War artist

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Willem van de Velde the Elder (c. 1611–1693) was the official naval war artist of the Dutch Admiralties during the first two Anglo-Dutch Wars in the 17th century.





The Third of May 1808 1814, by Francisco Goya


A war artist is an artist that depicts scenes or aspects of war through their art. The art might be a pictorial record, or it might commemorate how war shapes lives.[1] War artists explore the visual and sensory dimensions of war, often absent in written histories or other accounts of warfare.[2]


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Contents





  • 1 Definition and context

    • 1.1 Some examples and their background



  • 2 American

    • 2.1 Revolutionary War


    • 2.2 American Civil War


    • 2.3 Spanish–American War


    • 2.4 World War I


    • 2.5 World War II


    • 2.6 Vietnam era


    • 2.7 Recent conflicts



  • 3 Australian

    • 3.1 Second Boer War


    • 3.2 First World War


    • 3.3 Second World War


    • 3.4 Recent conflicts



  • 4 Austrian


  • 5 British

    • 5.1 Napoleonic Wars


    • 5.2 Crimean War


    • 5.3 Boer Wars


    • 5.4 First World War


    • 5.5 Second World War


    • 5.6 Recent conflicts



  • 6 Belgian

    • 6.1 First World War



  • 7 Canadian

    • 7.1 First World War


    • 7.2 Second World War


    • 7.3 Recent conflicts



  • 8 Chinese


  • 9 Dutch


  • 10 Flemish


  • 11 French


  • 12 German

    • 12.1 Franco-Prussian War


    • 12.2 First World War


    • 12.3 Second World War


    • 12.4 Recent conflicts



  • 13 Japanese


  • 14 Korean


  • 15 New Zealand

    • 15.1 First World War


    • 15.2 Second World War


    • 15.3 Recent conflicts



  • 16 Russian


  • 17 Serbia


  • 18 South African


  • 19 Spanish


  • 20 See also


  • 21 Notes


  • 22 References


  • 23 Further reading


  • 24 External links




Definition and context




A war artist in German-occupied France in 1941


A war artist creates a visual account of the impact of war by showing how men and women are waiting, preparing, fighting, suffering, celebrating,[3] or destroyed, as in Vasily Vereshchagin's 1871 painting, The Apotheosis of War.


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 role of the artist and his work is to embrace the causes, course, and consequences of conflict, and has an essentially educational purpose.[4]


Artists record military activities in ways that cameras and the written word cannot. Their art collects and distills the experiences of the men and women who endured it.[5] The artists and their artwork affect how subsequent generations view military conflicts. For example, Australian war artists who grew up between the two world wars were influenced by the artwork which depicted the First World War, and there was a precedent and format for them to follow.[6]


Official war artists have been appointed by governments for information or propaganda purposes and to record events on the battlefield,[7] but there are many other types of war artists. These can include combatants who are artists and choose to record their experiences, non-combatants who are witnesses of war, and prisoners of war who may voluntarily record the conditions or be appointed war artists by senior officers.


In New Zealand, the title of appointed "war artist" changed to "army artist" after the two world wars.[8] In the United States, the term "combat artist" has come to be used to mean the same thing.[9][10]





Gassed, 1918, by John Singer Sargent. Oil on canvas, 231 x 611.1cm (91 x 240.5in). Collection of the Imperial War Museum, London



Some examples and their background



  • William Simpson was an artist-correspondent who sent artwork to London from the front during the Crimean War.[11]


  • Alfred Waud was an American civil war pictorial newspaper illustrator.


  • Ogata Gekkō and Tsuguharu Foujita created woodblock prints for Japanese publications.


  • Ronald Searle recorded life in Japanese POW camps.[12][13]


  • Emmanuel Leutze's 1851 studio painting of Washington Crossing the Delaware is historically incorrect, and Leutze was born decades after the event his painting depicts, but this work has become an icon of popular culture.


American






Thomas Lea's The 2000 Yard Stare published in 1945




Michael Fay is an official US Marine war artist, one of only three whose work depicts the battlefronts in Iraq and Afghanistan (2007).


