- James McBey
- Midday Halt, 1917-1919
- Etching & Drypoint
- 6.8125 x 12.9375 in
- Signature: Signed in ink "James McBey" lower right-hand corner. Edition listed in ink "XVI" lower left-hand corner. Signed, located and dated in plate "James McBey Sinai July 1917 1919" lower center of image.
-
Not For Sale
Hardie 182.
This is one of a series of eight plates related to the activities of a British patrol in the Sinai desert which McBey accompanied in 1917. Depicts the Australian Camel Corps resting and setting up camp in a desert area of Sinai.
James McBey was born on December 23, 1883 in Newburgh, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, educated at his village school, and at the age of 15 years he became a clerk in a local bank. He taught himself how to create etchings on zinc plates from a book on etching "Traité de la Gravure a l'Eau-Forte."
In 1911, he exhibited at the Goupil Gallery in London and his prints were published in both London and Glasgow. In 1916 McBey was appointed official war artist to the Palestine Expeditionary Force, and these drawings are now in the Imperial War Museum. He made several visits thereafter to the Middle East and North Africa. In the 1920s his etchings began to sell at an accelerated price, and he was featured by Malcolm Salaman in the second volume of the series "Modern Masters of Etching" and Salaman also compiled a catalogue of his work, published in 1929. In addition, he had commissions to paint a number of formal portraits, including one of Sir Harry Lauder in 1921.
James McBey died on December 1, 1959 in Tangier, Morocco.
- Subject Matter: War