Riponelli - A Village in Lemnos
Edward Wadsworth
- Art Funded
- 2010
- Dimensions
- 10 x 7.4 cm
- Vendor
- Osborne Samuel Ltd
Dazzle painting was a type of camouflage used on warships and invented by marine artist, Norman Wilkinson. Wadsworth and Wilkinson spent part of the war in the Eastern Mediterranean and it is likely they met during this time. Wadsworth was stationed on the Greek island of Lemnos where he probably visited Riponelli. On his return to England, Wadsworth was released from active military duty on Wilkinson's request. He went on to work for Wilkinson as Supervisor of the ‘Dazzle Painting’ of Allied ships in British docks. Of all the artists involved in this marine camouflage campaign, Wadsworth’s art displays the strongest visual similarities to the abstraction of ‘Dazzle Painting’.
Provenance
The estate of the artist; Osborne Samuel.