Tag Archives: war art

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Arthur Szyk

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Arthur Szyk

Born June 16, 1894 during the reign of Tsar Nicholas II in the Central Polish city of Łódź, then part of the Holy Russian Empire, Arthur Szyk (pronounced “Shick“) showed artistic promise as youth. His father, a textile factory manager, sent young Arthur abroad to the Académie Julian in Paris in 1909 for four years then traveled Europe and Asia, finding himself in Palestine when World War I erupted.

Drafted into the Tsar’s Army as a reserve ensign, he fought in many of the pivotal battles on the Eastern Front including the one for his vey own hometown. Artistically trained, he took to sketching what he saw.

Wounded Russian soldiers. Lodz itself lost some 40 percent of its population in the war while the Russian Army threw away one million soldiers in an effort to keep Poland in the Empire in 1915.

Wounded Russian soldiers. Lodz itself lost some 40 percent of its population in the war while the Russian Army threw away one million soldiers in an effort to keep Poland in the Empire in 1915. Via the Arthur Szyk Society.

When Poland became independent once again at the end of WWI, he served as an officer in the newly formed Polish Army and fought against the Reds in the Russo-Polish War while also helping produce propaganda art for the cause.

1919 propaganda poster

1919 propaganda poster. Via the Arthur Szyk Society.

Once the war was over, he picked up his family and spent the next two decades in France, the UK and the states where he illustrated volumes of books, created postcards, created 38 watercolors in the Washington and his Times series, and produced the Haggadah.

Szyk's inside cover illustration for Andersen's fairy tales, 1944

Szyk’s inside cover illustration for Andersen’s fairy tales, 1944

Declaration of Independence. Note the Washington artwork-- Library of Congress

Declaration of Independence. Note the Washington artwork– Library of Congress

When the Second World War of his generation came forth, he jumped into the effort with both feet. His old homeland overrun, with the support of the British government and the Polish government-in-exile, he began a war of the pencils against Hitler and his like.

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"Liberty what the nazis leave behind" Aug 1941. Szyk had no love for the Soviets and it should be remembered that Stalin agreed to split his homeland with Hitler, invading Poland from the East just 17 days after the Germans did.

“Liberty what the Nazis leave behind” Aug 1941. Szyk had no love for the Soviets and it should be remembered that Stalin agreed to split his homeland with Hitler, invading Poland from the East just 17 days after the Germans did.

1939 "For a total living space, comrades in arms"

1939 “For a total living space, comrades in arms”

Satan leads the Ball

Satan leads the Ball

1939, Two comrades were serving

1939, Two comrades were serving

1944, Warriors-of-the-Polish-1st-Division-Tadeusz-Kosciuszko-by-Arthur-Szyk

1944, Warriors-of-the-Polish-1st-Division-Tadeusz-Kosciuszko-by-Arthur-Szyk

Wayside shrine

Wayside shrine

a130_009 336305_original SZYK

Tears of Rage, 1942

Tears of Rage, 1942

Two polish officers. Szyk knew firsthand the Polish army as he was one of its first officers in 1919.

Two polish officers. Szyk knew firsthand the Polish army as he was one of its first officers in 1919.

The New Order

The New Order

Poland Fights Nazi Dragon - Polish War Relief, 1943-- Library of Congress

Poland Fights Nazi Dragon – Polish War Relief, 1943– Library of Congress

1939, German 'Authority' in Poland,

1939, German ‘Authority’ in Poland,

Colliers cover

Colliers cover

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His art of the time, propaganda pieces for the main part, likely did as much damage to the Axis as a battalion of Sherman tanks or a squadron of Lancaster bombers.

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With the Soviets in Poland after the end of the War, Szyk made his stay in the West permanent and in 1948 became a U.S. citizen while championing Israeli independence.

He died in 1951

Arthur Szyk self portrait

Arthur Szyk self portrait

“Art is not my aim, it is my means.” – Arthur Szyk

The U.S. Library of Congress as well as the United States Holocaust Museum and Memorial maintain extensive collections of his work as do at least two private associations to include the Arthur Szyk Society and Szyk.com.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Watanabe Nobukazu

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Watanabe Nobukazu

Japanese woodblock printing (moku hanga) goes back to the 1700s and had evolved into high art by the 19th century. One of the more noted artists who operated in this media was Watanabe Nobukazu. Born in Tokyo in 1872 as Shimada Jiro, he studied duteously under master Yōshū Chikanobu in the Utagawa school before taking his new name.

His art ranged from traditional pre-Edo period Imperial Japanese Ukiyo-e imagery, to that of the more modern era the country was rapidly moving into. The process for this art form is among the most complex and demanding.

