Tag Archives: submarine art

Humor of the Northern Fleet Submariners

A fellow by the name of U. Lliyputin has saved some old 1980s/90s Soviet Navy comics, written and drawn by one O. V. Karavashkin.

Pulling away

Pulling away

O.V. Karavashkin illustration submarine

Coming into Polyarini. This scene looks almost right out of The Hunt for Red October.

Coming into Polyarini. This scene looks almost right out of The Hunt for Red October.

Lliyputin has provided translations and background information on the comics which show how ‘the other side’ lived during the Cold War.

Loading Type 53 torpedoes. The 53-65 (after the year it was introduced) torpedo family are Russian-made, wake-homing torpedoes designed to destroy surface ships and can make 45 kts on their hybrid kerosene turbines, delivering a shattering 678-lb HE explosive warhead. More on the kerosene later.

Loading Type 53 torpedoes. The 53-65 (after the year it was introduced) torpedo family are Russian-made, wake-homing torpedoes designed to destroy surface ships and can make 45 kts on their hybrid kerosene turbines, delivering a shattering 678-lb HE explosive warhead. More on the kerosene later.

Type 53s in action.

Type 53s in action.

This on-going battle between submariners and trawlers...

This on-going battle between submariners and trawlers…

The crew lining up for illegal homebrew made either from torpedo fuel or fermented fruit. Also an ongoing saga of submariners.

The crew lining up for illegal homebrew made either from torpedo fuel or fermented fruit. Also an ongoing saga of submariners.

Most of the comics seem to revolve around K-241 (Unit 854 in Soviet parlance), a Project 667AU Navaga-class (NATO designation Yankee) SSBN that was launched in 1972 at Severodvinsk and was based at Gadzhiyevo/Yagelnaya Bay or Saida Bay, which were in the same inlet in the Kola Peninsula. The subs carried 16 SS-N-6 SLBMs, had 6 torpedo tubes, and carried 18 Type 53 torpedoes.

They were the first Soviet SSBNs to carry their ballistic missiles within the hull (as opposed to the sail). K-241 was decommissioned June 16, 1992, for scrapping but the comix remain.

The rest here

Combat Gallery Sunday: Thomas Hart Benton, military artist

Thomas Hart Benton (April 15, 1889 – January 19, 1975) was an American painter and muralist. Born in Neosho, Missouri, he attended Western Military Academy (which closed in 1971) as a teen and in WWI served in the US Navy as a “camoufleur,.” This entailed Benton sitting all day at Hampton Roads, drawing the camouflaged ships that entered Norfolk harbor. This was done to ensure that U.S. ship painters were correctly applying the camouflage schemes, to aid in identifying U.S. ships that might later be lost, and to have records of the ship camouflage of other Allied navies.

After his military service he painted and made murals and some of the best art work in the country. During WWII he again served his country as a military artist. Benton created a series titled The Year of Peril, which portrayed the threat to American ideals by fascism and Nazism.

Benton, Thomas Hart; SHS#006617, CD

She's Off (LST 768 at launch 1944 http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/16/160768.htm )

She’s Off, LST 768 at Launch in 1944

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1944 Thomas Hart Benton (American regionalist artist, 1889–1975) WW II

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He then sailed on the USS Dorado (SS-248), a Gato-class submarine, to document a US Navy submarine in pen, pencil and paint.  Paintings from the Dorado by Hart include Score Another for the Subs, In Slumber Deep, and The Claustrophobic Confines.His work on the Dorado saved that ship in Time and she is on eternal patrol, sunk, off Panama on 12 October 1943, just six weeks after her commissioning.

Slumber Deep by Thomas Hart Benton

Slumber Deep by Thomas Hart Benton

Of course besides his military themed art, Benton produced hundreds of works that are known and loved, particularly in the Midwest and plains regions. Benton died in 1975 and his house studio in Kansas City is preserved as a museum, frozen on its own eternal patrol. If you are ever in KC you should look it up.

One of his murals

One of his murals

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