Arthur Beaumont

Arthur Beaumont (1890-1978) Born: Norwich, England. In the 1930s, he became a Lieutenant in the United States Naval Reserve and began producing the first of many watercolors depicting battle ships and other naval subjects.

During World War II, he was a war artist, documenting naval battles. A series of these works were published in National Geographic magazine. After the war he continued producing watercolors of naval activities in China, Japan, Guam, Vietnam and the Antarctic. Although he painted depictions of landscape and figurative subjects and worked as a commissioned portrait artist, Beaumont is best known for his watercolors of ships and harbor scenes.

As the official artist for Operation Crossroads – a series of nuclear tests that took place in the Marshall Islands – Beaumont was there to provide a keen account. In Bikini Atoll Atomic Test, his usual plein air style feels markedly different. The naval vessel and its crew are not the canvas’s focal point. The explosion is detailed and dramatic, relative to its eerily still surroundings. It is factual. And there is no danger of Beaumont romanticizing the painting’s island setting, with landfall barely visible in the distance.