The 1928 Flood within the Tate

- unintentional injury
- museums and exhibitions
Wednesday, August twenty fifth, 2021
The 1928 Flood within the Tate

Paul Delaroche, “The Execution of Woman Jane Gray,” 1834. Oil on canvas, 246 cm × 297 cm (97 in × 117 in). Nationwide Gallery, London. Picture courtesy Wikipedia
Yesterday I used to be watching an episode of “Fake or Fortune” that discusses a flood of the Thames River in January of 1928 (see 31:05 within the video episode linked above). The flood stuffed the decrease galleries of the Tate up to eight feet of water and plenty of work had been broken. One in every of these work was The Execution of Woman Jane Gray (proven above) which did maintain some injury and tears, however clearly was not destroyed. As an alternative, the portray rolled up and was forgotten till 1973, when a researcher on the Tate found it was rolled up in one other portray that was presumed misplaced within the aftermath of the flood: John Martin’s The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum. I feel there is a component of irony {that a} portray in regards to the eruption of Pompeii was almost destroyed in one other drive of nature, albeit rising water as a substitute of falling volcanic ash.
Though eighteen work had been listed as broken past restore, these two work by Delaroche and Martin turned up many years later. The “Faux or Fortune” episode considers the potential for discovering one other one which will have been misplaced within the aftermath of the flood (a portray by Edward Landseer), though I gained’t reveal a spoiler right here! Fortunately, many different artworks escaped injury or skilled minimal injury, together with the brand new murals by Rex Whistler which had been completed for the Tate restaurant solely the 12 months earlier than in 1927.
The Tate has a list of the paintings partially broken and broken within the flood (in addition to some photographs of the occasion), It seems like at the very least one portray, Frederick Lord Leighton’s Helios and Rhodes (see beneath) has been saved within the assortment however is unable to be restored.

Lord Frederic Leighton, “Helios and Rhodes,” 1830-1896. Oil on canvas, assist 165.8 × 109.9 cm. Tate. Inventive Commons License
This flood has had an influence on up to date artwork, too. Artist Julia Fullerton-Batten used images and digital instruments to create a scene of workers carrying a painting out of a flooded gallery throughout the Tate. Extra details about this picture and the step-by-step course of utilized by Recom Farmhouse to assist Fullerton-Batten create the scene, “Tate Britain Flood,” is discovered here.
This flood of the Thames in 1928 jogs my memory of the flood of Florence in 1966, which additionally created appreciable injury to artwork. Have you learnt of different artworks which were broken or destroyed as a result of floods?