To Paint a War

The lives of the Australian artists who painted the Great War, 1914-1918

Regular price
£24.95
Sale price
£24.95
Regular price
Free UK delivery on orders above £40

Among all the forms of national memory and commemoration, it falls to the artists to paint a war

Among all the forms of national memory and commemoration, it falls to the artists to paint a war. When war is as traumatic as the Great War, the artists' burden is so much greater.

The Australian artists who painted World War I approached their subject personally, in ways that reflected their experience of the war. Grace Cossington Smith painted on the home front. Hilda Rix Nicholas suffered personal loss beyond words. Tom Roberts, George Coates, and Arthur Streeton served as wardsmen in a military hospital in London. George Lambert travelled to Anzac Cove in 1919 to make the definitive record of the war at Gallipoli.

Some contributed as members of the official war artists' scheme. Others painted as eyewitnesses of the unfolding tragedy. Yet others painted from their hearts. Their work, in all its richness and variety, is a sweeping painterly chronicle of the war, and a vital part of Australia's heritage.

Extent: 248 pp
Format: flexibound with flaps
Publication date: 2017-08-10
Size: 25.5 x 21.6 cm
ISBN: 9780500500903
  • Free UK delivery on orders above £40
  • £4.00 standard shipping for orders under £39.99
  • Delivery typically within 2-4 business days
  • See our Shipping & Delivery policy for more info

Press Reviews

Wonderfully varied in genre and subject … it is precisely this eye for the quiddities of this most traumatic conflict that makes Travers’ book so valuable
Military History




About the Author

You May Also Like

View more