Woman with an Umbrella

Woman with an Umbrella

The Battle of Go-San-Nen

The Battle of Go-San-Nen

Nobukazu 3 Nobukazu 2

Nasu no Yoichi, Samurai of Genji side, tries to shoot down the fan placed atop the mast of his enemy Taira's ship at the battle of Yashima in 1185 via SCRC Virtual Museum at Southern Illinois University's Morris Library http://scrcexhibits.omeka.net/items/show/2

Nasu no Yoichi, Samurai of Genji side, tries to shoot down the fan placed atop the mast of his enemy Taira’s ship at the battle of Yashima in 1185 via SCRC Virtual Museum at Southern Illinois University’s Morris Library

Picture of Noble's Imperial Ceremony, 1900

Picture of Noble’s Imperial Ceremony, 1900

He later evolved his form to encompass a series of exquisite triptychs prints centering on the Sino-Japanese war of 1894. His use of vivid colors, glazes, and multiple transparencies gave his work a very characteristic depth of field.

The Second Army Bombarding and Occupying Port Arthur” by Watanabe Nobukazu, November 1894

The Second Army Bombarding and Occupying Port Arthur” by Watanabe Nobukazu, November 1894

Sino-Japanese Pitched Battles Two Generals Fighting at Fenghuangcheng

Sino-Japanese Pitched Battles Two Generals Fighting at Fenghuangcheng

Sergeant Miyake’s Courage at the Yalu River” by Watanabe Nobukazu, 1895

Sergeant Miyake’s Courage at the Yalu River” by Watanabe Nobukazu, 1895

Our Forces Crossing the Yalu River In Honor of Lieutenant General Nozu

Our Forces Crossing the Yalu River In Honor of Lieutenant General Nozu

Nobukazu

Illustration of the Attack on the Hōōjyo

Illustration of the Attack on the Hōōjyo

Battle of Yellow Sea

Battle of Yellow Sea

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And the Russo-Japanese war of 1904-05:

Torpedo boat attack on Port Arthur

Torpedo boat attack on Port Arthur

torpedo boat attack on Port Arthur 1904

torpedo boat attack on Port Arthur 1904

Russian soldiers

Russian soldiers

Picture of Our Valorous Military Repulsing the Russian Cossack Cavalry on the Bank of the Yalu River by Watanabe Nobukazu, March 1904

Picture of Our Valorous Military Repulsing the Russian Cossack Cavalry on the Bank of the Yalu River by Watanabe Nobukazu, March 1904

The Russian battleship Petropvavlask sinks as Adm. Makarov stands bravely on desk

The Russian battleship Petropavlask sinks as Adm. Makarov stands bravely on deck

Illustration of Russian and Japanese Army and Navy Officers Watanabe Nobukazu, February 1904

Illustration of Russian and Japanese Army and Navy Officers Watanabe Nobukazu, February 1904

As with many woodblock artists of his day, his art fell out of favor in the 1920s, a victim of increasing modernization in Japan. He died in 1944, largely forgotten in his own country. However, his body of work is seen as among the best of its genre.

MIT has an amazing gallery of woodblock prints by the artist and others in the same period from the Sharf Collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston available here while another inspiring gallery is maintained by the Lavenberg and at Ukiyo-e.org .

Thank you for your work, sir.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Leslie Gilbert Illingworth

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Leslie Gilbert Illingworth

Born 1902 in Wales, Leslie Gilbert Illingworth took a job as a teen in the lithographic department at the Western Mail while attending the Cardiff School or Art. While at the Mail he was an assistant to noted political cartoonist J. M. Staniforth who covered political and social unrest in the UK and Wales through the First World War. After the War, Illingworth attended the Royal College of Art then took Staniforth’s old job when the master retired. He later went to write for Punch and, in 1938 when the noted Percy Fearon retired as cartoonist of the Daily Mail, Illingworth joined the big leagues just in time for the Second World War where he really came into his own.

Although he wasn’t per se a “military artist,” he covered (with dry British satire) the military events of his day.

Freedom 1940

Freedom 1940

Japan's army arrives at New Guinea, 1942

Japan’s army arrives at New Guinea, 1942. Note the cricket bat dropped at the ‘Roo’s feet

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Spirit of the Ark Royal

Spirit of the Ark Royal, sunk in 1941

Free French

Free French

Stalingrad

Stalingrad

Neutrality Patrol March 1941

Neutrality Patrol March 1941

Japan enters the war 1941

Japan enters the war 1941

 

After the war he continued his work, but still revisited military issues as they pertained to the overall political climate

German rearmament 1950

German rearmament 1950

Berlin 5 April 1948

Berlin 5 April 1948. Note the Atom Bomb on Truman’s GI belt

Illingworth remained active through 1974 when he finally retired. He was the inaugural president of the British Cartoonists’ Association and his art was some of the most stinging of the 20th Century.

Illingwortheslie_0He died 20 December 1979 at age 77.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Hans Liska

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Hans Liska

Born 1907 in Vienna, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Hans Liska started off life as a folk singer and small businessman. Then, after studying in Vienna and Munich after the First World War, he landed a job at the Berlin Illustrated newspaper in 1933. He illustrated Rudolf Defends’s, Der König von Kakikakai.