The American panorama created by artists whose work focuses on war began with a visual account of the American Revolutionary War. The war artist or combat artist captures instantaneous action and conflates earlier moments of the same scene within one compelling image. Artists are unlike the objective camera lens, which records only a single instant and no more.[14]


In 1917 the American military designated American official war artists who were sent to Europe to record the activities of the American Expeditionary Forces.[15]


In World War II, the Navy Combat Art Program ensured that active-duty artists developed a record of all phases of the war and all major naval operations.[14]


The official war artist continued to be supported in some military engagements. Teams of soldier-artists during the Vietnam War created pictorial accounts and interpretations for the annals of army military history.[16] In 1992 the Army Staff Artist Program was attached to the United States Army Center of Military History as a permanent part of the Museum Division's Collections Branch.[15]


The majority of combat artists of the 1970s were selected by George Gray, chairman of NACAL, Navy Air Cooperation and Liaison committee. Some of their paintings will be selected for the Navy Combat Art Museum in the capital by Charles Lawrence, director. In January 1978 the U.S. Navy chose a seascape specialist team: they asked Patricia Yaps and Wayne Dean, both of Milford, Connecticut, to capture air-sea rescue missions off of Key West while they were based at the nearby Naval Air Station Key West. They were among 78 artists selected that year to create works of art depicting Navy subjects.[17][18][19]


Selected artists

A select list of representative American artists includes:








Revolutionary War


  • Ralph Earl

  • Emanuel Leutze

  • William B.T. Trego

  • John Trumbull


American Civil War


  • Don Troiani

  • Alonzo Chappel

  • Edwin Forbes

  • Gilbert Gaul

  • Winslow Homer

  • Thomas Nast


  • Keith Rocco[20]

  • Julian Scott

  • Xanthus Russell Smith

  • Alfred Waud

  • William Waud



Spanish–American War



  • Howard Chandler Christy Newspaper


  • William Glackens Newspaper


  • Henry Reuterdahl Newspaper


  • Walter Russell Newspaper


World War I



  • William James Aylward[21]


  • Walter Jack Duncan[21]


  • Harvey Thomas Dunn[21]


  • Kerr Eby Marines


  • George Matthews Harding[21]


  • Wallace Morgan[21]


  • Ernest Clifford Peixotto[22]

  • John Singer Sargent


  • J. Andre Smith[22]


  • Henry Tonks[22]


  • Harry Everett Townsend, Army[22]


  • Claggett Wilson Army



World War II



  • Standish Backus, 1910–1989


  • McClelland Barclay, 1891–1942[23]


  • George Biddle, 1885–1973


  • Aaron Bohrod, 1907–1992[24]


  • Howard Brodie, 1915–2010[25][26]


  • Joseph Bulone, 1915-2006


  • Jack Coggins, 1914–2006[24]


  • Raymond Creekmore, 1905–1984

  • James Dietz


  • Olin Dows[27]


  • Edward Dugmore, 1915–1996[24]


  • William Franklin Draper, 1912–2003[28][29]


  • Ted Egri, 1913-2010[30] Egri served in the U.S. Navy, and painted while at sea. Examples of his WWII paintings have recently been donated to the U.S. Navy Museum, 2016.


  • Nathan Glick Army Air Force


  • Mitchel Jamieson, 1915–1976


  • Thomas Lea, 1907-2001


  • Ludwig Mactarian, 1908-1955


  • John Cullen Murphy, 1919–2004[24]


  • Edward Reep, 1918–2013   [25][31]


  • Henry Varnum Poor, 1887–1970


  • Dwight Shepler (died 1974)


  • Mitchell Siporin, 1910–1976


  • Sam Smith, 1918-1999[32]

  • Taro Yashima

  • Yasuo Kuniyoshi


Vietnam era


Soldier Artist Participants in the U. S. Army Vietnam Combat Artists Program





Landing Zone by John O. Wehrle, CAT I, 1966, Courtesy of the National Museum of the United States Army



  • CAT I, 15 Aug – 15 Dec 1966, Roger A. Blum (Stillwell, KS), Robert C. Knight (Newark, NJ), Ronald E. Pepin (East Hartford, CT), Paul Rickert (Philadelphia, PA), Felix R. Sanchez (Fort Madison, IA), John O. Wehrle (Dallas, TX), and supervisor, Frank M. Sherman


  • CAT II, 15 Oct 1966 – 15 Feb 1967, Augustine G. Acuna (Monterey, CA), Alexander A. Bogdanovich (Chicago, IL), Theodore E. Drendel (Naperville, IL), David M. Lavender (Houston, TX), Gary W. Porter (El Cajon, CA), and supervisor, Carolyn M. O'Brien


  • CAT III, 16 Feb – 17 June 1967, Michael R. Crook (Sierra Madre, CA), Dennis O. McGee (Castro Valley, CA), Robert T. Myers (White Sands Missile Range, NM), Kenneth J. Scowcroft (Manassas, VA), Stephen H. Sheldon (Los Angeles, CA), and supervisor, C. Bruce Smyser


