24 April 2024: Conference presentation: ‘Representations of the suffering of soldiers in German art of World War I’.

I’m delighted to be able to present at the conference, The Soldier as Victim, taking place on 24 April 2024 at Birmingham Newman University. I am also looking forward to attending a great series of presentations offering a range of contexts on a very important topic.

My presentation will focus on a group of German artists who were among the earliest to depict the harsher aspects of the soldier’s experience of World War I. It will include the work of the remarkable Willy Jaeckel, whose unflinching but emotive pictures of the suffering of soldiers were among the very earliest exhitbited works that represented the harsher truths of the soldier’s experience. I will also look at the work of Gert H. Wollheim, who served as a soldier on the eastern and western fronts, and through a series of pictures and poems, recorded the trauma of frontline experience, including his own serious injury. The talk will also include discussion of some works by the most famous German artist who served in the war, Otto Dix (the subject of my new book), specifically his pictures that consider the fate of disabled veterans. Conference website

01 July 2020: new journal article

In the Fray: Making and Meaning in Jenny Bowker’s Memorial Quilt After the Last Sky, H-Art Issue 7, Universidad de los Andes (Uniandes), Bogotá, Colombia, July 2020

This essay explores meaning and materiality in the monumental memorial quilt After the Last Sky by Australian art-quiltmaker Jenny Bowker, which memorialises the suffering of protesters during the Rabaa Square Massacre in Cairo on 14 August 2013. The essay shows how Bowker’s migration of the photographic image to quilt form, as well as the quilt’s meaningful, strategic use of medium and relevance to current artistic developments challenge the limits placed on textiles as art. Read full article online (journal webpage)

Resumen – Español: En la Refriega:1 La Creación y el Significado en el Edredón Conmemorativo After the Last Sky [Después del Último Cielo] de Jenny Bowker

Este ensayo explora el significado y la materialidad en el monumental edredón conmemorativo After the Last Sky de la artista australiana Jenny Bowker, que conmemora el sufrimiento de los manifestantes durante la Masacre de la Plaza de Rabaa en El Cairo el 14 de agosto de 2013. El ensayo muestra como el trabajo de Bowker pone a prueba los límites impuestos al textil en cuanto medio artístico a través del traslado de la fotografía a la forma de edredón, haciendo también un uso estratégico de este medio que le da relevancia en el marco de los desarrollos artísticos actuales. Leer ensayo completo