British Council Collection
SHIPS FUNNEL, QUEEN MARY 1936
Madame Yevonde (1893 – 1975)
Details
- Dimension
- 50.7 X 40.6 CM
- Media
- PERMAPRINT DYE-TRANSFER PRINT FROM ORIGINAL NEG
- Accession number
- P6984
Summary
One of the ship’s three funnels, each of which had a diameter of 30ft – sufficient to allow three trains to pass through in line abreast.
This series was commissioned by Fortune magazine in 1936. Yevonde was instructed to photograph the last days of the fitting out of the Queen Mary: a brand new luxury liner. She was one of the largest and fastest ocean liners and represented the pinnacle of ship building. Put into service in 1936, she captured the public imagination and came to represent the spirit of era characterised by elegance and style. Her art deco interior, decorated with specially commissioned works by British painters and sculptors, was renowned for its exquisite craftsmanship. She made her final voyage in December 1967 and is now sited at Long Beach in California.
Madame Yevonde Be Original or Die, The British Council 1998
Glossary
-
Photograph
A permanent image taken by means of the chemical action of light on light-sensitive surfaces.