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Clewing  Up the Mainsail in Heavy Weather

Image credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London

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The waist of a ship, looking forward, is depicted in a heavy sea. The mainmast intersects the image to the left, with two bare-footed figures in rolled-up shirt-sleeves hauling on the mainsail clew-line, while on the far left another man in boots looks aloft, probably to men working on the unseen main yard above. The viewer is looking down on the action from the height of a deckhouse roof and the image is off-centre and at an angle to create a sensation of a heaving deck. The sky is light to the top right and the sea is shown coming over the lee gunwale, in this demonstration of all the actions associated with a sailing ship in a heavy sea. Briscoe studied at the Slade School and at Julien's in Paris. He was a keen sailor and lived aboard his yacht for some years with his first wife and young son.

National Maritime Museum

London

Title

Clewing Up the Mainsail in Heavy Weather

Date

1925

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 66 x W 101.8 cm

Accession number

BHC1352

Work type

Painting

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National Maritime Museum

Romney Road, Greenwich, London, Greater London SE10 9NF England

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