One of the Stations of the Dead (1933-37)
Artist
Wyndham Lewis
(Amherst, Nova Scotia, Canada, 1882 - 1957)
Date1933
Mediumoil on canvas
ClassificationsPaintings And Drawings
DimensionsHeight: 127.6 cm, Width: 75.8 cm
Frame Size: 145.8 x 94.6 x 7.5cm
Frame Size: 145.8 x 94.6 x 7.5cm
AcquisitionPurchased in 1956 with income from the Macdonald Bequest.
Copyright© The Artist. All Rights Reserved 2023 / Bridgeman Images
LocationView by Appointment - Aberdeen Treasure Hub
Object numberABDAG002522
About MeWyndham Lewis was responsible for establishing the Vorticist Group in 1914. This modernist movement combined Cubist and Futurist influences and reflected a modern machine age. This work is an example of the artist's early extreme abstractions, in which figures are reduced to angular distortions. Here, robotic figures inhabit a space consisting of vertical shapes.
As well as having a fascination for the modern world around him, Lewis was also inspired by classical themes. The title of this picture, together with the suggestions of a boat sailing on a river through a cave, hint that it may have been based on Virgil's description of Charon, the ferryman, conveying the souls of the dead across the river Styx to the Underworld (Virgil 'Aenid' VI 295).
More About Me
In the grouping of people at the centre of the painting, everyone looks different. Is it possibly a comment suggesting that in death we are all equal?
Exhibitions
Ian Robertson