With the Grand Fleet 3. A Battle at Night
In March 1917, Muirhead Bone (1876-1953) was sent as an Official War Artist to the Grand Fleet at Rosyth, Scotland, where he spent three weeks recording daily life at sea, including oiling and firing practice. The work that he completed during that time was reproduced in May 1917 in ‘Country Life’ magazine and was compiled into a portfolio of six lithographs titled ‘With the Grand Fleet’. Although the prints may each be viewed as a work of art in its own right, the text that accompanies them makes it clear that this portfolio was intended as propaganda. The journalist C. E. Montague’s (1867-1928) descriptions enforce an idea of British superiority, pride and power and encourage the viewer to consider Bone’s lithographs in a new way.
Montague's description for 'A battle at night' was:
'A battleship revealed by the beam of its own searchlight. A big gun emerges in silhouette. One feels considerable awe when threading one’s way in a small picket boat between the ships of the Fleet at night.'
Montague's description for 'A battle at night' was:
'A battleship revealed by the beam of its own searchlight. A big gun emerges in silhouette. One feels considerable awe when threading one’s way in a small picket boat between the ships of the Fleet at night.'
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Object Details
ID: | PAI0683 |
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Type: | |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Bone, Muirhead |
Events: | World War I, 1914-1918 |
Date made: | 1917 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Sheet: 556 x 797 mm |