HMS BARHAM FROM HMS WARSPITE PALMA, MALLORCA 1921

(MP223). Cecil King, RI RBA ROI RSMA (1881-1942). watercolour signed and dated 1921.

Limited Edition: 12 copies worldwide

Standard size:12.5 x 9 ins (31 x 22.5 cms) approx, though available at sizes to order

£130-150


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HMS BARHAM (Captain R C Dalglish RN), flagship of Vice Admiral Commanding 1st Battle Squadron, Vice Admiral Sir William Nicholson KCB; and HMS WARSPITE (Captain F Clifton-Brown CB CMG RN) were units of the Atlantic Fleet’s 1st Battle Squadron whose custom it was to deploy to Gibraltar in January each year for combined exercises with the Mediterranean Fleet which was based in Malta. Cecil King’s painting suggests that this is during one of those early spring deployments when these two battleships and escorts were in Mallorca, a favourite watering hole for ships of both British fleets. The boats crews are in blues (tropical whites became “rig of the day” between mid April and mid October, depending on the weather pattern of each particular year) and the general scene is not one that suggests Mediterranean summer warmth! There have been very heavy showers ashore but the clouds are thinning and a rainbow promises….

HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH (Captain Geoffrey Blake RN) flagship of the Commander-in-Chief Atlantic Fleet, Admiral Sir Charles Madden Bt GCB GCVO KCMG, would have been on the spring cruise too but has perhaps remained at sea or gone on another port visit, possibly with HMS VALIANT (Captain Cecil Staveley CMG RN) of her squadron, in company. The fifth ship of the class and squadron, HMS MALAYA (Captain Percy Royds CMG RN) was absent in the Far East, on a courtesy visit to her donors in Malaya and. carrying HRH The Duke of Connaught to India enroute.

Captain Cecil George Charles King TD painted for the Sphere and Illustrated London News and his sea paintings are represented in the Imperial War Museum, London and in the Paris Musee de Marine. He was vice-president of the Society of Marine Artists and was Marine Painter to the Royal Thames Yacht Club in Knightsbridge. The author of several books about the Royal Navy, he was considered to have “an extensive knowledge of naval lore” (Obituary, The Times, 10 December 1942). He had served in the trenches of World War 1 but the sea was, we are told, his first and abiding love.