Claggett Wilson, born Washington, DC 1887-died New York City 1952
Underground Dressing Station, ca. 1919
Watercolor and pencil on paperboard
19 x 22 7⁄8 in. (48.2 x 58.1 cm)
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Within months of the armistice that ended the First World War, the American artist Claggett Wilson (1887–1952), who had fought in France as a combat marine, produced a riveting portfolio of two dozen watercolors based on his wartime experiences. Wilson had trained in Paris at the progressive Académie Julien, exhibited at the Armory Show, and been an art instructor at Columbia University. Now he combined modernist techniques with popular visual culture in an effort to render visible the atrocities he had seen and the physical and mental wounds he had sustained. These paintings, long kept in storage and little known today, are vital testaments to an artist’s disturbing recollections of military violence. Reminiscent of the prints in Francisco de Goya’s early nineteenth-century Disasters of War series, they are tragic, appalling, and bitingly ironic. More on Claggett Wilson
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