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- Canadian official war artists
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- British official war artists
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- Canadian War Museum
- Canadian art
- Alex Colville
- Canada in World War II
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- Canadian official war artists - Wikipedia
- Canadian War Art Programs - The Canadian Encyclopedia
- 150+ Canadians Day 76: War Artists - archive.peacequest.ca
- Canadian official war artists | Military Wiki | Fandom
- 100 years of Canadian artists capturing the realities of war
- War Art in Canada | Historical Overview | Art ... - Art Canada …
- Canada's War Artists
- Canadian War Artists, 1939-1945 - SilverHawkAuthor
- Military art - Canada.ca
- Canada’s War Art | Canadian War Museum
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Canadian official war artists GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
Canadian official war artists create an artistic rendering of war through the media of visual, digital installations, film, poetry, choreography, music, etc., by showing its impact as men and women are shown waiting, preparing, fighting, suffering, celebrating. These traditionally were a select group of artists who were employed on contract, or commissioned to produce specific works during the First World War, the Second World War and select military actions in the post-war period. The four Canadian official war art programs are: the First World War Canadian War Memorials Fund (CWMF), the Second World War Canadian War Records (CWR), the Cold War Canadian Armed Forces Civilian Artists Program (CAFCAP), and the current Canadian Forces Artists Program (CFAP).
A war artist will have depicted some aspect of war through art; this might be a pictorial record or it might commemorate how war shapes lives. The devastation of war is depicted in painting and drawing quite differently from what a camera can achieve.
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 or her work embraces the causes, course and consequences of conflict and it has been primarily an essentially educational purpose, but now is a culturally independent act of witness in contemporary Canada. Official war artists have been appointed by governments for information or propaganda purposes and to record events on the battlefield; but there are many other types of war artist.
First World War
Representative works by Canada's war artists have been gathered into the extensive collection of the Canadian War Museum. In the First World War, Canada developed an official art program under the influence of Lord Beaverbrook. The Canadian-born, England-based businessman viewed war art not only as a form of historical documentation, but also an expression of national identity. He provided leadership in creating the Canadian War Records Office in London in early 1916. Initially, the First World War was documented primarily using photography and film. Some of the extensive footage that official cinematographers produced of soldiers, machinery, and horses was later incorporated into Lest We Forget (1934), directed by Frank Badgley. It was the first feature-length documentary war film made in Canada.
In 1916 Lord Beaverbrook also established the Canadian War Memorials Fund, which was mainly privately funded and evolved into a collection of war art by over one hundred artists and sculptors in Britain and Canada. Under this program, Lord Beaverbrook commissioned one of the first significant Canadian paintings of the First World War, The Second Battle of Ypres, 22 April to 25 May 1915, 1917, by English Canadian artist and illustrator Richard Jack. This commission was intended to address the lack of visual documentation of this major battle.
Some artists who received commissions from the Canadian War Memorials Fund were considered "official" war artists. For example, the English artist Alfred Munnings was employed as war artist to the Canadian Cavalry Brigade. Munnings painted many scenes, including a mounted portrait of General Jack Seely on his horse Warrior in 1918 (now in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa). Munnings worked on this canvas a few thousand yards from the German front lines. When General Seely's unit was forced into a hasty withdrawal, the artist discovered what it was like to come under shellfire.
Munnings also painted Charge of Flowerdew's Squadron in 1918 (now in the collection of the Canadian War Museum, Ottawa). In what is known as "the last great cavalry charge" at the Battle of Moreuil Wood, Gordon Flowerdew was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for leading Lord Strathcona's Horse (Royal Canadians) in a successful engagement with entrenched German forces.
The Canadian Forestry Corps invited Munnings to tour their work camps, and he produced drawings, watercolors and paintings, including Draft Horses, Lumber Mill in the Forest of Dreux in France in 1918. This role of horses was critical and under-reported; and in fact, horse fodder was the single largest commodity shipped to the front by some countries.
The "Canadian War Records Exhibition" at the Royal Academy after war's end included forty-five of Munning's canvasses.
Another example of a war artist embedded with Canadian forces was the Belgian soldier-artist Alfred Bastien whose work is part of the permanent collection of the Canadian War Museum.
In Canada, a separate committee affiliated with the Canadian War Memorials Fund was led by the National Gallery of Canada. It commissioned depictions of the home-front and recommended Canadian artists to serve overseas. Many famous examples of Canadian war art were produced under this program, including A.Y. Jackson's A Copse, Evening, 1918, and Frederick Varley's For What?, 1918.
