BRITISH ART AND THE GREAT WAR The Great War promoted the breakthrough of modernism in British literature, but it discouraged avant-garde experimentation in the visual arts. These painters found that those who controlled museum space and government commissions detested irony or avant-garde styles: Wyndham Lewis ( ): pioneer of Vorticism Paul Nash ( ): influenced by Cubism John Nash ( ): Paul’s younger brother C.R.W. Nevinson ( ): Cubist trained in Paris William Orpen ( ): fashionable portrait painter
“What did YOU do in the Great War?” (1915): Photographic realism was the preferred style for recruitment posters
“Step Into Your Place,” Great Britain, 1915
E. Kealey, “Women of Britain Say – GO!” Great Britain, 1915
Emile Boussu, “Reims Cathedral in Flames” (1914)
Instructions regarding Field Punishment #1, January 1917 (Canadian): See Graves, p. 176
W.H. Margetson, “The Angels of Mons”
John Singer Sargent ( ), “Gassed,” 1918/19 (a somber topic, treated in traditional style)
John Singer Sargent, “A Street in Arras” (1918)
Pablo Picasso, “Girl with a Mandolin” (Paris, 1910): A pioneering work of “analytical cubism”
Marcel Duchamp, “Nude Descending a Staircase, #2,” 1912: Described by a U.S. critic of the Armory Show as “an explosion in a shingle factory”
David Bomberg, “Sappers at Work,” 1918/19 (first version)
David Bomberg, “Sappers at Work,” final version in the National Gallery of Canada, 1919
C.R.W. Nevinson, “Machine-Gun” (1915): Apollinaire wrote that Nevinson “translates the mechanical aspect of modern warfare where man and machine combine to form a single force of nature.”
C.R.W. Nevinson, “French Troops Resting” (1916)
C.R.W. Nevinson, “A Bursting Shell” (exhibited in London, December 1915)
C.R.W. Nevinson, “Paths of Glory” (1917): Banned from exhibition!
Eric Kennington, “The Kensingtons at Laventie” (1915/16)
Eric Kennington, “Gassed and Wounded” (1918)
Wyndham Lewis, “The Crowd” (1915; example of “Vorticism”)
Wyndham Lewis, “A Canadian Gun-Pit” (1918): Imitating Orpen’s style gained him commissions
Wyndham Lewis, “A Battery Shelled” (1919)
John Nash, “Over the Top” (Cambrai, 1917): Of 80 men in Nash’s company, 68 were killed or wounded in a few minutes
John Nash, “Oppy Wood, 1917: Evening”
Paul Nash, “The Ypres Salient at Night” (undated)
Paul Nash, “Void” (1918)
Paul Nash, “We Are Making a New World” (1918)
William Orpen ( ), “Ready to Start” (June 1917)
William Orpen, “Dead Germans in a Trench” (1918)
William Orpen, “To the Unknown British Soldier Killed in France,” 1922/23 (photograph of first version)
William Orpen, “To the Unknown British Soldier Killed in France,” final version of 1927
The Cenotaph, Whitehall, London. Designed by Sir Edward Lutyens, built in 1919/20: “The Glorious Dead”