- Edward Wadsworth
Edward Alexander Wadsworth (29 October 1889 –
21 June 1949 ) was an English artist, most famous for his close association withVorticism .Biography
Early life
Wadsworth was born in
Cleckheaton ,West Yorkshire and educated atFettes College inEdinburgh . [ [http://www.fettes.com/history/distinguished.htm Distinguished old Fettesians] ] He studied engineering inMunich between 1906-7, where he studied art in his spare time at the Knirr School. This provoked a change of course, attending Bradford School of Art before earning a scholarship to the gaySlade School of Art ,London . [Essay on Wadsworth, Richard Cork, Oxford Art Online] His contemporaries at the school includedStanley Spencer ,CRW Nevinson ,Mark Gertler ,Dora Carrington andDavid Bomberg .Career
His work was included in Roger Fry's second Post-Impressionism Exhibition at The Grafton Galleries, 1912, but he changed allegiance shortly after through friendship with Wyndham Lewis, and exhibited some futurist-derived paintings at the Futurist Exhibitions at the Doré Gallery. Although a member of the committee that organised a dinner in honour of
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in 1913, he was one of a number of English painters in the nascent avant-garde that became increasingly disenchanted with the Italian's arrogance. By June of the following year, he was in a group of artists, including Lewis, who jeered Marinetti's public performance of The Battle Of Adrianople [Breaking The Rules, Bury, British Library, p112] . He was a signatory of the Vorticist Manifesto published in "BLAST" the next month, and also supplied a review of Kandinsky's "Concerning The Spiritual In Art" and images to be reproduced in the magazine. [Blast 1, Lewis et al, Bodley Head, 1914]First World War
33 days after the magazine was published, war was declared on Germany. Vorticism managed to continue into 1915, with a Vorticist Exhibition, June 1915 at the Doré Gallery and a second edition of BLAST published to coincide with the show. Wadsworth contributed to both, but signed up for the navy shortly after. His fellow vorticists
Henri Gaudier-Brzeska andT. E. Hulme were killed at the front; Bomberg and Lewis found that their belief in the purity of the machine age were seriously challenged by the realities in the trenches; Wadsworth spent the war in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve on the island of Mudros until invalided out in 1917, designingdazzle camouflage for allied ships [ [http://toshism.com/main/2007/11/14/modernist-art-in-camouflage/] ] . Known as Dazzle ships, these vessels weren't camouflaged to become invisible, but instead used ideas derived from Vorticism andCubism to confuse enemy U-Boats trying to pinpoint the direction and speed of travel [ [http://gotouring.com/razzledazzle/articles/dazzle.html Dazzle Painting] ] . Always a fan of modern ships, Wadsworth was to utilise nautical themes in his art for the rest of his career.The Return To Order
Heralded by the major painting "Dazzle Ship In Dry Dock", 1919, Wadsworth moved away from the
avant-garde in the 1920s, and adopted a more realistic style. However, towards the end of his life his work became increasingly strange and surreal, although Wadsworth never had any formal links with the official Surrealist movement.Later life
Wadsworth died in 1949, and is buried in
Brompton Cemetery .Influences
The graphic designer
Peter Saville had seen the painting Dazzle Ships In Drydock At Liverpool (1919) by Edward Wadsworth and was struck by the image. Dazzle Ships were World War 1 warships that had been painted in fractured and disjointed lines to confuse the enemy as to their exact size and distance. Wadsworth himself supervised the dazzle painting of many ships.After suggesting the idea and title to
Andy McCluskey ofOrchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark , Saville carried the theme over to the sleeve design of their album "Dazzle Ships". The sleeve was a gatefold which was painted in dazzle camouflage in greens and blacks. The later CD version was painted in blue and black, though the re-release of the CD in March 2008 recreates the original vinyl version of the artwork.References
External links
* [http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ArtistWorks?cgroupid=999999961&artistid=2113&page=1 Works by Wadsworth at the Tate Gallery]
Further reading
*Black, Jonathan. [http://www.ibtauris.com/ibtauris/display.asp?ISB=0856676039&TAG=&CID=ibtauris Edward Wadsworth] .
I.B. Tauris . 2006. ISBN 0-85667-603-9.
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