Artist as Witness: The Impact of War

£20.00

Author: Gill Clarke

270 x 210mm / hardback
120pp
ISBN 9781915670298

Available on backorder

Description

Publication 25 October 2025.
Pre-orders are now being taken and orders will be despatched upon publication.

Artist as Witness explores the importance of the artist as eyewitness, providing insights not only into warfare, but also the impact of war on those involved and the communities affected.

The book covers the First and Second World Wars, the liberation of Bergen-Belsen, a concentration camp, the Nuremberg Trials, and the war in Ukraine. Evocative works by both well-known artists (such as Paul Nash, C.R. Nevinson, Laura Knight, Evelyn Dunbar and Graham Sutherland) and lesser-known (Kaff Gerrard and Hilda Jillard) will encompass themes of ‘The Battlefield’ and ‘The Home Front’. ‘Remembering the Holocaust’ will feature work by artists who witnessed the liberation of Bergen- Belsen, a concentration camp and survivors, notably Edith Birkin (née Hoffman), as well as the witnesses of the Nuremberg Trials (Laura Knight, Feliks Topolski and Julius Stafford-Baker).

George Butler’s powerful drawings made in situ in Ukraine, continue to remind us of the power of the artist as witness to the devastating impact of war on communities: the shattering of lives, forced migration and displacement as well as the need for rebuilding, peace and reconciliation.

Artist as Witness accompanies an exhibition curated by the author at Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum, Bournemouth (25 October 2025 – 8 March 2026)

 

Author biography

Dr Gill Clarke is a writer, curator and former academic. She has published widely on twentieth-century British Art; her books include: Evelyn Dunbar: War and Country; Randolph Schwabe: A Life in Art; Conflicting Views: Pacifist Artists. She has also curated exhibitions at Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum, Bournemouth, Burgh House & Hampstead Museum, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester and St Barbe Museum & Art Gallery, Lymington, where she co-authored with Steve Marshall Unsettling Landscapes: The Art of the Eerie and Parallel Lives: Eight Women Artists.