  • CAT IV, 15 Aug – 31 Dec 1967, Samuel E. Alexander (Philadelphia, MS), Daniel T. Lopez (Fresno, CA), Burdell Moody (Mesa, AZ), James R. Pollock (Pollock, SD), Ronald A. Wilson (Alhambra, CA), and technical supervisor, Frank M. Thomas


  • CAT V, 1 Nov 1967 – 15 March 1968, Warren W. Buchanan (Kansas City, MO), Philip V. Garner (Dearborn, MI), Phillip W. Jones (Greensboro, NC), Don R. Schol (Denton, TX), John R. Strong (Kanehoe, HI), and technical supervisor, Frank M. Thomas


  • CAT VI, 1 Feb – 15 June 1968, Robert T. Coleman (Grand Rapids, MI), David N. Fairrington (Oakland, CA), John D. Kurtz IV (Wilmington, DE), Kenneth T. McDaniel (Paris, TN), Michael P. Pala (Bridgeport, CT)


  • CAT VII, 15 Aug – 31 Dec 1968, Brian H. Clark (Huntington, NY), William E. Flaherty Jr. (Louisville, KY), William C. Harrington (Terre Haute, IN), Barry W. Johnston (Huntsville, AL), Stephen H. Randall (Des Moines, IA), and supervisor, Fitzallen N. Yow


  • CAT VIII, 1 Feb – 15 June 1969, Edward J. Bowen (Carona Del Mar, CA), James R. Drake (Colorado Springs, CO), Roman Rakowsky (Cleveland, OH), Victory V. Reynolds (Idaho Falls, ID), Thomas B. Schubert (Chicago, IL), and supervisor, Fred B. Engel


  • CAT IX, 1 Sept 1969 – 14 Jan 1970, David E. Graves (Lawrence, KS), James S. Hardy (Coronado, CA), William R. Hoettels (San Antonio, TX), Bruce N. Rigby (Dekalb, IL), Craig L. Stewart (Laurel, MD), and supervisor, Edward C. Williams


Recent conflicts



  • Kristopher Battles, Iraq and Afghanistan[9]


  • Henry Casselli[33]


  • Michael D. Fay, Iraq and Afghanistan[9]


  • Robert W. Bates, Afghanistan[34][35][36]


  • Victor Juhasz, Afghanistan[37]




  • Sergeant Than Naing of Wounded Warrior Battalion, East, sketched by Robert William Bates, 2011.





Australian






Australians and New Zealanders at Klerksdorp 24 March 1901 by Charles Hammond


War artists have depicted all the conflicts in which Australians have been called to combat. The Australian tradition of "official war artists" started with the First World War. Artists were granted permission to accompany the Australian Imperial Force to record the activities of its soldiers. During the Second World War, the Australian War Museum, later called the Australian War Memorial, engaged artists. At the same time, the Australian Army, Royal Australian Navy, and Royal Australian Air Force appointed official war artist-soldiers from within their ranks.[38] These embedded war artists have depicted the activities of Australian forces in Korea, Vietnam, East Timor, Afghanistan, and Iraq.


The ranks of non-soldier artists like George Gittoes continue to create artwork which becomes a commentary on Australia's military actions in war.[39]


Selected artists

A select list of representative Australian artists includes:








Second Boer War



  • William Dargie CBE, 1912–2003[40]


First World War



  • George Bell, 1878–1966[41]


  • Charles Bryant, 1883–1937[41]


  • Will Dyson, 1880–1938[41]


  • A. Henry Fullwood, 1863–1930[41]


  • George Lambert ARA, 1873–1930[41]


  • Fred Leist, 1878–1945[41]


  • John Longstaff, 1862–1941[41]


  • Louis Frederick McCubbin, 1890–1952[42]


  • Harold Septimus Power, 1877–1951[41]


  • James Quinn, 1869–1951[41]


  • Arthur Streeton, 1867–1943[41]



Second World War



  • Stella Bowen, 1893–1947[43]


  • Norma Bull, 1906-1980[44]


  • Colin Colahan, 1897–1987[45]


  • William Dargie CBE, 1912–2003[43]


  • William Dobell OBE, 1899–1970[46]


  • Russell Drysdale AC, 1912–1981[47]


  • Richard Eurich, OBE, RA, 1903–1992[48]


  • Murray Griffin, 1903–1992[43]


  • Nora Heysen AM, 1911–2003[43]


  • Frank Hodgkinson AM, 1919–2001[43]


  • Nora Heysen AM, 1911–2003[43]


  • Alan Moore, 1914-2015[43]


  • Sydney Nolan OM, AC, 1917–1992.[49]


  • William Edwin Pidgeon, 1909–1981


  • Grace Cossington Smith AO, 1892–1984[50]



Recent conflicts



  • Rick Amor, b. 1948, Peacekeeping in East Timor.[51]


