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Mural Design for Portico at the Empire Exhibition
Mural Design for Portico at the Empire Exhibition
Mural Design for Portico at the Empire Exhibition

Mural Design for Portico at the Empire Exhibition

Date1924
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsObject/Work: 414 x 179 mm
ClassificationsArtworks/Commemorations/Photographs
Terms
    Object numberGA0624
    DescriptionOil painting on canvas design for a large mural planned for the British Empire Exhibition, Wembley, 1924.

    This large painted canvas is over 4 metres long and almost 2 metres high. It is a design for a mural intended for the British Empire Exhibition, Wembley in 1924. Medworth's long, horizontal canvas depicts men labouring at a ship building yard, most likely in the Surrey Docks at Rotherhithe, Southwark. The work being executed is called framing - the process of constructing the skeletal structure of a ship or barge.

    Medworth’s powerful, almost symmetrical composition is reminiscent of renaissance Christian imagery and elevates the humble shipbuilder to a position of social and industrial reverence. Ship building was perhaps the single major industry in Rotherhithe for over four centuries, from the Elizabethan era until the early twentieth century. A number of commercial docks continued to operate until their closure during the 1970s.

    Because of the nature of the subject depicted, it is likely that the mural was destined for a portico or pavilion in the Palace of Engineering, a significant part to the British Empire exhibition. It is currently unknown whether this exact design was accepted.

    Benjamin Angwin - October 2014
    On View
    Not on view
    Collections
    The Cup of Death
    Kathleen Bruce
    before 1892
    Slipper
    1850 - 1900
    Head-Dress
    1775-1825
    Cord
    1800-1840
    Self Portrait
    Frank Charles Medworth RBA
    date currently not known (c.1920s)
    Opium-Pipe
    1800-1850
    Recto view
    John Tunnard ARA
    1947
    Recto view
    William H. Innes
    1952