Bronze Age Gold from Wales

The Ideals

BRANGWYN, Sir Frank William (Brangwyn was born in Bruges to an Anglo-Welsh father and Welsh mother from Brecon. The family moved back to Britain and by the age of fifteen Brangwyn was studying under designer and socialist William Morris. As he became successful as a painter, etcher and lithographer, Brangwyn began to travel widely across the world. He had an international reputation at the time of the First World War and was a member of the Senefelder Club, which promoted the medium of lithography.)

A group of sailors, adrift on the sea, heroically beat off the deadly attack of a sea monster, symbolising the battle against the enemy.

Brangwyn was born in Bruges, but moved with his family back to Britain at a young age. He received little formal art education, yet during his successful career he turned his hand to oil painting, watercolour painting, printing, architecture and design.

Brangwyn was not an official war artist, yet he produced over 80 posters and designs for War Bond Stamps. He was a member of the Senefelder Club, which promoted lithographs. He would print his own images, drawing directly on a lithographic stone rather than using transfer paper.

This work forms part of the portfolio 'The Great War: Britain's Efforts and Ideals' series of 66 lithographic prints commissioned by the Ministry of Information in 1917. The series provide a broad and fascinating representation of Britain's war objectives, military activities and effort on the Home Front.

Collection Area

Art

Item Number

NMW A 13153

Creation/Production

BRANGWYN, Sir Frank William
Date: 1917

Acquisition

Gift, 19/2/1919
Given by H. M. Ministry of Information

Measurements

h(cm) sheet size:50.9
h(cm)
w(cm) sheet size:76.1
w(cm)

Techniques

lithograph on paper
lithograph
Planographic printing
prints
Fine Art - works on paper

Material

ink
Paper

Location

In store
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