David Bomberg
Moonlight, Beddgelert, 1936
Oil on canvas
51 x 61 cm
20 1/8 x 24 1/8 in
20 1/8 x 24 1/8 in
The outbreak of civil war in Spain in 1936 was a particularly shocking reality for Bomberg
and his family, who fled back to England as the conflict escalated. The artist’s time spent
in Spain had formed one of the most productive and progressive periods in his career.
Visits to Cuenca, Ronda, and the Asturias, yielded the confidence Bomberg desperately
needed to sustain his creative morale and unleash his most expressive engagement
with landscape. Yet despite once being described as ‘British in his blood and all his
movements’, the return to the country of his birth interrupted the creative energy and
certitude Bomberg had built up over the preceding years.
Moonlight, Beddgelert illustrates the stubborn continuity of this earlier brilliance. Although
he had hoped to discover inspiration in dramatic landscapes abroad, financial constraints
left North Wales as the most affordable destination for Bomberg to find the mountainous
terrain he loved. The work sees him return to the technique of painting by moonlight seen
earlier in Jerusalem [cat. 3] and later in Cyprus with Marr [cat. 15]. The mountain heaves, an
inscrutable, schematised mass of shadow. The moonlight cascades over its upper ridge to
illuminate the bowl of a corrie below. Yet it is not the moon itself nor the mountain that is
Bomberg’s focus, but rather their interaction. The furious scrubbing together of different
hues – a technique developed in Toledo – gives life to the hillside, articulating the glowing
mists that shift across it. A spirited, near horizontal sweep of citric yellow and white forms
the central feature of the composition.
There is a tendency to categorise Bomberg as a painter who shunned the British
landscape, and he undoubtedly preferred working abroad. However, his British work
made throughout his career demonstrates his remarkably consistent expressive ability
and formal insight. Whether handling the British hills associated with Richard Wilson
and contemporaries like John Piper, or the severe Mediterranean mountains that were
his element, the impact of Bomberg’s work remains substantial and endlessly varied.
Sylvester wrote that works such as Moonlight, Beddgelert, ‘are paintings filled with awe
before the massiveness and mystery and menace of nature’, not vague or generalised
but ‘Wordsworthian in their aptness to what is there’. As an instance of the emotional
specificity and sincerity observed by Sylvester, Moonlight, Beddgelert illustrates the
continuity of Bomberg’s seemingly separate periods of inspiration. His experience as
a man and a painter in Spain was not lost, but was carried forward through a romantic
sensibility and developed on home soil. Consequently, Moonlight, Beddgelert makes an
important claim for the artist’s place amongst the greatest British painters of the twentieth
century.
Provenance
Lilian BombergAnita Walker
Bernard Jacobsen Gallery
Private Collection
Exhibitions
1958, London, The Arts Council of Great Britain, David Bomberg 1891-1957: A Memorial Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings, May-June, cat. no. 33 (travelled to Newcastle, Swansea, Middlesborough, Kettering and Bradford)1964, London, Marlborough Fine Art, David Bomberg 1890-1964, cat. no. 24