ROYAL ACADEMY
EXHIBITION DESPITE WAR FEWER PICTURES HUNG (0.C.) LONDON, May 8. War has not stopped the 173rd exhibition of the Royal Academy of Arts. The statue of Sir Joshua Reynolds has been removed from the courtyard outside the building for safe keeping, the 827 paintings and drawings hung are less by 562 than the total exhibited last year, and only 12 of the usual 16 galleries are in use: but the exhibition is, in all other respects, " as usual." The war, not unnaturally, is reported in various of its phases by many artists, and there are vivid glimpses of war on land, in the air, and at sea. There are impressions of the beaches at Dunkirk, the last stand at Calais, of aerial dogfights, and of convoys attacked at sea. War on the civilians in its many aspects has also been recorded. Dunedin Artist Represented New Zealand has a direct interest in the work of its artists. The number exhibiting is fewer this year than usual, but Mr F. H. Coventry .(Christchurch) and Mr E. Heber Thompson (Dunedin) have both had their work hung again. Mr Coventry's water colour is entitled " Pimlico Houses," and it is a faithful reproduction of some of London's drab, unimaginative' boxes of bricks. They are maroon and dirty cream in colour, and they, support a long ladder. Above, white clouds are becked by a rare blue sky, and a man with a club foot hobbles along the pavement. Mr Coventry shows his usual excellent workmanship. Mr Heber Thompson's oil is entitled " Retour des Matelots. Concarneau." It is a scene from an open window. There are fishermen in navy blue leaving their brown-sailed fishing boat, and there rre barrels and fish \nets throwing shadows on the sunlit beach. Bevond there are more fishing bofets. with wooded hills iiythe distance. The colouring is fresh and attractive. Added interest for New Zealanders is the portrait of the Governor-Gen-eral. Sir Cyril Newall. bv R. G. Eves. R.A. It is n shoulders, and is an excellent Mkenes< Dunkirk and Calais Two arresting works are "Dunkirk Beach, May, 1940," by Richard Eurich. and " The Last Stand at Calais Citadel, May, 1940," by Charles Gere. The first condenses the scent of the British withdrawal; men are shown marching, embarking, lying, walking, standing and being killed on the beach against a background of smoke and flame. The scene at Qalais is dedicated to " those who by their sacrifices saved the B.E.F. at Dunkirk." From a breach in the citadel, overlooking a canal. British soldiers blaze their Bren guns: flame-bclching tanks and death-diving aeroplanes are included in the scene. One criticism of the picture described it as a "piece of overheated journalism." As a relief from the war pictures, (he orthodox landscapes, seascapes and portraits are exhibited. The Queen is the only Royal lady represented, and appreciation of three studies of her is a matter of individual taste. ■ A critic commented on one: "The Queen looks as though she were made of nink sugar, like a birthday cake. Perhaps Gerald Kelly sees her that way."
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 24627, 7 June 1941, Page 14
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512ROYAL ACADEMY Otago Daily Times, Issue 24627, 7 June 1941, Page 14
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