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Art Funded



Medusa

Medusa (© Estate of the artist c/o Lefevre, London)

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Edward Burra (1905 - 1976)

Manchester Art Gallery

1938

Medusa is remarkable in many ways. It stands at the confluence of several streams of interest that concerned Burra during the 1930s: his interest in Mexico and the art of Diego Rivera; his fondness for Spain and its art (in particular Goya's Black Paintings and etchings) and his distress at the Spanish Civil War; and his interest in Italy and the work of Magnasco. All this, combined with a knowledge of Surrealism, enabled him to create a series of remarkable images of impending destruction, of which this is one of the largest and most powerful. In purely technical terms, the work is an extraordinary tour-de-force. It is a remarkable display of the versatility of the watercolour medium, and an education in itself to an audience more familiar with the restrained style of the English School.

  • Medium: watercolour, gouache, pencil on paper
  • Dimensions: 155 x 112 cm
  • Art Fund Grant: £10000 ( Total: £36,000)
  • ArtFunded in: 1987
  • Vendor: Lefevre Contemporary Art

Provenance

Lefevre Gallery.


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