Discharging Americans

During the First World War, John Everett was at first unable to sketch outdoors due to wartime security regulations, but in the spring of 1918, the Ministry of Information asked him to depict London river scenes. Everett received a permit to draw, and that summer, spent every day at the docks.
What attracted him most were the ships covered in ‘dazzle painting’. Dazzle was a type of camouflage developed by the artist Norman Wilkinson in 1917, in response to the heavy losses sustained by British merchant ships to German U-boat submarines. Everett’s dazzle pictures are among his most daring works for their sense of composition and modernity. They were first displayed at the Goupil Gallery in London in November 1918.

Here, a grain shipment is being discharged into barges. Art supplies were short in wartime. This drawing shows Everett’s economical use of pastel, with parts of the support left uncovered, so that the grey paper can evoke the dock’s placid waters and metallic structures.

Object Details

ID: PAH6686
Type: Drawing
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Everett, (Herbert Barnard) John
Date made: 1914-18; 1918
Exhibition: War Artists at Sea
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Frame: 654 mm x 884 mm x 40 mm;Mount: 506 mm x 633 mm;Sheet: 375 x 503 mm