  • Conway Bown, b. 1966, Australian Army War Artist[52]


  • Peter Churcher, b. 1964, War on Terrorism.[51]


  • George Gittoes AM, b. 1949.[39]


  • Shaun Gladwell, b. 1972, War in Afghanistan.[51]


  • Ivor Hele, 1912–1993, Korean War[51]


  • Ken McFadyen, 1939–1997, Vietnam War[51]


  • Lewis Miller, b. 1959, War in Iraq.[51]


  • Frank Norton, 1916–1983, Korean War[51]


  • Wendy Sharpe, b. 1960, Peacekeeping in East Timor[51]


Austrian





The Fall of Nelson, Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805 by Denis Dighton, c. 1825





The Last Stand at Isandlwana, 1879 by Charles Edwin Fripp in 1885. Collection of the National Army Museum of South Africa


  • Alfred Basel

  • Roman Zenzinger


British



British participation in foreign wars has been the subject of paintings and other works created by Britain's war artists. Artwork like the 1688 painting,The Fleet at Sea by Willem van de Velde the Younger depict the Royal Navy in readiness for battle. The Ministry of Defence art collection includes many paintings showing battle scenes, particularly naval battles.[53]Military art and portraiture has evolved along with other aspects of war. The British official war artists of the First World War created a unique account of that conflict. The British War Artists Scheme expanded the number of official artists and enlarged the scope of their activities during the Second War.[54]


Significant themes in the chronicle of twentieth-century wars have been developed by non-military, non-official, civilian artists. For example, society portraitist Arabella Dorman's paintings of wounded Iraq War veterans inspired her to spend two weeks with three regiments in different frontline areas: the Green Jackets at Basra Palace, the Queen's Own Gurkhas at Shaibah Logistics Base ten miles south-west of Basra, and the Queen's Royal Lancers in the Maysaan desert. In the field, Dorman drew quick charcoal portraits of the men she met. Returning to England, the sketches she made helped her use art to "evoke the emotions and psychological impact of war," rather than depicting the "physical horror" of war.[55]


Selected artists

A select list of representative British artists includes:








Napoleonic Wars



  • Denis Dighton, 1792–1827[56]


  • Robert Ker Porter, 1777–1842[57]


  • John Christian Schetky,1778–1874[53]


Crimean War



  • Jerry Barrett, 1824–1906[58]


  • Oswald Brierly, 1817–1894[59]


  • William Simpson 1823–1899[60]


Boer Wars



  • John Henry Frederick Bacon, 1868–1914[61]


  • René Bull, 1872–1942


  • Charles Edwin Fripp, 1854–1906[62]


  • Godfrey Douglas Giles, 1857–1941[63]


  • Ernest Prater, 1864–1950[64]


  • Melton Prior, 1845–1910[65]


  • Frederic Villiers, 1851–1922


  • William Barnes Wollen, 1857–1936


First World War



  • Muirhead Bone, 1888–1953.[66]


  • Sydney Carline, 1888-1929.


  • Colin Gill, 1892-1940.


  • Eric Kennington RA, 1888–1960.[67]


  • John Hodgson Lobley RA, 1878–1954.[68][69]


  • Olive Mudie-Cooke, 1890-1925.


  • John Nash CBE RA, 1893–1977.[70]


  • Paul Nash, 1889-1946.[71]


  • C.R.W. Nevinson, 1889-1946.[72]


  • Sir William Orpen KBE RA RHA, 1878–1931.[73]


  • Sir Stanley Spencer RA, 1891–1959.[74]



Second World War



  • George Worsley Adamson RE, 1913–2005[75]


  • Edward Ardizzone CBE RA, 1900–1979[76]


  • Richard Eurich RA, 1903–1992[77]


  • Edward Bawden RA, 1903–1989[78]


  • Henry Carr RA, 1894–1970[79]


  • Jack Bridger Chalker, 1918–2014


  • Leslie Cole, 1910-1976


  • Charles Cundall, 1890-1971,


  • Anthony Gross, 1905-1984[80][81]


  • Bernard Hailstone, 1910–1987[66]


  • Thomas Hennell, 1903–1945[66]


  • Eliot Hodgkin, 1905–1987[82]


  • Laura Knight DBE RA, 1877–1970[83]

  • (Thomas) John Mansbridge, 1901-1981.[84]


  • Philip Meninsky, 1919–2007.[85]


  • James Morris, 1908—1989


  • Ashley George Old, 1913–2001[86]


  • Cuthbert Orde, 1888–1968[87]


  • John Piper, 1903–1992


  • Roland Vivian Pitchforth, 1911–1999[66]


