Monte San Quintín - 1918


Size (cm): 75x45
Price:
Sale price$337.00 CAD

Description

Arthur Streeton, one of the most eminent Australian landscapes, presents us in * Monte San Quintín - 1918 * an evocative interpretation of devastation and the drama of the First World War. The painting is registered within the series of works carried out during the Streeton stage as an official war artist, reflecting one of the most crucial moments of the contest: the battle of Mont Saint-Quentin.

The work, of considerable size and visual strength, consists mainly of ocher, gray and green tones that dominate the landscape broken by war. The composition is strongly dynamic: the abrupt and high land captures the viewer's gaze, recreating the injured topography of Mount San Quintín. The trenches, although less obvious and blurred by the Streeton palette, suggest the presence of fortifications and warlike warlike impregnated on earth.

Streeton, through use master of light and shadow, gives the painting deep and movement. The upper part is gently illuminated by a diffuse light, while deep shadows in lower sectors carry a feeling of despair and wear. The absence of human figures in the scene does not decrease the rawness of the stage, but, on the contrary, amplifies the sense of abandonment and desolation. The intervention of the man is intuited and highlighted by the heartbreaking scar that has imposed on the natural landscape.

The monochromy and the predominant color in the painting are not only a reflection of a climate and geographical reality, but also transmit the emotional heaviness of the war period. This type of devastated and gloomy landscapes were not common in the Australian landscape tradition of the late nineteenth century, where Streeton began to forge his career, known by more bucolic celebrations and idyllic scenes. This stylistic transition responds to the influence and evolution of the context lived by the artist.

Mount San Quintín is located near Péronne, in northern France, and was the scene of intense fighting between Australian and German forces in September 1918. The battle itself was emblematic of resistance and bravery, and street, with its brush Delicate and precise, it transports us at that moment. We can visualize the strategic altitude of the mountain and, at the same time, feel the heavy atmosphere that accompanies every battlefield after a butcher shop.

Within the field of military art, Streeton's work stands out not only for its technical quality but also for the ability to capture the spirit of time. The detailed precision of the relief and the mixture of tones contribute to a sense of realism that, however, does not neglect the subjective sensitivity of the artist.

Together with works such as "Arras, (1898)" by Jean-Joseph Weerts or the paintings From William Orpen, Streeton stands out as an accurate and critical observer of war disasters. Its color treatment and shape are their way of documenting and at the same time humanize the tragedy of war.

In sum, * Monte San Quintín - 1918 * It is not only a visual testimony of a historical event, but also a meditation on destructive capacity and human resilience, embodied in the constant contradiche between nature and human conflict. Arthur Streeton, through this composition, reads a enduring vision of the severe beauty of this tragic episode, turned into art.

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