The six sequential essays in this collection provide a narrative of a
century and a half of Welsh painting, written with an emphasis on issues
of social class and national identity. Through his earlier writing,
Peter Lord has contributed to the establishment of an historical
tradition of Welsh painting, but because it does not feature in the
wider story of Western art history as presently told, the work revealed
continues to be perceived as marginal, existing in isolation from ideas
and movements in other countries. These essays break new ground by
discussing the concerns of Welsh painters not only in domestic terms but
also in the context of the ways in which artists in other parts of
Europe and in the United States reacted to the common underlying causes
of those concerns. The author challenges the idea that the work of Welsh
painters is relevant only to the evolution of their own communities and,
through confident and detailed analysis, validates their pictures also
in terms of the arts of other Western cultures.