  • Eric Ravilious, 1903–1942[88]


  • Albert Richards, 1919–1945[89]


  • Henry Rushbury, KCVO RA 1898–1968


  • Stella Schmolle, 1908-1975


  • Ronald Searle CBE RDI, 1920–    [12]


  • Ruskin Spear RA, 1911–1990[90]


  • Sir Stanley Spencer RA, 1891–1959.[91]


  • Graham Sutherland OM, 1903–1980[92]


  • Carel Weight CBE RA, 1908–1997[93]


  • John Worsley, 1919–2000



Recent conflicts



  • Richard Johnson, b. 1966


  • Derek Eland, b. 1961 (Afghanistan, 2011)[94]


  • Peter Howson, b. 1958[95][96]


  • John Keane, b. 1954[95][97]


  • Linda Kitson, b. 1945 (Falklands, 1982)[95][98][99]


  • Xavier Pick, b. 1972 (Iraq with British and US Forces, 2009-2011)


  • Steve Mumford, b. 1960 (Iraq with US Forces)


  • Paul Seawright, b 1965 (Afghanistan) Imperial War Museum Commission



Portrait of POW "Dusty" Rhodes. A three-minute sketch by Ashley George Old painted in Thailand



Belgian



First World War



  • Alfred Bastien, 1873—1955[100]


Canadian






Canadian Forestry Corps' Gas Attack, Lievin (1918) by Canadian war artist A. Y. Jackson


Representative works by Canada's artists whose work illustrates and records war are gathered into the extensive collection of the Canadian War Museum. A few First World War paintings were exhibited in the Senate of Canada Chamber, and artists studied these works as a way of preparing to create new artworks in the conflict in Europe which expanded after 1939.[101]





In the Second World War, Canada expanded its official art program;[101] Canadian war artists were a kind of journalist who lived the lives of soldiers.[102] The work of non-official civilian artists also became part of the record of this period. Canada supported Canadian official war artists in both the First World War and the Second World War; no official artists were designated during the Korean War.[103]


Among Canada's embedded artist-journalist teams was Richard Johnson, who was sent by the National Post to Afghanistan in 2007 and 2011; his drawings of Canadian troops were published and posted online as part of the series "Kandahar Journal".[104]


Selected artists

A select list of representative Canadian artists includes:




First World War



  • John William Beatty, 1869–1941[102]


  • Alexander Young Jackson CC CMG, 1882–1974[102]


  • Arthur Lismer CC, 1885–1969[102]


    Capt. Will Ogilvie, Official army war artist, with some of his paintings, 9 February 1944




  • Frederick Varley, 1881–1969[102]


  • Mabel May, 1877-1971[105]


Second World War



  • Eric Aldwinckle, 1909-1980[106]


  • Donald Kenneth Anderson, 1920–2009[107]


  • Alan Brockman Beddoe OC OBE HFHS FHSC, 1893–1975[108]


  • Molly Lamb Bobak CM ONB, 1922–    [109]


  • Paraskeva Clark[110]


  • David Alexander Colville PC CC ONS, 1920–2013[111]


  • Charles Fraser Comfort OC, 1900–1994[112]


  • Lawren P. Harris, 1910-1994


  • William Abernethy Ogilvie CM MBE, 1901–1989


  • George Campbell Tinning RCA, 1910-1996[113]


  • Jack Shadbolt OC OBC, 1909–1998[102]


Recent conflicts



  • Richard Johnson, b. 1966


  • Edward Zuber, b. 1932    [114]


Chinese


  • Li Hua

  • Feng Zikai


Dutch


  • Philips Wouwerman


Flemish


  • Vincent Adriaenssen

  • Pieter van Bloemen

  • Frans Breydel

  • Karel Breydel

  • Jasper Broers

  • Laureys a Castro

  • Nicolaas van Eyck

  • Frans Geffels

  • Robert van den Hoecke

  • Lambert de Hondt the Elder

  • Jan Baptist van der Meiren

  • Adam Frans van der Meulen

  • Pieter Meulener

  • Arnold Frans Rubens

  • Lucas Smout the Younger

  • Peter Snayers

  • Jan Snellinck

  • Jan Peeter Verdussen

  • Pieter Verdussen

  • Sebastiaen Vrancx

  • Cornelis de Wael


French




French war art poster by Henri Dangon, 1916. Lithograph by Imp. H. Chachoin, Paris


During the First World War, the work of artists depicting aspects of the military conflict were put on display in official war art exhibitions.[115] In 1916 the Ministry of Beaux-Arts and the Ministry of War sponsored the Salon des Armées to show the work of the artists who had been mobilized. This one exhibition realized 60,000 francs. The proceeds supported needy artists at home and the disabled.[115]


