The Blue Cloud

© the artist. Image credit: University of Birmingham

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The richly allusive imagery in John Walker’s mural, with its landscape, figurative and literary references, explores the cyclic nature of life and death, of meeting and parting. Walker’s diverse sources include English poetry, the painting of Goya, the landscape of Vermont and Australian aboriginal culture. The painted texts are passages from the poetry of Wilfred Owen and Lord Byron, both speaking eloquently of departure and loss. Such moving farewells are balanced by the repeated symbol of rebirth, the speckled eucalyptus seed, whose form is also that of a clay vessel which, in aboriginal culture, holds the departed soul. John Walker’s paintings and prints are represented in public collections throughout the world. He has close associations with the University of Birmingham: his parents met here during the First World War and as a boy he regularly visited the Barber Institute of Fine Arts.

University of Birmingham

Birmingham

Title

The Blue Cloud

Date

1996

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 80 x W 80 cm

Accession number

A0884n

Acquisition method

commissioned by the University of Birmingham

Work type

Painting

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University of Birmingham

Edgbaston, Birmingham, West Midlands B15 2TT England

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