Jet Engine on a test bed

Made:
1954 in United Kingdom
artist:
Terence Tenison Cuneo
Painting

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Painting
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Oil painting 'Jet Engine on a test bed' by Terence Cuneo, November 1954. Signed and dated, bottom right.

Cuneo shows a De Havilland 'Ghost' engine on test bed.

In his autobiography Cuneo describes the experience of observing the engine, showing the considerable physical pains that he went to in producing his work: “Then, there was the time when I had to crouch beside the open bore of a deHavilland ‘Ghost’ jet engine on test, ear-muffed, listening to the piercing scream of ‘peak revs’ and trying to observe the colour effects of the lurid glow within the cone. Concentration was not aided by the fact that with the mounting crescendo, the slipstream began tearing at my trouser legs and all but snatched me from the ladder, whilst my whole inside started shimmering, as if jerked by invisible springs. It was only possible to endure this for seconds at a time and I had constantly to signal the operator in his sound-proof cabin to decelerate.” (The Mouse and his master, 1977, p.47). Cuneo's trademark mouse has not yet been found yet in this scene.

The painting was originally presented to Lord Hives, the chairman of Rolls Royce by C. M. Vignoles, Managing Director of Shell-Mex and BP on 15th December 1954. It is not clear why Vignoles would have presented Hives with a painting of a rival engine.

The painting subsequently appeared in the Rolls Royce Heritage Exhibition at Derby City Art Gallery in 1983 and 'Cuneo 80th Birthday Exhibition' at the London Mall Galleries, 8th-18th June, 1988.

Details

Category:
Art
Object Number:
1986-703
Materials:
oil paint on canvas
Measurements:
overall: 760 mm x 870 mm x 50 mm,
frame: 745 mm x 875 mm x 50 mm,
image: 635 mm x 762 mm
type:
oil painting
credit:
Purchased (Sotheby's)