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The way in which Bomberg reduces the human figure to a series of geometric shapes may reflect his fascination with the machine age, which he shared with the Futurists and Vorticists. This painting could also represent the human form, stripped to its essential core.The scene is based on steam baths near Bomberg’s home in east London, which were used by the local Jewish population and which also had religious associations. They were, perhaps, a place for both physical and spiritual cleansing.

Details

  • Title: The Mud Bath
  • Creator: David Bomberg
  • Date: 1914-01-01
  • Provenance: Purchased 1964
  • Physical Dimensions: 1524 x 2242 mm
  • Original Title: The Mud Bath
  • Additional Viewing Notes: When ‘The Mud Bath’ was first exhibited at the Chenil Gallery, it was ‘hung outside the Gallery premises that it may have every advantage of lighting and space’. Two preparatory works, ‘Study for mud bath’ (T01963) and ‘Mud bathers’, were also included. In the Foreword the artist wrote: ‘I appeal to a Sense of Form. In some of the works I show in the first room, I completely abandon Naturalism and Tradition. I am Searching for an Intenser expression. In other work in this room, where I use Naturalistic Form, I have stripped it of all irrelevant matter. ‘I look upon Nature, while I live in a steel city, where decoration happens, it is accidental. My object is the construction of Pure Form.’ A study for ‘The Mud Bath’ was also in the Marlborough Fine Art exhibition, 1964 (2, repr.). Mrs. Lilian Bomberg told the compiler that she had heard that a mud bath had in fact been opened by a Russian in the East End of London about the time the picture was painted. The Jewish Chronicle of 5 June 1964 confirmed that this was Schevzilk’s steam baths in Brick Lane, which were destroyed by fire in the last war. Published in The Tate Gallery Report 1964–1965, London 1966.
  • Type: Painting
  • Rights: Tate
  • Medium: Oil paint on canvas

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