Second World War
The Canadian War Records (CWR) was the name given to Canada's Second World War art program. The CWR produced two kinds of art: field sketches and finished paintings. The War Artists' Committee (WAC) recommended that the artists should attempt to share in the experience of "active operations" in order to "know and understand the action, the circumstances, the environment, and the participants." The ultimate goal was defined as "productions" which were "worthy of Canada's highest cultural traditions, doing justice to History, and as works of art, worthy of exhibition anywhere at any time."
There was a general appreciation of the need to develop what "the camera cannot interpret." The government recognized that "a war so epic in its scope by land, sea and air, and so detailed and complex in its mechanism, requires interpreting [by artists] as well as recording."
E. J. Hughes enlisted "at the Work Point Barracks in Esquimalt in 1939. Named the first “service artist” in 1941, he spent two winters in Ottawa before being posted to London, where he was attached to different regiments in England and Wales. His paintings of camp life and convoys reflect his keen attention to the details of vehicles, artillery, and uniforms. In 1943, on the Alaskan island of Kiska, he transformed sub-zero weather and howling gales into a powerful document of this remote theatre of war. He returned to Ottawa where he worked until 1946"
Second Lieutenant Molly Lamb of the Canadian Women's Army Corps was Canada's only woman official war artist in the Second World War. One of her most significant works is Private Roy, 1946, a painted portrait of Sergeant Eva May Roy. She was one of the few Black members of the Canadian Women's Army Corps at the time.
On the 65th anniversary of D-Day, the war artists were recognized and addressed directly in a Ceremony of Remembrance in the Canadian Senate,
What each of you achieved on the artist's canvas is more profound and more powerful than any words can express.
-- Hon. Greg Thompson, Minister of Veterans Affairs
Recent conflicts
From 1946 to 2014 over 70+ civilian artists have participated in documenting the Canadian Forces. This was initially supported by the Canadian Armed Forces Civilian Artists Program (CAFCAP) and more recently by the Canadian Forces Artist Program headed by Dr. John MacFarlane. Internationally renowned artists who have participated in the Canadian Forces Artists Program include Gertrude Kearns, Adrian Stimson, Althea Thauberger, Tim Pitsiulak, and Rosalie Favell.
Selected artists
= First World War
=This list shows selections from the authorized list of Official Canadian War Artists in A Checklist of the War Collections of World War I, 1914-1918, and World War II, 1939-1945 by R. F. Wodehouse (National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, 1968). Their work in the Canadian War Museum can be looked up on https://www.warmuseum.ca/collections.
Cyril Henry Barraud
John William Beatty
Frederick Sproston Challener
Arthur Crisp
Maurice Cullen
Kenneth Forbes
Edmund Wyly Grier
A. Y. Jackson
C.W. Jefferys
Franz Johnston
Wyndham Lewis
Arthur Lismer
Frances Loring
Mabel May
David Milne
Alfred James Munnings
Paul Nash
William Orpen
George Agnew Reid
William Roberts
Albert H. Robinson
William Rothenstein
Charles Walter Simpson
Dorothy Stevens
Frederick Varley
Homer Watson
Florence Wyle
= Second World War
=This is the authorized list of Official Canadian War Artists in the Second World War according to A Checklist of the War Collections of World War I, 1914-1918, and World War II, 1939-1945 by R. F. Wodehouse (National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, 1968).
Eric Aldwinckle
Donald K. Anderson
Aba Bayefsky
Harold Beament
Bruno Bobak
Molly Lamb Bobak
Miller Brittain
Frank Leonard Brooks
Albert Edward Cloutier
Alex Colville
Charles Fraser Comfort
Patrick Cowley-Brown
Orville Fisher
Michael Forster
Charles Goldhamer
Paul Goranson
Lawren P. Harris
E. J. Hughes
Robert Stewart Hyndman
C. Anthony Law
T. R. MacDonald, (1908-1978)
Donald Cameron MacKay, (1906-1979)
Rowley Murphy
Jack Nichols
William Abernethy Ogilvie
George Pepper
Moe Reinblatt
Goodridge Roberts
Carl Schaefer (artist)
George Campbell Tinning
Peter Whyte
Tom Wood
= Recent conflicts
=Edward Zuber (1932–2018)
Suzanne Steele, 2008–2010, the first poet to serve as a war artist (Afghanistan)
Scott Waters, 2003–4, 2012–14
See also
Military art
War photography
Richard Johnson
Further reading
Brandon, Laura. War Art in Canada. Art Institute. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
Notes
References
McCloskey, Barbara. (2005). Artists of World War II. Westport: Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313321535; OCLC 475496457
Further reading
Brandon, Laura. War Art in Canada: A Critical History. Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2021.
