Western Mail

Great art finds a Welsh sanctuary during wartime

- Sherna Noah newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PHOTOGRAPH­S of the “secret and labyrinthi­ne world” where the National Gallery hid its paintings during the Second World War are going on display.

The gallery, in Trafalgar Square, will be showing photograph­s of the disused slate mine in Snowdonia, where it stored its collection for safekeepin­g.

Archival photograph­s will document the dispersal of paintings to the mine, while the gallery will also show five photograph­s, by Robin Friend, of the quarry as it appears today.

A plan was made to protect the national art collection in the summer of 1940, when the invasion of Britain looked imminent.

Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill had vetoed one proposal for the paintings to be evacuated by ship to Canada.

“Hide them in caves and cellars, but not one picture shall leave this island,” he said.

The entrance of the Manod mine was enlarged using explosives to enable the largest paintings to be taken inside and several small brick “bungalows” were built in the caverns to protect the works from variations in humidity and temperatur­e.

Special “elephant” cases were constructe­d to transport the valuable artworks on trucks to Wales.

By the summer of 1941, the whole collection had been reunited in its new subterrane­an home, where it was to remain for four years.

Experts made “valuable discoverie­s” which influenced the way the collection was displayed and cared for when it returned to London after the war ended.

It had never been possible to monitor a whole collection in such controlled circumstan­ces before.

Air conditioni­ng was included in the plans for the major renovation­s needed for the west wing of the National Gallery, which had been badly damaged during bombing raids.

The display will also feature a 30-minute film, shot in a slate mine in Snowdonia and in the National Gallery, about a painting that has taken human form.

Photograph­s of the disused slate mine last went on display at the National Gallery more than 20 years ago.

National Gallery curator Dr Minna Moore Ede said: “Hundreds of feet undergroun­d, the Manod slate mine is an extraordin­ary subterrane­an space in north Wales. Robin Friend’s photograph­s convey the wonder of this secret and labyrinthi­ne world, where for four years during the Second World War, the National Gallery hid their collection for safekeepin­g.”

Manod: The Nation’s Treasure Caves runs from March 5 to April 8 at the National Gallery’s Annenberg Court.

 ?? Fred Ramage ?? > Art treasures from the National Gallery are moved to Manod Quarry slate caverns in September 1942
Fred Ramage > Art treasures from the National Gallery are moved to Manod Quarry slate caverns in September 1942
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