The aim of the exhibition is to commemorate the centenary of the start of the First World War and to show something of the human experience of war through the medium of portraiture. It features
- 80 paintings, photographs, sculpture and drawings drawn from different perspectives and angles. It's benefited from some major loans - including significant ones from the Imperial War Museum.
- It also includes propaganda film about life at the frontline during the Battle of the Somme - from both British and German sources
The NPG is also planning more events as part of the commemoration which will take place over the next four years.
The Curator of the exhibition is Paul Moorehouse, the Curator of 20th Century Portraits. He told me that all the portraits in the exhibition has been drawn or painted within the 1914-18 timeframe.
He started his presentation by blowing on a British Officer's Trench Whistle from the Battle of the Somme in 1916. He went on to detail some of the staggering statistics associated with the war - such as the fact that
Gallery view of the The Great War in Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery |
He started his presentation by blowing on a British Officer's Trench Whistle from the Battle of the Somme in 1916. He went on to detail some of the staggering statistics associated with the war - such as the fact that
- 70 million people were mobilised during the First World War.
- At the end of it, 9 million of them were dead.