Posts Tagged ‘Richard Eurich’

Daily news from Dunkirk 1940

June 5, 2023

Today’s news from Dunkirk

– every day from 26th May to 4th June

Each year, every day from 26th May to 4th June The Dunkirk Project publishes this day’s news from Dunkirk 1940 live. Follow real people’s real stories day by day, with lots of new entries, updated features, and stories continuing beyond the evacuation. Just click on the date in the page menu top left of your screen.

And always available on the menu: features on heroic ships, artists’ views and visions of Dunkirk and some extraordinary true stories, an introduction and summary to fill you in on the background, and Thames to Dunkirk, the largest book in the British Library.


Stranger than Fiction – highlighting extraordinary true stories from Dunkirk from our contributors, including some surprising elements: twelve pairs of silk socks, a jam sandwich and a tattered postcard, and a treasured newspaper clipping showing one of the last soldiers to be evacuated from Dunkirk.


Follow Thames to Dunkirk page-by-page: by Liz Mathews, the largest book in the British Library draws together all the stories:

a vivid witness account from soldier poet BG Bonallack, a raw and powerful undercurrent from Virginia Woolf, a map of the Thames with the names of little ships that answered the call, and along the great strand of Dunkirk beaches, many of the 337,131 people who were rescued.

Thames to Dunkirk on film – an artist’s film takes a walk around the big book, in company with BG Bonallack and Virginia Woolf; with an article on the British Library’s blog.

And you can explore the making of the big book, in a feature about its inspiration and development from a dream to a continuing work in progress.


Creating Dunkirk – artists’ views and visions – a series of articles looking at other artworks inspired by Dunkirk begins with a feature on John Craske‘s astonishing embroidery The Evacuation of Dunkirk

And Charlie Bonallack’s Dunkirk Phossils brings another very contemporary vision of Dunkirk.


DSC_0444

The Dunkirk Project – what’s it all about?

Touch screen or click here to find out more.


The Little Ships artist’s book by Liz Mathews, from a poem by Philip Guedalla

Daily news from Dunkirk 1940

May 25, 2023

Today’s news from Dunkirk

– every day from 26th May to 4th June

the dated news page will appear

in the menu on the left

– click there for the day’s news

Each year, every day from 26th May to 4th June The Dunkirk Project publishes this day’s news from Dunkirk 1940 live. Follow real people’s real stories day by day, with lots of new entries and updated features.

And always available on the main menu to the left of your screen, features on heroic ships, artists’ views and visions of Dunkirk and some extraordinary true stories, as well as an introduction and summary to fill you in on the background.


Stranger than Fiction – highlighting extraordinary true stories from Dunkirk from our contributors, including some surprising elements: twelve pairs of silk socks, a jam sandwich and a tattered postcard, and a treasured newspaper clipping showing one of the last soldiers to be evacuated from Dunkirk.


Follow Thames to Dunkirk page-by-page: by Liz Mathews, the largest book in the British Library draws together all the stories:

a vivid witness account from soldier poet BG Bonallack, a raw and powerful undercurrent from Virginia Woolf, a map of the Thames with the names of little ships that answered the call, and along the great strand of Dunkirk beaches, many of the 337,131 people who were rescued.

Thames to Dunkirk on film – an artist’s film takes a walk around the big book, in company with BG Bonallack and Virginia Woolf; with an article on the British Library’s blog.

And you can explore the making of the big book, in a feature about its inspiration and development from a dream to a continuing work in progress.


Creating Dunkirk – artists’ views and visions – a series of articles looking at other artworks inspired by Dunkirk begins with a feature on John Craske‘s astonishing embroidery The Evacuation of Dunkirk

And Charlie Bonallack’s Dunkirk Phossils brings another very contemporary vision of Dunkirk.


DSC_0444

The Dunkirk Project – what’s it all about?

Touch screen or click here to find out more.


The Little Ships artist’s book by Liz Mathews, from a poem by Philip Guedalla

Nine extraordinary days

April 19, 2023

In the early summer of 1940, three hundred thousand people shared an event that has become legendary.

Over nine extraordinary days, The Dunkirk Project tells their stories.

Alec Harrison

Stranger than Fiction – highlighting extraordinary true stories from Dunkirk, including: twelve pairs of silk socks, a jam sandwich and a tattered postcard, and a treasured newspaper clipping showing one of the last soldiers to be evacuated from Dunkirk.

 


Lucky Weather text by Frances Bingham, paperwork by Liz Mathews

Read the daily news from Dunkirk each day from 26th May 1940 to 4th June 1940 – nine unforgettable days and beyond.

The daily news pages are removed and edited during May and will be released live again daily from 26th May to 4th June.


Thames to Dunkirk – page by page, the largest book in the British Library, which opens out to a free-standing paper sculpture 17 metres long.


The blockbuster event of the summer

Thames to Dunkirk on film – a new artist’s film takes a walk around the big book, in company with BG Bonallack and Virginia Woolf.


This was Dunkirk – what was it really like, how does it look from here, and some parallels with our own times.


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Creating Dunkirk – artists’ views and visions – a new series of articles looking at artworks inspired by Dunkirk begins with a feature on John Craske’s astonishing embroidery The Evacuation of Dunkirk.


Creating Dunkirk 2Richard Eurich, war artist, claims Dunkirk as his subject in June 1940, painting The Withdrawal from Dunkirk, a visionary masterpiece that draws on past, present and future.


Medway Queen alongside-Brighton-Belle-1.jpg

Heroic ships: 1 HMM Medway Queen – a new series focusing on individual ships begins with a feature on the gallant paddle-steamer Medway Queen.


Heroic ships 2: The Thomas Kirk Wright and the Poole Flotilla – a lifeboat, four ferryboats, fifteen fishing trawlers and a handful of pleasure boats on a mission.


DSC_0444

The Dunkirk Project – what’s it all about?

Touch screen or click here to find out more.



And coming soon:

More Heroic ships – features on the Royal Daffodil, the paddle-steamer Gracie Fields and the London fireboat Massey Shaw, along with a look at the Tough Brothers shipyard in Teddington and a flotilla of requisitioned Thames boats.