Diver (from the 'Submarines' series)

In February 1940, Eric Ravilious (1903–42), became, with Paul Nash, one of the first artists to be appointed by the WAAC. He was assigned to the Admiralty and given the rank of Captain. His first assignments took him to the Royal Naval Barracks in Chatham, Sheerness, Grimsby and Scapa Flow, sailing to the Arctic Circle on HMS ‘Highlander’. Ravilious moved on to Portsmouth, and, in August 1940, to HMS ‘Dolphin’, the Royal Navy shore base at Gosport. He spent time on board L-class submarines (which, largely decommissioned by the time of the Second World War, were used for training), drawing interiors of these extraordinary environments. From this experience, came the ‘Submarines' series, a group of lithographic prints produced in 1941, and perhaps his most coherent group of wartime works. The preparatory sketches, acquired by the WAAC, are in the National Maritime Museum. In 1942, Ravilious was reassigned to the RAF. That summer, he went to Iceland, never to return: his aircraft was lost during a rescue operation on 2 September. Ravilious was the first of three official war artists killed on active duty during the Second World War.

This print, related to preparatory drawing PAJ0748 (WAAC no. LD955) shows a diver being prepared to operate in a dry dock, and probably drawn on Ravilious' stay in Grimsby. A photograph, still with the family of the artist, and showing the same scene (though in reverse, with the diver looking to the left) was used as a reference.

Object Details

ID: PAD8073
Type: Print
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Ravilious, Eric
Date made: 1940; 1941
Exhibition: War Artists at Sea
Credit: © Crown copyright. National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Sheet: 343 x 305 mm
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