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Notes
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The city of Ypres in Belgium – called Ypres in French and Ieper in Dutch – stands on one of the routes between Germany and France and was therefore especially vulnerable to damage in the wars between those countries. It was a historic city with famous medieval buildings such as the Cloth Hall and St Martin's Cathedral (both thirteenth-century Gothic). The governments of the warring countries might have agreed that these, and other Belgian treasures such as Louvain University Library, were the equivalent of World Heritage Sites, and should be spared. However, as we can see in this watercolour, little was left standing. The view is of the Menin Road, the road eastwards out of Ypres. The whole desolate scene consists of shell holes, remains of trees, puddles and mud, and, in the middle ground, miserable human figures, reduced to insignificance as they pathetically try to extricate themselves from the horrific, bleak remnant of a landscape.
Title
First World War: Evacuating the Wounded on the Menin Road, 1917
Medium
watercolour on paper (?)
Measurements
H 59.5 x W 122.5 cm
Accession number
45941i
Acquisition method
presumed to be part of the collection formed by Henry S. Wellcome
Work type
Watercolour