Country Life

Munnings goes to war

Huon Mallalieu welcomes the opportunit­y to see a significan­t body of wartime paintings alongside other works by Munnings in his former home

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IN 1919, on his return from his time as an Official War Artist with the Canadian cavalry and just before his second marriage, Alfred Munnings bought Castle House, Dedham, in what had until then been indisputab­ly Constable Country. He moved his custombuil­t studio to the garden and, except during the Second World War, he lived there for the rest of his life.

His widow, Violet, establishe­d The Munnings Art Museum in the 1960s, transferri­ng to a trust

many of the contents and all his paintings that remained in her possession. Since then, more paintings have been purchased to plug gaps in his career and works are also occasional­ly borrowed from other museums and collection­s. Both house and original furniture have been restored to preserve the atmosphere of the artist’s home as it was.

Now, a century after Munnings moved in, 41 of his wartime works have followed him, on loan from the Canadian War Museum. The exhibition, ‘Behind the Lines’, has already been shown at the National Army Museum in London, but here at Castle House, the paintings are shown together with sketches for them from the resident collection.

In 1899, an accident with a thorn hedge blinded Munnings in his right eye, which meant that he was unable to enlist at the outbreak of war. He was not yet widely known, but, in 1917, when he was working under the command of Maj Cecil Aldin at the Army Remounts Centre near Reading, his talent was spotted by Paul Konody, art critic of the Observer, who was signing up artists for Max Aitken’s (later Lord Beaverbroo­k) Canadian War Records Office.

As a result, between January and April, 1918, Munnings worked as an official artist with the Canadian Cavalry Brigade on the Somme sector of the Western Front. He won the affection and cooperatio­n of officers and men by producing some of the finest

He won affection with some of the finest images of horses at war

images of horses at war and the men were thrilled to recognise themselves and their charges in the paintings. Among them are some that he and other judges thought of as his finest works, such as Watering on the March, of which he later made four copies.

At the same time, he was painting some of the earliest of the equestrian portraits that would become the mainstay of his postwar career, notably those of Gen Jack Seely; Lord Mottistone, commander of the cavalry brigade; Maj Brooke, one of the British army’s best horsemen; and Seely’s ADC Capt Prince Antoine of Orléans and Braganza.

Although many of the paintings, drawings and oil sketches show the devastatio­n of conflict, only one—the famous Charge of Flowerdew’s Squadron at Moreuil Wood—shows a battle scene and it is an idealised interpreta­tion, as Munnings did not witness the event. By coincidenc­e, Capt Flowerdew, who was given a posthumous VC, had been educated at Framlingha­m College a few years after Munnings.

One of the artist’s first billets was at the brigade headquarte­rs in Smallfoot Wood, where he painted a fatigue party making bomb-proof shelters. Luckily, he was a little further back a few days later when those shelters were desperatel­y needed and the position abandoned under fierce shellfire. He recalled that the sound of the bombardmen­t ‘became the background to all our doings... I lay in bed trembling with fear’. One would never guess it from an oil sketch on board of a calm dawn sky, but on the reverse he wrote: ‘April 2nd 1918 during German attack.’

Despite orders to return home, he was ‘persuaded’ by two colonels — ‘they assured me that they were going to kidnap me and all my parapherna­lia,’ he recalled —to move further behind the lines to record the work of the Canadian Forestry Corps in the Jura on the Swiss border and the Forest of Dreux, west of Paris, where it was helping to supply the army’s insatiable demand for timber.

The sketchbook­s hold many delights. As well as studies that would bring life to the paintings are humorous drawings of the brigade’s French interprete­rs, for the most part aristocrat­ic cavalrymen, and the ladies who ran the hotels and cafes where the troops relaxed. In the Jura, there was time for a painting of a peasant ploughing with a bull. The farmer was so pleased that he not only gave Munnings supper, but introduced him to his daughters, saying ‘that if I cared to stop, I could marry one of them’. ‘Behind the Lines: Alfred Munnings War Artist, 1918’ is at The Munnings Art Museum, Dedham, Essex, until November 3 (01206 322127; www. munningsmu­seum.org.uk)

Next week William Blake

 ??  ?? Sir Alfred Munnings was concerned with the quiet moments behind the front line, as in Camp at Malbuisson, near Pontarlier, 1918
Sir Alfred Munnings was concerned with the quiet moments behind the front line, as in Camp at Malbuisson, near Pontarlier, 1918
 ??  ?? Below left: Felling a Tree in the Vosges, with the Canadian Forestry Corps.
Below left: Felling a Tree in the Vosges, with the Canadian Forestry Corps.
 ??  ?? Below right: A spell of peace: Halt on the March by a Stream at Nesle
Below right: A spell of peace: Halt on the March by a Stream at Nesle
 ??  ?? Left: Captain Prince Antoine of Orléans and Braganza, 1918, a proud, but poignant portrait: the prince died only days after the Armistice was signed.
Left: Captain Prince Antoine of Orléans and Braganza, 1918, a proud, but poignant portrait: the prince died only days after the Armistice was signed.

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