Gallatin, Albert Eugene. Art and the Great War. (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1919).
Gillis, Raina-Clair. "Artistic Impressions of War," Canadian Military Journal.
Oliver, Dean Frederick, and Laura Brandon (2000). Canvas of war: painting the Canadian experience, 1914 to 1945. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 1-55054-772-0
Tippett, Maria, 1944. Art at the service of war: Canada, art, and the great war. Toronto; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
E. J. Hughes: Canadian War Artist, 2022, Amos Robert, ISBN 1771513853, Touchwood Editions
External links
Kandahar Journal War artist Richard Johnson's blog from the front lines in Kandahar, Afghanistan
A news illustrator War artist Richard Johnson's work from Iraq and Afghanistan
The Long Road An illustrated article on Canada's ten-year conflict in Afghanistan, by the National Post.
Painting to Afghanistan Painter Christopher Hennebery embedded with Canadian Forces, Afghanistan
[1] [2] Official War Artist SMSteele's open diary recording her road to war and back, as a poet, with 1PPCLI to Afghanistan, and her work as a poet, digital artist, writer, and scholar examining the narrative of the Great War 1914–18
[3] Canadian War Poet Tells Story of Afghanistan in requiem with VSO (Afghanistan: Requiem for a Generation, SMSteele librettist and Jeff Ryan, composer)
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Canadian War Art Programs | The Canadian Encyclopedia
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Canadian War Artists, 1939-1945
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Canadian official war artists - Wikipedia
This is the authorized list of Official Canadian War Artists in the Second World War according to A Checklist of the War Collections of World War I, 1914-1918, and World War II, 1939-1945 by R. F. Wodehouse (National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, 1968).
Canadian War Art Programs - The Canadian Encyclopedia
Feb 7, 2006 · Since the First World War, there have been four major initiatives to allow Canadian artists to document Canadian Armed Forces at war. Canada’s first official war art program, the Canadian War Memorials Fund (1916–19), was one of …
150+ Canadians Day 76: War Artists - archive.peacequest.ca
Apr 18, 2017 · Serving in both official and civilian capacities, Canadians have generated important visual records of Canadian involvement in war. Using painting, drawing, printmaking, photography, digital installations, film, poetry, choreography, music and more, they have created profound renderings of war.
Canadian official war artists | Military Wiki | Fandom
Canadian official war artists create an artistic rendering of war through the media of visual, digital installations, film, poetry, choreography, music, etc., by showing its impact as men and women are shown waiting, preparing, fighting, suffering, celebrating,[1] These traditionally were a...
100 years of Canadian artists capturing the realities of war
Nov 10, 2021 · But the best-known Canadian visual records of war come from four official war art programs: the First World War Canadian War Memorials Fund, the Second World War Canadian War Records, the...
War Art in Canada | Historical Overview | Art ... - Art Canada …
During the Second World War, painting dominated Canada’s official war art program, the Canadian War Records, which, as a collection, includes approximately 5,000 small paintings that depict events, locations, machinery, and military personnel on both the battle and the home fronts.
Canada's War Artists
During the third year of the Second World War, 1939-1945, the Canadian War Artists' Committee was established. Shortly thereafter a war art program was launched through the efforts of Vincent Massey and the director of the National Gallery of Canada, H.O. McCurry.
Canadian War Artists, 1939-1945 - SilverHawkAuthor
Captain C.F. Comfort, a Canadian war artist, Italy, 1943. Comfort's war began in October 1939 when he became a rifle instructor with the Canadian Officers' Training Corps. In February 1943 he was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Canadian …
Military art - Canada.ca
Explore a gallery of more than 30 Second World War paintings and learn more about the art and artists. Profiles of notable people in the history of Canada’s Navy and photos of their sculptures. A virtual exhibit featuring the works of war artists such as Alex Colville and Jack Nichols.
Canada’s War Art | Canadian War Museum
The Canadian War Memorials, the First World War art collection, consists of nearly 1,000 works by over 100 artists, more than a third of them Canadian. In part because of its wide variety, the collection is of international stature.