Walter Sickert
Soldiers of King Albert the Ready, 1914/15
Etching and engraving on wove paper
Plate: 37.5 x 28.2 cm / 14 3/4 x 11 1/8 in
Sheet: 43.1 x 32.3 cm / 16 7/8 x 12 3/4 in
Sheet: 43.1 x 32.3 cm / 16 7/8 x 12 3/4 in
Fourth state (of five)
Copyright The Artist
In 1914, Sickert set up new studios in Red Lion Square, Holborn, first at number 24 and then next door at number 26. They were on the north side of...
In 1914, Sickert set up new studios in Red Lion Square, Holborn, first at number 24 and then next door at number 26. They were on the north side of the square: ‘Facing south is what takes me’, he declared. He installed a printing press at 26 Red Lion Square, which became a productive site for painting and etching war-related compositions. A grand piano on the first floor featured in his Tipperary pictures, and it was here that he made studies for Soldiers of King Albert the Ready, a large propaganda picture calculated to stir emotions at a time when the fate of Belgium was a matter of widespread public concern. As he wrote to Nan Hudson, ‘[m]ilitary paintings have a definite patriotic and recruiting value.’ During its gestation, Sickert also mentioned in passing: ‘I am etching my Belgian subject.’ Five different states of the print were first distinguished by Harold Wright. Despite such an extended development of the plate, however, Sickert decided not to include it in his Carfax series of etchings, which was ongoing at the time. Only a small number of impressions were made from the plate.
Provenance
Leicester Art Books, LondonThe Fine Art Society and C. G. Boerner, 2002
The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, Los Angeles, May 2005
Exhibitions
London, Thomas Agnew & Sons, Centenary Exhibition of Etchings & Drawings by W. R. Sickert, 15 March – 14 April 1960, cat. no. 187 ('4th state')
Perth, Art Gallery of Western Australia, The Leicester Galleries' Collection of Sickert Etchings, 3 June – 1 July 1979, cat. no. 19, touring to Melbourne, University Gallery, 11 Sept. – 21 Oct. 1979*
New York, C. G. Boerner/The Fine Art Society, Sickert: Pages Torn from the Book of Life. An Exhibition of Prints, 1883–1929, 10 – 25 Oct. 2002, cat. no. 35*
London, Piano Nobile, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, 26 Sept. – 19 Dec. 2025, no. 52*
Literature
Ruth Bromberg, Walter Sickert: Prints: A Catalogue Raisonné, Yale University Press, 2000, cat. no. 159, p. 190 (this impression illus.)*Gordon Cooke and Richard Shone, Sickert: Pages Torn from the Book of Life, exh. cat., The Fine Art Society, 2002, cat. no. 35, pp. 50–51 (this impression col. illus.)*
Wendy Baron, Sickert: Paintings and Drawings, Yale University Press, 2006, cat. no. 445.10, p. 426
Kate Aspinall, Luke Farey and Stuart Lucas, Sickert: Love, Death & Ennui. The Herbert and Ann Lucas Collection, exh. cat., Piano Nobile, 2025, no. 52, p. 108 (col. illus.)*