Making Guns: The Furnace
Sir George Clausen 1852 - 1944
Summary
An interior with sparks spraying from a bright light in the centre middle ground. A figure stands in the foreground to the right beside an arched structure. A figure holds a wheeled trolley in the middle ground to the far right. An over head light hangs in the upper section of the interior.
Display Label
The Sensory War 1914-2014 11 October 2014 – 22 February 2015. The Sensory War 1914-2014 marks the centenary of the beginning of the First World War and explores how artists have communicated the impact of war on the body, mind, environment and human senses across the subsequent century. The First World War involved a profound re-configuration of sensory experience and perception through the invention of devastating military technologies which destroyed human beings and altered the environment beyond recognition. Its legacy has continued and evolved through even more radical forms of destruction over the last hundred years. Some of the most profound and moving works of art of the last century were created by artists who experienced the horrors of the war and the trenches at first hand. They struggled to create ways of making meaning out of the sights and sounds that shocked their senses as the world around them was transformed into a living hell. Since that first technological war, artists have followed in their footsteps making powerful personal visions of the conflicts that have happened since. This exhibition brings together their responses across a wide range of media from painting to video. Manchester Art Gallery has a nationally important collection of art of the First World War assembled by its first director, Lawrence Haward. Taking this rich collection as the starting point the exhibition explores thematically the responses of these artists to the sensory effects of warfare. The Sensory War 1914-2014 is part of The First World War Centenary Programme, which has been co-ordinated by the Imperial War Museum, London to commemorate the First World War in galleries and museums across the country. Supported by Ian Simpson and Rachel Haugh, First TransPennine Express, The Austin and Hope Pilkington Trust, the Western Front Association and a generous group of donors from the Friends of Manchester Art Gallery who have financially supported the exhibition. Curated by Dr Ana Carden-Coyne, Co-director, Centre for the cultural history of War at the University of Manchester, David Morris, the Whitworth and Tim Wilcox, Manchester Art Gallery (MAG, MCC, WW1 Centenary logos) The exhibition begins on this floor and continues on the second floor
Object Name
Making Guns: The Furnace
Creators Name
Date Created
1918 (circa)
Dimensions
support: 50.5cm x 38.5cm
accession number
1925.546
Collection Group
Place of creation
Europe
Support
paper
Medium
ink (black)
Credit
Gift of Mr Charles Lambert Rutherston, 1925
Legal
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