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painting wrecked planes as a dead sea, serving as war artist in both World Wars, and wanting Hitler's face on propaganda postcards of his own work

Where to see Paul Nash
Ranked by works you can see in person.
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14 worksTate
London, United Kingdom
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6 worksYale Center for British Art
New Haven, United States
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9 worksNational Gallery of Canada
Ottawa, Canada
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8 works
National Gallery
London, United Kingdom
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8 works
Imperial War Museums
London, United Kingdom
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5 works
Imperial War Museum London
London, United Kingdom
Also here (2)
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2 worksAberdeen Archives, Gallery and Museums collections
Aberdeen, United Kingdom
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5 worksBritish Council
London, United Kingdom
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5 works
Government Art Collection
London, United Kingdom
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4 worksNational Galleries Scotland
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Own a piece of it
Paul Nash prints
Hand-finished archival prints from Paul Nash's body of work.
Landscape with Hedge and Distant Hills - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Dyke by the Road - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Design for Urne Buriall and Ghosts - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Worth Matravers, Dorset - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Study of Mrs. Nash - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Oxfordshire Landscape - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Winter, Hampden - Paul Nash
From £28.00
Landscape of the Moon's First Quarter - Paul Nash
From £28.00
View all 45 museums
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3 works
Pallant House Gallery
Chichester, United Kingdom
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3 works
Leeds Art Gallery
Leeds, United Kingdom
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3 works
Manchester Art Gallery
Manchester, United Kingdom
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3 worksFitzwilliam Museum
Cambridge, United Kingdom
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0 worksCanadian War Museum
Ottawa, Canada
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2 works
Walker Art Gallery
Liverpool, United Kingdom
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2 worksFerens Art Gallery
Kingston upon Hull, United Kingdom
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2 works
Southampton City Art Gallery
Southampton, United Kingdom
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2 works
Art Gallery of New South Wales
Sydney, Australia
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2 works
Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust
Sheffield, United Kingdom
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2 works
Birmingham Museums Trust
Birmingham, United Kingdom
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2 works
National Gallery of Victoria
Melbourne, Australia
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1 works
Buffalo AKG Art Museum
Buffalo, United States
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1 worksMercer Art Gallery
Harrogate, United Kingdom
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1 works
Upton House
Ratley and Upton, United Kingdom
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1 worksUlster Museum
Belfast, United Kingdom
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0 works
Royal Academy of Arts
London, United Kingdom
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1 works
Whitworth Art Gallery
Manchester, United Kingdom
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1 works
Museum of Fine Arts Boston
Boston, United States
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1 worksGlasgow Museums Resource Centre
Glasgow, United Kingdom
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1 worksBrighton Museum & Art Gallery
Brighton and Hove, United Kingdom
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1 works
Glynn Vivian Art Gallery
Swansea, United Kingdom
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1 worksNational Gallery of Art
Washington D.C., United States
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0 works
Australian War Memorial
Canberra, Australia
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1 works
The Box
Plymouth, United Kingdom
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1 works
Art Gallery of South Australia
Adelaide, Australia
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0 works
British Museum
London, United Kingdom
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1 worksNational Museum Cardiff
Cardiff, United Kingdom
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1 worksThe Phillips Collection
Washington D.C., United States
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1 worksVictoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom
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1 works
Leicester Museum & Art Gallery
Leicester, United Kingdom
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1 worksCartwright Hall Art Gallery
Bradford, United Kingdom
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1 works
Reading Museum
Reading, United Kingdom
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1 works
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki
Auckland, New Zealand
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0 works
University of York Art Collection
York, United Kingdom
Also here (3)
Can't travel? Bring Paul Nash home.
See all Paul Nash prints →Frequently Asked Questions
Where did Paul Nash live?
Paul Nash was born in London and grew up in Buckinghamshire.Was Paul Nash a war artist?
Yes, Paul Nash served as an official war artist in both World Wars, one of very few to hold that role across both conflicts.Why was Paul Nash asked to become a war artist?
Paul Nash served as an official war artist in both World Wars, but the biography and scholarly passages do not specify why he was asked to become a war artist.Was Paul Nash a soldier?
The biography does not specify that Paul Nash was a soldier, but he did serve as an official war artist in both World Wars.Fun facts about Paul Nash?
Paul Nash deliberately used the German title Totes Meer (Dead Sea) because he wanted the image made into propaganda postcards to be dropped over the Reich; he even superimposed Hitler's head onto the wrecked planes in a postcard version.Paul Nash famous paintings?
Paul Nash's famous paintings include Totes Meer (Dead Sea).What was Paul Nash famous for?
Paul Nash is famous for his painting Totes Meer (Dead Sea, 1940[8]-41). Painted from his own photographs of the site, it is one of the defining images of the Second World War, depicting wrecked German aircraft.Paul Nash art movement?
Paul Nash's later work combined English landscape with Surrealism[8].
Sources
Where to See guide aggregates verified holdings of Paul Nash's works across the following collections.
- [1] museum Buffalo AKG Art Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [2] museum Mercer Art Gallery Used for: museum holdings.
- [3] museum Government Art Collection Used for: museum holdings.
- [4] museum Upton House Used for: museum holdings.
- [5] museum Ulster Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [6] museum National Galleries Scotland Used for: museum holdings.
- [7] wikidata Wikidata: Q727643 Used for: identifiers.
- [8] wikipedia Wikipedia: Paul Nash Used for: biography.
- [9] book Hodge, Susie;, Artists at Home Used for: museum holdings.
- [10] book Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author, Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author - The Art Book_ New Edition, Mini Format Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
- [11] book Caws, Mary Ann; Wright, Sarah Bird; , Bloomsbury and France Used for: museum holdings.
- [12] book guggenheim-britishartnowame00wald Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
- [13] book guggenheim-emergingartists100wald Used for: biography.
- [14] book guggenheim-picassow00nash Used for: biography.
- [15] book Bo Jeffares, Landscape Painting (In the History of Art) Used for: stylistic analysis.
- [16] book Tillyard, S. K, The impact of modernism, 1900-1920 : early modernism and the arts and crafts movement in Edwardian England Used for: stylistic analysis.
- [17] book Robert Hughes, The Shock of the New, 1980 Used for: biography.
- [18] book Charlene Spretnak (auth.), The Spiritual Dynamic in Modern Art _ Art History Reconsidered, 1800 to the Present Used for: stylistic analysis.
Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-07-15. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.
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