Australian official war artists

Australian official war artists are those who have been expressly employed by either the Australian War Memorial (AWM) or the Army Military History Section (or its antecedents).[1] These artist soldiers depicted some aspect of war through art; this might be a pictorial record or it might commemorate how war shapes lives.[2]

Australian official war artists, 1916–1918 by George Coates, 1920. Oil on canvas, 124.2 x 104.5 cm. The group portrait presents, left to right: front — George Bell; standing — John Longstaff, Charles Bryant, George Washington Lambert, A. Henry Fullwood, James Quinn, H. Septimus Power, Arthur Streeton; and seated back — Will Dyson, Fred Leist.

War artists have explored a visual and sensory dimension of war which is often absent in written histories or other accounts of warfare.[1] Official war artists have been appointed by governments for information or propaganda purposes and to record events on the battlefield;[3] but there are many other types of war artist.

A war artist creates a visual account of war by showing its impact as men and women are shown waiting, preparing, fighting, suffering, celebrating,[4] The works produced by war artists illustrate and record many aspects of war, and the individual's experience of war, whether allied or enemy, service or civilian, military or political, social or cultural. The rôle of the artist and his work embraces the causes, course and consequences of conflict and it has an essentially educational purpose.[2] For example, C.E.W. Bean's Anzac Book influenced the artists who grew up between the two world wars; and the war art of their childhoods provided a precedent and format for them to follow as war artists of the Second World War.[5]

The AWM have appointed war artists to record the activities of Australian forces in Korea, Vietnam, East Timor and Afghanistan; and both the AWM and the Australian Army have appointed official war artists to depict Australian forces in Iraq.

First World War

Artworks by Arthur Streeton and sculptures by Web Gilbert on display at the Australian War Memorial in 2012

The Australian tradition of war artists started with the First World War.

Will Dyson, an expatriate Australian artist living in London petitioned the Australian government to allow him to travel to the Western Front where Australian forces were fighting. In 1917 he was finally granted permission to accompany the Australian Imperial Force to record the activities of its soldiers and thus became the first Australian official war artist.

This early scheme was expanded upon and other Australian artists were commissioned to undertake forays to the front lines to record the Australian experience of war. Artists who had already enlisted and were fighting with the AIF, were appointed official war artists for the Australian Army.

Second World War

During the Second World War, the Australian War Memorial, continued the scheme and appointed war artists whilst the Australian Army, Royal Australian Navy and Royal Australian Air Force appointed their own official war artists from within their ranks. Other venues have honored Australian participation in the war.[6]

Selected artists

First World War

Arthur Streeton: Amiens, the key of the west, oil-on-canvas, completed in 1919.

Second World War

Lieutenant Frank Hodgkinson

Recent conflicts

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See also

Notes

  1. "Australian official war artists - Second World War | The Australian War Memorial". www.awm.gov.au. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  2. Imperial War Museum (IWM), About the Imperial War Museum Archived 2010-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
  3. National Archives (UK), "'The Art of War,' Learn About the Art."
  4. Canadian War Museum (CWM), "Australia, Britain and Canada in the Second World War," 2005.
  5. Reid, John B. (1977). Australian Artists at War, Vol. 2, p. 5.
  6. CWM, "Interpreting the war: Australia's Second World War art" by Lola Wilkins, 2005.
  7. AWM, First World War, official artists
  8. National Gallery of Australia (NGA). "War Artists" by Anna Gray; excerpt, artists "were commissioned to paint portraits and large battle pictures after the war."
  9. Reid, John B. (1977). Australian Artists at War, Vol. 1, pp. 13–14.
  10. NGA, "War Artists"; excerpt, "Daryl Lindsay was seconded to become a medical artist at the Queen Mary Hospital at Sidcup, Kent, in England."
  11. Gray, Anne. (1986). "McCubbin, Louis Frederick (1890–1952)," Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 10, pp. 243–244; Reid, p. 15.
  12. AWM: Second World War, official artists
  13. CWM, Yosl Bergner
  14. Colahan, Colin – Australian War Memorial; An article and images of Colahan's war art compiled by Garry Kinnane., Journal of the Australian War Memorial, retrieved 31 August 2011
  15. CWM, William Dobell
  16. CWM, Russell Drysdale
  17. CWM, Harold Freedman
  18. CWM, Frank Hinder
  19. CWM, Ludwig Herschfeld Mack
  20. Australian War Memorial, Lieutenant Geoffrey Richard Mainwaring, Retrieved 3 April 2019
  21. "Alan Moore". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  22. CWM, Sidney Nolan
  23. Vodicka, Peter (2019). Reginald Wilfred (Bill) Rowed : artist, avid skier and raconteur. [Darling Point, New South Wales] : [Peter Vodicka].
  24. CWM, Grace Cossington Smith
  25. CWM, Grace Taylor
  26. AWM: Conflicts 1945 to today, official artists
  27. Order of Australia, George Gittoes, 1997.
  28. RAAF_News,, 2013.

References

  • McCloskey, Barbara. (2005). Artists of World War II. Westport: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-32153-5; OCLC 475496457
  • Reid, John B. (1977). Australian Artists at War: Compiled from the Australian War Memorial Collection. Volume 1. 1885–1925; Vol. 2 1940–1970. South Melbourne, Victoria: Sun Books. ISBN 978-0-7251-0254-8; OCLC 4035199

Further reading

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