  • Hippolyte Bellangé

  • Nicolas Toussaint Charlet

  • Edouard Detaille

  • Antoine-Jean Gros

  • Constantin Guys

  • Eugène Louis Lami

  • Louis-François, Baron Lejeune

  • Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier

  • Alphonse-Marie de Neuville

  • Paul Philippoteaux

  • Paul Alexandre Protais

  • Denis Auguste Marie Raffet

  • Carle Vernet

  • Horace Vernet

  • Antoine Watteau

  • Adolphe Yvon


German



  • Emmanuel Leutze

  • Adolf Menzel


Franco-Prussian War


  • Georg Bleibtreu

  • Wilhelm Camphausen

  • Emil Hünten

  • Carl Röchling

  • Anton von Werner


First World War



  • Luitpold Adam[116]

  • Otto Dix

  • Theodor Rocholl


Second World War



  • Luitpold Adam[117]


  • Heinrich Amersdorffer[118]


  • Conrad Hommel[119]


  • Alfred Hierl[119]


Recent conflicts



  • Frauke Eigen, b. 1969[120][121]


Japanese




  • Kubota Beisen, 1852–1906[122]


  • Toyohara Chikanobu, 1838–1912[123]


  • Tsuguharu Foujita, 1886–1968[124]


  • Ogata Gekkō, 1859–1920[125]


  • Toshihide Migita, 1862–1925[126]


  • Utagawa Yoshiiku, 1833–1904[127]


Korean



  • Kim Seong-hwan, 1932–    [128]


New Zealand



War artists have been appointed by the government to supplement the record of New Zealand’s military history.[129] The title of "war artist" changed to "army artist" when Ion Brown was appointed after the two world wars.[130]


Conservators at the National Art Gallery considered the collection to be of historic rather than artistic worth; few were displayed.[131] New Zealand's National Collection of War Art encompasses the work of artists who were working on commission for the Government as official war artists, while others created artworks for their own reasons.[132]


Selected artists

A select list of representative New Zealand artists includes:




First World War





Bellevue Ridge, 1918 by New Zealand official war artist George Edmund Butler



  • George Edmund Butler[133]

  • Nugent Herman[130]


Second World War



  • James Boswell, 1906–1971[134]


  • Russell Clark, 1905–1966[135]


  • John McIndoe, 1898–1995;[136]


  • Peter McIntyre OBE, 1910–1995[137]


Recent conflicts



  • Graham Braddock[130]


  • Ion Brown,[138] Bosnia and Croatia[130]


  • Matthew Gauldie,[139] Solomon Islands and Afghanistan[140]


Russian




The Apotheosis of War by Vasily Vereshchagin


  • Mikhail Avilov

  • Nikolai Baskakov

  • Lev Chegorovsky

  • Vladimir Chekalov

  • Aleksandr Deyneka

  • Nikolai Dmitriev-Orenburgsky

  • Rudolf Frentz

  • Nikolay Karazin

  • Aleksey Kivshenko

  • Victor Korovin

  • Alexander Kotzebue

  • Lev Lagorio

  • Viktor Poltavets

  • Franz Roubaud

  • Nikolai Samokish

  • Alexander Sauerweid

  • Nikolay Sauerweid

  • Vasily Vereshchagin

  • Bogdan Willewalde


Serbia


  • Mihailo Milovanović (1879-1941), one of the most distinguished artists in World War I

  • Dragomir Glišić (1872-1957)

  • Kosta Miličević (1877-1920)

  • Miloš Golubović (1888-1961)

  • Đorđe Mihajlović (1875-1924)

  • Danica Jovanović (1886) killed at the start of the war

  • Živorad Nastasijević (1895-1966)


  • Nadežda Petrović succumbed to typhus fever in 1915


  • Beta Vukanović survived as a widow when her husband


  • Rista Vukanović had died in 1918

  • Dragoslav Vasiljević Figa (1895-1929)

  • Miodrag Petrović (1888-1950)

  • Borivoje K. Radenković (1871-1952)

  • Milivoj Dejanović (1883-1938)

  • Vasa Eškićević (1867-1933)

  • Nikola Džanga (1892-1960)

  • Jefto Perić (1895-1967)

  • Todor Švrakić

  • Emanuel Muanović (1886-1944)


  • Vladimir Becić who early in his career joined the Serbian Army

  • Dragoljub Pavlović (b. 1875)


South African



  • Neville Lewis (World War II)


Spanish




Spanish war artist Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau in Afghanistan (2012)



  • Francisco de Goya, e.g., The Disasters of War, The Third of May 1808, 1810s


  • Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937.


  • Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau 1964[141]


See also


  • Norman Wilkinson (artist)

  • War photography


Notes




  1. ^ Imperial War Museum (IWM), header phrase, "war shapes lives"


  2. ^ Australian War Memorial (AWM): Australian official war artists


  3. ^ Canadian War Museum (CWM), "Australia, Britain, and Canada in the Second World War," 2005.


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  57. ^ National Portrait Gallery(NPG), Robert Ker Porter


  58. ^ National Portrait Gallery, Expansion and Empire


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  60. ^ Library of Congress (LOC), Simpson, William, 1823–1899


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  62. ^ Charles Edwin Fripp; excerpt, "Fripp also held a commission in the Artists Rifles for 13 years ...."


  63. ^ British Sporting Artists Trust (BSAT), Godfrey Douglas Giles


  64. ^ WorldCat Identities: Prater, Ernest


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  67. ^ Imperial War Museum. "Gassed and Wounded [Art.IWM ART 4744]". IWM Collections Search. Retrieved 16 April 2013.; also a war artist in the Second World War.


  68. ^ "John Hodgson Lobley, 1878–1954". BBC in partnership with The Public Catalogue Foundation.


  69. ^ "Witness – Highlights of First World War Art" (PDF). Imperial War Museum.


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  71. ^ Imperial War Museum. "The Menin Road [Art.IWM ART 2242]". IWM Collections Search. Retrieved 16 April 2013.; also a war artist in World War II.


  72. ^ Imperial War Museum. "Paths of Glory [Art.IWM ART 518]". IWM Collections Search. Retrieved 16 April 2013.


  73. ^ Imperial War Museum. "Harvest, 1918 [Art.IWM ART 4663]". IWM Collections Search. Retrieved 16 April 2013.; also a war artist in World War II.


  74. ^ Imperial War Museum. "Travoys Arriving with Wounded at a Dressing-Station at Smol, Macedonia, September 1916, 1919 [Art.IWM ART 2268]". IWM Collections Search. Retrieved 12 Nov 2013.; also a war artist in World War II.


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  77. ^ http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/richard-eurich-1071


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  83. ^ "Laura Knight" (in French). Civilization.ca. Retrieved 2012-07-15.


  84. ^ http://www.iwmprints.org.uk/image/803584/mansbridge-john-an-air-gunner-in-a-gun-turret-sergeant-g-holmes-d-f-m


  85. ^ "Philip Meninsky". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 2013-04-25.


  86. ^ Portrait by Old at Imperial War Museum


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  91. ^ Imperial War Museum. "Shipbuilding on the Clyde: Bending the Keel Plate, 1943 [Art.IWM ART LD 3106]". IWM Collections Search. Retrieved 12 Nov 2013.; also a war artist in World War I.


  92. ^ "Graham Sutherland" (in French). Civilization.ca. Retrieved 2012-07-15.


  93. ^ "Carel Weight" (in French). Civilization.ca. Retrieved 2012-07-15.


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References


.mw-parser-output .refbeginfont-size:90%;margin-bottom:0.5em.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ullist-style-type:none;margin-left:0.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul>li,.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>dl>ddmargin-left:0;padding-left:3.2em;text-indent:-3.2em;list-style:none.mw-parser-output .refbegin-100font-size:100%

  • McCloskey, Barbara. (2005). Artists of World War II. Westport: Greenwood Press.
    ISBN 9780313321535; OCLC 475496457

  • Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan Encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5; OCLC 48943301

  • Okamoto, Shumpei and Donald Keene. (1983). Impressions of the Front: Woodcuts of the Sino Japanese War, 1894–95. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art. OCLC 179964815



Further reading




  • Brandon, Laura. (2008). Art and War. New York: I.B. Tauris.
    ISBN 9781845112370; OCLC 225345535

  • Cork, Richard. (1994). A Bitter Truth: Avant-garde Art and the Great War. New Haven: Yale University Press.
    ISBN 9780300057041; OCLC 185692286

  • Foot, Michael Richard Daniel. (1990). Art and War: Twentieth Century Warfare as Depicted by War Artists. London: Headline.
    ISBN 9780747202868; OCLC 21407670

  • Gallatin, Albert Eugene. (1919). Art and the Great War. New York: E.P. Dutton. OCLC 422817

  • Hodgson, Pat (1977). The War Illustrators. London: Osprey. OCLC 462210052

  • Johnson, Peter (1978). Front-Line Artists. London: Cassell.
    ISBN 9780304300112; OCLC 4412441

  • Jones, James (1975). WW II: a Chronicle of Soldiering. New York: Grosset & Dunlap. 1617592

