Monday, 26 May 2025

Frank Brangwyn - part 5

Frank Brangwyn (b. Bruges, 13 May 1867: d. Ditchling, Sussex, 11 June 1956) was a British painter, printmaker, draughtsman, and designer, the son of a Welsh architect who specialised in church furnishings, and who was working in Belgium at the time of Frank’s birth. Between 1882–84 he served an apprenticeship with William Morris, and like his master he was active in a variety of fields. He was an Official War Artist during the First World War, and was considered one of the finest draughtsmen of the day; a skilful etcher and lithographer, who also made designs for a great range of objects (furniture, textiles, ceramics, glassware, and jewellery) however, he became best known for his murals. His most famous undertaking in this field was a series of large panels on the theme of the British empire, commissioned by the House of Lords.


All images © Estate of Sir Frank William Brangwyn.

This is part 5 of a 10-part series on the works of Frank Brangwyn:

c1916 Mars Appeals to Vulcan
two-colour lithograph poster 57.7 x 45.7 cm
V&A Museum, London

1916 War
 lithograph on paper 44.5 x 68.5 cm

c1917 The Boatswain
oil on board 42 x 62 cm
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

c1917 Making Sailors: Boatdrill
lithograph 54 x 38 cm

1917 Wharfside, The Thames
etching on paper 33 x 45.5 cm
Christchurch Art Gallery, New Zealand

1917 The Last of H.M.S. Britannia
etching on paper 55 x 81 cm

1917 The Gun
lithograph on paper 54.9 x 38.1 cm
National Museum Cardiff, UK

1917 Demolition of the General Post Office (London)
etching on paper 64.5 x 77 cm
Danum Gallery, Library and Museum, Doncaster, UK

c1917 The Great War (1914-18): Britain’s Efforts and Ideals
The "Great War: Britain’s Efforts and Ideals" project was conceived at 'Wellington House', the British government's secretive War Propaganda Bureau, established at the start of the First World War in 1914. This initiative aimed to bolster waning public support for the war by engaging eighteen of the country's most celebrated artists including C. R. W. Nevinson, Eric Kennington, Muirhead Bone, and Frank Brangwyn. Sixty Six lithographs were produced, each limited to 200 signed and 100 unsigned impressions.

The lithographs were divided into two thematic categories: ‘Efforts’ and ‘Ideals.’ The 'Efforts' depicted tangible contributions to the war effort, such as Kennington’s series, "Making Soldiers," which illustrated men's progression from training to the trenches. The 'Ideals' aimed to convey the moral reasons for the conflict, with works like Brangwyn's "Making Sailors" employing a range of artistic styles from Edwardian to Modern to engage and persuade a war-weary public.


First exhibited at the Fine Art Society in July 1917, these prints toured Britain and America, raising funds for the war effort. Following the war, sales diminished and many prints were donated to public museums and galleries, including the newly formed Imperial War Museum, which later took over the project's administration after the Ministry of Information (successor to Wellington House) was disbanded following the Armistice.

Youthful Ambition
lithograph on paper 45.5 x 36 cm
Tate, London

The Lookout 
lithograph on paper 45.8 x 35.5 cm
Tate, London

The Gun
lithograph on paper 47.1 x 37.1 cm
Tate, London

The Freedom of the Seas
colour lithograph on paper 50.9 x 76.3 cm
Hugh Lane Gallery, Dublin

Making Sailors - Boat Drill
lithograph on paper 54 x 38 cm
Imperial War Museum, London

Duff 
lithograph on paper 54.3 x 38.1 cm
Tate, London

Going Abroad
lithograph on paper 47 x 35.5 cm
Tate, London
----------------------------------------------------

c1918 He Needs Your Help Now, Buy War Bonds
lithograph with hand colouring 100.6 x 151.6 cm
V&A Museum, London

1918 Put Strength in the Final Blow. Buy War Bonds
lithograph on paper 151.7 x 101.6 cm
V&A Museum, London

1918 Fashions at the Front
lithograph on ivory wove paper 44 x 64.8 cm
Art Institute of Chicago, IL

1918 Desolation on the Front
lithograph on paper 91 x 138 cm

1919 Blacksmith
woodcut on paper 10 x 3 cm

1919 A Venetian Procession
etching and drypoint printed on yellow Japanese paper
17.9 x 25.5 cm (plate)
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

by 1919 Vimy
lithograph on paper 51 x 77.5 cm (sheet)
Museums, Wales, UK

by 1919 Church of St Martin, Ypres
lithograph on paper 51 x 77.5 cm (sheet)
Museums, Wales, UK

by 1919 Cambrai
lithograph on paper 63.3 x 80.7 cm (sheet)
Museums, Wales, UK

by 1919 Arras
lithograph on paper 60.8 x 80.9 cm (sheet)
Museums, Wales, UK

1919 Building the New Bourse, Paris
etching on copper 17.3 x 17.5 cm
William Morris Gallery, London

1919 Nativity
etching, sandpaper ground on yellowed, wove paper
36.4 x 55.4 cm
Queensland Art Galley of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia

1919 Mask
woodcut on paper 6.3 x 4.3 cm

1919 L'Eroica
woodcut on paper 22.3 x 18.3 cm

1919 British Empire Panels: There were 16 British Empire Panels in the original set created by Brangwyn as a contribution to the national art heritage. They are now housed in the assembly room in Swansea's Guildhall – named Brangwyn Hall.

They were begun in 1926 and rejected amid great controversy in 1930, being considered too flamboyant for their setting. 

The rejection of his British Empire panels caused Brangwyn to experience a great depression after his seven years of work on the murals, however his unique depiction of the Empire – despite its complicated context in line with colonial ideology – has continued to be reproduced for decades.

Offers for the panels came from all over the world, and in 1934 they were installed in the Guildhall in Swansea. Brangwyn's work at its most characteristic was floridly coloured, crowded with detail and incident, and rather Rubensian, although it later became somewhat flatter, lighter, and more stylised. For much of his career he was one of the most famous artists in the world. He received many honours at home and abroad and was held in particularly high esteem in his birthplace Bruges, where a museum devoted to him was founded in 1936 (there is another large collection of his work in the Musée Municipale, Orange). His reputation crumbled after his death, his work tending to be dismissed as facile and sentimental, but there has recently been a revival of interest in him: a major exhibition was held in Leeds, Bruges, and Swansea in 2006 to mark the 50th anniversary of his death.


England


Canada

Canada


Canada

Canada

West Africa

West Indies

Siam

Burma

India

India

East Africa

Australia

East Indies

East Indies


North Africa

Panels at the rear of Brangwyn Hall



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