Get Flash Player Get Flash Player Get Flash Player Requirements

Royal Artillery, Archers

I think further evidence for such an interpretation of the Royal Engineers panel can be found in the Royal Artillery panel. Carrick portrayed the crew of an 8 inch Howitzer battery in action in the heat of battle. The action is captured in the strain of muscle and sinew. Yet this does not fully explain the tremendous sense of pent-up tension which you feel when standing in front of this panel. Once again the answer lies in Carrick’s ingenious composition. In the foreground, running horizontally along the base of the panel, five gunners drag ammunition up. In the background, running diagonally up to the top left hand corner, is a second line formed by four gunners loading the gun. These two straining lines are dragged across the scene to meet at the right hand edge; like the tightly drawn string of a bow. At the point at which the lines meet you find loaded, instead of an arrow, a charge held by a gunner who looks out in the direction of fire. Just as Carrick was portraying the Engineers as modern day pyramid builders I think he was portraying the Artillerymen as the modern archers of the battlefield and when you stand in front of the panel the composition unconsciously arouses a tremendous sense of pent up tension, heightening the drama of the scene.

Such a portrayal of artillerymen in the tradition of ancient archers also appears to draw on the history of the site itself. What could be more fitting for a gothic chapel, built within the walls of a medieval castle?

Carrick had served with the Royal Artillery in Flanders and, when discussing this panel, Anne Scott told me 'That was the war he knew'.


Full sized view