'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration

Straddling the Meensestraat through the old ramparts of Ypres in Belgium is the Menin Gate. Designed by the architect Reginald Blomfield in 1922, this building commemorates the 56,000 British Empire missing from the battles of the Ypres Salient during the First World War. This solemn memorial has si...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephens, John
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15268
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author Stephens, John
author_facet Stephens, John
author_sort Stephens, John
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Straddling the Meensestraat through the old ramparts of Ypres in Belgium is the Menin Gate. Designed by the architect Reginald Blomfield in 1922, this building commemorates the 56,000 British Empire missing from the battles of the Ypres Salient during the First World War. This solemn memorial has significance and commemorative meaning to relatives of those whose names appeared on the structure. Responding to an eerie vision at the Gate in 1927, the Australian artist and soldier William Longstaff painted his allegorical work Menin Gate at Midnight, showing it as an ethereal structure in a brooding landscape populated with countless ghostly soldiers. The painting was an instant success and was reverentially exhibited at all Australian capital cities. This article contends that both gate and painting — in diverse and complementary ways — attempt to come to terms with the idea of the missing as a special class of soldier death and to create particular sites of memory for those who had no physical remains over which to grieve.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-152682017-09-13T13:41:02Z 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration Stephens, John commemoration the missing Menin Gate at Midnight Menin Gate memorialization memory Straddling the Meensestraat through the old ramparts of Ypres in Belgium is the Menin Gate. Designed by the architect Reginald Blomfield in 1922, this building commemorates the 56,000 British Empire missing from the battles of the Ypres Salient during the First World War. This solemn memorial has significance and commemorative meaning to relatives of those whose names appeared on the structure. Responding to an eerie vision at the Gate in 1927, the Australian artist and soldier William Longstaff painted his allegorical work Menin Gate at Midnight, showing it as an ethereal structure in a brooding landscape populated with countless ghostly soldiers. The painting was an instant success and was reverentially exhibited at all Australian capital cities. This article contends that both gate and painting — in diverse and complementary ways — attempt to come to terms with the idea of the missing as a special class of soldier death and to create particular sites of memory for those who had no physical remains over which to grieve. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15268 10.1177/0022009408098644 Sage Publications restricted
spellingShingle commemoration
the missing
Menin Gate at Midnight
Menin Gate
memorialization
memory
Stephens, John
'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration
title 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration
title_full 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration
title_fullStr 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration
title_full_unstemmed 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration
title_short 'The Ghosts of Menin Gate': Art, Architecture and Commemoration
title_sort 'the ghosts of menin gate': art, architecture and commemoration
topic commemoration
the missing
Menin Gate at Midnight
Menin Gate
memorialization
memory
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15268