  • Lanker, Brian and Nicole Newnham. (2000). They Drew Fire: Combat Artists of World War II. New York: TV Books.
    ISBN 9781575000855; OCLC 43245885

Australia
  • 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 9780725102548; OCLC 4035199

Canada
  • Oliver, Dean Frederick, and Laura Brandon (2000). Canvas of War: Painting the Canadian Experience, 1914 to 1945. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre.
    ISBN 9781550547726; OCLC 43283109

  • Tippett, Maria. (1984). Art at the Service of War: Canada, Art, and the Great War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
    ISBN 9780802025418; OCLC 13858984

Germany
  • Gilkey, Gordon. War Art of the Third Reich. Bennington, Vermont: International Graphics Corporation, 1982).
    ISBN 9780865560185; OCLC 223704492

  • Weber, John Paul. (1979). The German War Artists. Columbia, South Carolina: Cerberus.
    ISBN 9780933590007; OCLC 5727293

New Zealand
  • Haworth, Jennifer. (2007). The Art of War: New Zealand War Artists in the Field 1939–1945. Christchurch, New Zealand: Hazard Press.
    ISBN 9781877393242; OCLC 174078159
South Africa
  • Carter, Albert Charles Robinson. (1900). The Work of War Artists in South Africa. London: "The Art Journal" Office. OCLC 25938498
United Kingdom
  • Gough, Paul. (2010). A Terrible Beauty: British Artists in the First World War. Bristol: Sansom and Company.
    ISBN 9781906593001; OCLC 559763485

  • Harries, Meirion and Suzie Harries. (1983). The War Artists: British Official War Art of the Twentieth Century. London: Michael Joseph.
    ISBN 9780718123147; OCLC 9888782

  • Harrington, Peter. (1983). British Artists and War: The Face of Battle in Paintings and Prints, 1700–1914. London: Greenhill.
    ISBN 9781853671579; OCLC 28708501

  • Haycock, David Boyd. (2009). A Crisis of Brilliance: Five Young British Artists and the Great War. London: Old Street Publishing.
    ISBN 9781905847846; OCLC 318876179

  • Hichberger, J.W.M. (1988). Images of the Army: The Military in British Art 1815–1914. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
    ISBN 9780719025754; OCLC 17295891

  • Sillars, Stuart (1987). Art and Survival in First World War Britain. New York: St. Martins Press.
    ISBN 9780312005443; OCLC 14932245

  • Holme, Charles. (1918). The War Depicted by Distinguished British Artists. London: The Studio. OCLC 5081170

United States
  • Cornebise, Alfred. (1991). Art from the trenches: America's Uniformed Artists in World War I. College Station: Texas A & M University Press.
    ISBN 9780890963494; OCLC 22892632

  • Harrington, Peter, and Frederic A. Sharf. (1988). A Splendid Little War; The Spanish–American War, 1898; The Artists' Perspective. London: Greenhill.
    ISBN 9781853673160; OCLC 260112479

  • Chase Maenius. The Art of War[s]: Paintings of Heroes, Horrors and History. 2014.
    ISBN 978-1320309554



External links


  • Mémorial de Caen, 1914–1918 war, Artists of the First World War


  • Ministry of Defence (MoD), MoD art collection, war artists


  • National Archives (UK), The Art of War


  • In War-torn Country a Soldier Looks at Iraq by Lance Nixon, Capital Journal, Vol 134 No. 27, 7 February 2014 pp C1-C6


  • Harvey Dunn at War by Lance Nixon, Capital Journal, Vol 134 No. 32, 14 February 2014 pp C1-C6


  • Remembering Battles They Fought Facing East: Plains Indians as War Artists by Lance Nixon, Capital Journal, Vol 134 No. 57 pp C1-C6


  • About light and dark in peace and war and a piece of Vietnam by Lance Nixon, Capital Journal (South Dakota), 17 January 2014.


  • Drawing fire by Lance Nixon, Capital Journal (South Dakota), 23 January 2014.


  • A photograph of a war is different from a painting “that’s not rocket science” by Dave Askins, Capital Journal (South Dakota), 20 April 2018.


  • Combat artists share ware experiences by Kerri Lawrence, National Archives News, 9 April 2018

  • National Archives Facebook Combat Art Panel


  • US Army Soldier-Artists in Vietnam (CAT IV, 15 August to 31 December, 1967) by James Pollock, War, Literature & the Arts: An International Journal of the Humanities, free downloadable PDF South Dakota State University Open PRAIRIE repository/2009 Volume 21


  • SDPB Radio Interview MIDDAY Karl Gehrke interviews James Pollock, 10 June 2015.

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