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24 September 2014
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Paul Nash's Totes Meer copyright Tate London 2005

The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Front: Paul Nash's Totes Meer (1940-1)



Having served as a war artist in the First World War, Paul Nash was once again commissioned to be an official war artist at the beginning of the Second World War and this time he was seconded to the Air Ministry. He set about recording a war where the landscape was dominated not by men, but by machines in the air.

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Nash's greatest masterpiece is called Totes Meer - a German title which means Dead Sea. It shows us an ocean of shot-down German planes and he painted it after visiting a huge dump for wrecked Nazi aircraft that would never fly again.

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Like the artist JMW Turner before him, Nash seemed to recognize that the sea was the most powerful symbol of the British character. His Totes Meer is a powerful national symbol of victory over fascism that draws on our deeply ingrained love of the landscape.

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Nash said of his time as a war artist: "I have never before had such a stimulating adventure as an artist, yet all this time I have not once flown in an aeroplane. I wish I was able to fly and explore the mysterious domain of the air."

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Ironically, Nash's chronic asthma meant that his lifelong ambition of flight would never be physically realised.




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