Gilbert Spencer: Protective Covering - on Art WW I

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Gilbert Spencer:
Protective Covering

Framed (ref: 9228)

Signed and inscribed : It is urged on all ranks to make the fullest use of local conditions when adopting protective covering

Pencil, pen, ink and watercolour on paper


Exhibited : Bristol exhibition 1950; The Artist as Evacuee, Ambleside


Tags: Gilbert Spencer gouache animals artists at work farms/domestic animals men war 1.Master Drawings Gilbert Spencer



Provenance: The Artist's Family


From 1941 Spencer worked with the Royal College of Art at Ambleside in the Lake District.  Too old to serve in the army Spencer was active in the Home Guard as a subsection leader.  His witty observations of life in the Home Guard were captured in a series of fourteen large watercolours, which were intended for publication.  The publication however had to be abandoned after the watercolours were intercepted by the Royal Mail,  on their way  to the printers, and ripped along one side (subsequently repaired by Spencer) as an act of censorship.


Distinguished as having been an Official War Artist in both WW1 and WW2 Spencer was commissioned by the Artists Advisory Committee on four occasions as an Official War Artist in 1940, 1942, 1943, 1944.  


Troops in the Countryside, Cartwright Hall Gallery



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