Archive for Found Objects

The items gathered here include objects found in the course of my archival researches, other people’s texts and observations (if not exactly ‘links’), and various exhibits connected to my own areas of interest.

Image: ‘The Shop. Friendship brooches 30p.  Plain stones 5p. Painted stones 10p. Bottle tops 5p.’  Shingle Street, Suffolk, 2004.

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Cyrus LeRoy Baldridge’s farewell to the Western Front »

June 20th, 2008 | Posted in: Found Objects, War & peace

Baldridge (1899-1977) was an American artist whose illustrations appeared in The Stars and Stripes, the official paper of the American Expeditionary Force, during the last year of the First World War. This drawing, which anticipates the rise of what is now called ‘Battlefield Tourism’, is reproduced from Baldridge’s fine autobiography, Time and Chance (1947) - a book that, after so many years of George Bush Junior, should be attributed to the ‘other’ America, from which we would love to hear more…

‘Bach’s Christmas Music in England and in Germany’ by Vernon Lee »

May 27th, 2008 | Posted in: Found Objects, War & peace, Articles General

This is the long-forgotten article in which the iron curtain was first taken from the theatre and converted into a political metaphor. It was published in the London-based Suffragist magazine Jus Suffragii, Vol. 9, No. 4, 1 January 1915, p. 218. I count it among the key writings of the First World War. It can also be read - against Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and other latter-day polemicists - as an example of how secular-minded and even atheist writers may engage religious subjects without merely resorting to furious denial. An account of Vernon Lee and her article’s sources, context and influence is given in my book Iron Curtain: from stage to Cold War.

Lighten up on the khaki - Solomon J. Solomon’s advice to the War Department »

March 10th, 2008 | Posted in: Found Objects, Potemkinism and Camouflage

‘It has to be remembered that throughout this war our men are moving in a more or less easterly direction…’

Solomon J. Solomon was a prominent Anglo-Jewish artist and portrait painter who went on to pioneer various schemes of camouflage in the First World War. It was in this letter to the editor of The Times, published on 27 January, 1915, that he first indicated the contribution that artists might make to a war in which traditional methods of concealment had been invalidated by the coming of aerial photography. Here applied to the question of military uniform, his novel recommendations are indebted to the idea of ‘countershading’ developed by the American artist Abbott H. Thayer in the earlier study, Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom (1909). Solomon’s letter is followed by another, written by an ‘artist and big-game shot’ who signed himself ‘W.W.’, and printed two days later. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word ‘camouflage’ did not enter English usage until 1917.

‘The Führer gives a village to the Jews’ »

February 19th, 2008 | Posted in: Found Objects, Potemkinism and Camouflage

A Nazi propaganda film made in Terezin (Theresienstadt), a fortress and town in the Czech Republic where the Nazis concentrated Jewish prisoners before transporting them to Auschwitz. The director, Kurt Gerrin, was himself a prisoner. Like the rest of the cast, he was taken to Auschwitz and murdered shortly after these scenes were shot in 1944.

On Peter Fleming’s rook rifle »

February 12th, 2008 | Posted in: Found Objects, Englishness and British national identity

‘Mr. Money-Coutts evidently belongs to the “keep a bullet for the woman” school, and has no doubt shot his way out of many a tight corner among the savage nomads of Hertfordshire…’

A correspondence from The Times, London, 20 November - 2 December, 1935.

Trouble on the Old Bridge, Mostar »

December 20th, 2007 | Posted in: Found Objects, War & peace, Art & its applications

The idea of ‘public art’ has often provoked controversy. Its promoters justify their interventions in public space by talking about access and the importance of reaching beyond the confines of gallery and museum.

‘Are You Local?’ Pluvialis (and Stanley Spencer) on being placed »

June 29th, 2007 | Posted in: Found Objects, Englishness and British national identity

In June 2007 I attended a conference entitled ‘Passionate Natures’ at the Faculty of English, Cambridge University. The event, which drew together conservationists and literary commentators, was highly suggestive. Helen MacDonald was among the organisers, and this blog, recommended with some (slight) embarrassment, offers a memorable reflection on the issues at stake.