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Featured Work
Featured here is one of the many works in the Government Art Collection, accompanied by further information about the work and the artist. The selection of works will change on a regular basis, so please come back again.

July 2008
I Wonder What My Heroes Think of the Space Race
Artist  
Derek BOSHIER
Title  
I Wonder What My Heroes Think of the Space Race
Date  
1962
Medium  
Oil on canvas
Dimensions  
241(H) x 174(W)
Inscriptions  
Signed verso
Acquisition  
Purchased from Sotheby's, 2 December 1976
Number  
12661

Description
A perfectly spherical moon provides the central focus of Derek Boshier’s classic British Pop Art painting of the 1960s. Intersected below is the Earth, its land masses dripping ominously like blood. Amid the clouds are Boshier’s ‘heroes’, all of whom died tragically, either by assassination or accident.

A half portrait of Lord Horatio Nelson in military dress and eye patch surveys the scene. Nearby, is the bearded figure of Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth President of the United States, who was in office during the American Civil War. The spectacled face of Buddy Holly, the American rock and roll singer, stares out from the clouds. Floating below, inside a white space is Yuri Gagarin, the Soviet cosmonaut and national hero who was the first human to enter space and to orbit the Earth in 1961.

Boshier was enthralled by the imagery of the American-Soviet ‘space race’ – the ideological battle for space exploration that dominated American and Soviet politics for two decades. Although painted in 1962, ‘I Wonder What My Heroes Think of the Space Race’ captures the spirit of the race to get humans to the moon. This July sees the fortieth anniversary of the American crew members of Apollo 11, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, famously setting foot on the moon on 20 July 1969. Their achievement pioneered the development of future lunar exploration.

Derek Boshier was born in Portsmouth and studied at Yeovil School of Art and in the early 1960s, at the Royal College of Art, where he was one of a younger generation of British Pop artists. He has exhibited widely and is well represented in British public collections. Major group exhibitions of his work were held at Tate Britain in 2004 and at the National Portrait Gallery in 2007. Today Boshier lives and works in Los Angeles.

 

 

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