1) Ghetto Theatre; 2) The Family, Ghetto Theatre; 3) Sappers under Hill 60
David Bomberg, 1919
Ghetto Theatre and The Family, Ghetto Theatre form part of the preparatory work for the painting Ghetto Theatre, which is one of the most significant works in the Ben Uri Collection. They depict a joyless East-End Jewish theatre audience, whose drab clothes and mask-like faces express not only their disenchantment, but BombergÂ’s own dismal, post-war vision. Sappers under Hill 60 is part of a series of works relating to BombergÂ’s commissioned work for the Canadian War Records Office. The drawings show British sappers at work building tunnels and trenches which eventually resulted in the successful mine attack on a German observation post at St Eloi in March 1916. All three drawings show the artist moving away from the fractured, mechanised style of his pre-war modernist work, towards a more human response.
More information
Title of artwork, date
1) Ghetto Theatre; 2) The Family, Ghetto Theatre; 3) Sappers under Hill 60, 1919
Date supported
2010
Medium and material
Pencil, ink & wash
Dimensions
1) 25.4 x 19.1 cm; 2) 25.4 x 19.7 cm; 3) 12.1 x 15.9 cm
Grant
3803
Total cost
7115

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