1915-1916: "In a series of concise, thought-provoking chapters the au...
This paper examines the artists sent to the Western Front under Britain’s official war artists initi...
My chapter, comprising some 7,000 words with 4 plates, focussed on letters written by certain Britis...
As the First World War entered its second year Henry James lamented the failure of language to do ju...
Equally talented as a writer and painter, Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957) was one of the most innovative a...
Much of how World War I is understood today is rooted in the artistic depictions of the brutal viole...
This study examines paintings of battle produced in Britain between c.1885 and 1919, drawing for exa...