Air Raid by Cyril Power, linocut
Power’s linocut print of a biplane ‘dog fight’ recalls his First World War service in the Royal Flying Corps, when he supervised aircraft repairs at Lympne aerodrome, Kent. He developed the print in four lino-block colour separations of red, light blue, grey and dark blue from a wartime sketch.
Formerly an architect, after his service Power retrained as an artist at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art where his tutor Claude Flight led a modernist movement in linocut printing. Vorticism and Futurism were influential to the group’s celebration of speed in the machine age. Impressions of Air Raid were first sold at the Redfern Gallery in the exhibition 'Colour Prints' (25 June to 18 July 1936, cat. no. 15). Although inscribed as number '4’ of an edition of ‘60’, few impressions of the print are known to exist today. This is one of two impressions of Air Raid in the RAF Museum's collection. Purchased from the Parkin Gallery, 1976. Artist copyright: expired / RAF Museum.
Details
Object number | FA00972 |
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Maker name | Mr Cyril Edward Power |
Production date | Circa 1935 |
Adopted by:
- Mark Russell
- M.P.A. van Stijn
- Neil Jennings
Adopted on behalf of my favourite in-house aviation historian.
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