Crater

Murry, Richard Arthur Crossthwaite, 1902 - 1984


Crater

Murry, Richard Arthur Crossthwaite 1902 - 1984

Summary

An aerial view of a bombed city during the Second World War, a deep bomb crater in the foreground, beyond which can be seen ruined buildings and city streets. SMoke is billowing from some building in the background. The painting is predominately grey but lifted by some oranges and blue patches.

Display Label

Everything’s Inevitable Works from the collection of Manchester Art Gallery selected by Des Hughes 1 May 2012 – 2013 Manchester Art Gallery has invited sculptor Des Hughes to make a selection of works from our collection to show alongside a framed assemblage piece, In a Brown Study 2011 which will be a new acquisition. Des Hughes lives and works in Kington, Herefordshire. His Do You Think of Me Often is also a recent addition to the Whitworth Art Gallery collection. ‘When I first looked through the collection I planned to select works in a logical way by grouping work by certain themes that I had noticed. Because it is such a vast collection I was overwhelmed, a pleasurable experience in itself, but the idea of 'selecting ' works involves making sense, using a system. To search the collection thoroughly I felt that every work should have a fair audition based on this system. 'Beards', 'hair', 'holes', 'abstract sculpture in paintings made before abstract sculpture was invented' were just some of the themes that seemed to suggest themselves. By grouping works small and probably irrelevant details might connect random and distant painting and sculpture and become important, and in doing so reveal something to myself and others how I might use them in my sculpture. But every time I went through the collection completely different exhibitions would surface and particular works would keep distracting me from these schemes. I noticed that it was exactly the way in which I would view exhibitions, and in fact the way I view everything, scrolling through until a single anecdotal element lights up. Whatever and whenever it is, it suddenly feels vital and current and needs to be made. It connects with past works or particular material or technique, image or gesture and somehow becomes 'inevitable'. An element of every painting, sculpture and particularly the modest items of decorative arts in this selection has become a part of this raw material of future works. ‘ Des Hughes


Object Name

Crater

Date Created

1941

Dimensions

unframed: 40.7cm x 51cm
framed: 52.5cm x 62.8cm

accession number

1947.400

Place of creation

England

Support

canvas

Medium

oil paint

Credit

Gift of H.M. Government War Artists' Advisory Committee.


x
Fill out my online form.