Paul Usherwood
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Representations of leadership in late nineteenth-century British battle painting
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The 1870s saw a dramatic change in the representation of the officer in British battle painting. Like working-class figures in genre painting, ordinary soldiers in nineteenth-century battle painting were expected to be not merely deferential but 'types'. The new conception of military leadership needs to be put in a wider context, in relation to a new emphasis on gentlemanly values in middle-class culture generally which emerged at the turn of the century. Elizabeth Thompson was one of the painters to propose the link between sport and battle. Pictures of sport and sportsmen provide some of the most striking examples, carrying as they do the unspoken assumption that sport is the best preparation for battle. Caton Woodville's After the Storming of Badajoz, 1812 shows Wellington and a group of British soldiers at the end of a long and murderous seige during the Peninsular War.

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