When the Second World War came, he was drafted and served in a propaganda company producing artwork for Signal, the periodical of the German armed forces. He observed the drawings first hand while serving in Greece, Crete and along the Eastern Front. Two sketchbooks were released of Liska’s art during the war, through the patronage of German aircraft maker Junkers, including Kriegs-Skizzenbuch (Luftwaffe) and Kriegs-Skizzenbuch. While the subject matter, Nazi-era troops and war implements, have never been seen as politically correct, he did capture them rather well and due to his body of work, much military history was saved.

Junkers Ju87 succsessfully landed with just one wheel. Lieutenant H. told us that Ju87 reached the airfield safely after a direct flak hit, clipping off 3 meters long piece of the wingtip. This aircraft (lower right corner) returned home despite destroyed tail.

Junkers Ju87 successfully landed with just one wheel. Lieutenant H. told us that Ju87 reached the airfield safely after a direct flak hit, clipping off 3 meters long piece of the wingtip. This aircraft (lower right corner) returned home despite destroyed tail.

German paratroopers at Crete

German paratroopers at Crete

Gerbisjagers

Gerbisjagers

Fight in the woods. Partisan actions

Fight in the woods. Partisan actions

"End of the Fight" by Hans Liska

“End of the Fight” by Hans Liska

"End of Russian heavy battery at Sevastopol" by Hans Liska

End of Russian heavy battery at Sevastopol” by Hans Liska

Supply column

Supply column

Fire of the heavy artillery" by Hans Liska

Fire of the heavy artillery” by Hans Liska

"Panzer Attack" by Hans Liska

“Panzer Attack” by Hans Liska

"German engineers in action" By Hans Liska

“German engineers in action” By Hans Liska

Salvo of the Nebelwerfer rocket battery. by Hans Liska

Salvo of the Nebelwerfer rocket battery. by Hans Liska

"Removing Mines" by Hans Liska

“Removing Mines” by Hans Liska

After the war, he put down his military sketches and turned to producing ad art for Benz, and Kaiser porcelain. For the latter he made over 200 city skylines to be applied to ceramics.

"Christkindlesmarkt,Nurnberg" by Hans Liska.From hansliska.com

“Christkindlesmarkt,Nurnberg” by Hans Liska.From hansliska.com

"Köln" by Hans Liska, from Hansliska.com

“Köln” by Hans Liska, from Hansliska.com

He was also noted for his sketches of flamenco dancing and bull fighting.

Flamenco by Hans Liska from hansliska.com

Flamenco by Hans Liska from hansliska.com

from Hansliska.com

from Hansliska.com

He died  26 December 1983 in Austria.

All Wars has a collection of more than 50 of his WWII works. You can visit his official website here.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Moses Ezekiel

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Moses Ezekiel

Born into a family of that included 14 brothers and sisters on the rough side of Richmond, Virginia October 28, 1844 was one Moses Jacob Ezekiel. The son of penniless Spanish-Jewish parents who themselves were first generation Americans, he sought out a position at the nearby Virginia Military Institute (VMI) in Lexington as it was a public school and, most importantly, affordable.

moses-ezekiel

Accepted into the Class of 1866, on September 17, 1862 he became the first Jewish cadet of that storied academy. No sooner did he arrive then he had to fight off prejudice and scorn, which he overcame to become a well liked, by all accounts, adjusted cadet. During his time at VMI, he was selected as part of the special guard for the casket of fallen Confederate Lt-Gen Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson who had been before the war an instructor at the school. It was not to be his only brush with history during the war.

When Union Major General Franz Sigel marched his 6200-man army to the head of the Shenandoah Valley in May 1864, there just weren’t any Confederate troops there to stop him. Confederate Major General (and former U.S. Vice President) John C. Breckinridge grabbed everyone who could carry a rifle– including the 295 VMI cadets, to stop them. This led to the famous Battle of New Market, which stopped Sigel, ensured the local farmers could harvest their crops which went on to feed the Army of Northern Virginia through the winter of 1864-65, and by default, extended the war according to some arguments.

Battle of New Market., by Keith Rocco. Ezekiel was a teenage cadet on that field.

Battle of New Market., by Keith Rocco. Ezekiel was a teenage cadet on that field.

Ezekiel was there, as part of Company C of the VMI Battalion, and, with the cadets, made a charge without orders across a muddy field in the rain in May 15, 1864. Most of the cadets had their boots sucked off by the thick mud but they broke the Union position and captured a cannon, helping in the overall defeat while suffering some 24 percent casualties. To this day, the battleground is remembered as the “Field of Lost Shoes.”

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Ezekiel helped recover the wounded after the battle, including his friend, Thomas Jefferson Garfield, the grandson of the seventh President. He sat with Garfield and read from the New Testament to sooth the boy as he died in hospital. Following New Market, Ezekiel rejoined the cadets and fought through the rest of the war. Then, returning to the academy at its new location (it was burned during the war) he graduated 10th in his class in 1866. He refused in later years to state that he fought for the institution of slavery, but rather to repel invaders to his home state .

On advice from Robert E Lee, then president of nearby Washington College, Ezekiel resumed his work in the arts and soon left for Europe where he spent much of the rest of his life. From there he became one of the most famous American sculptors of his era, producing more than 200 finished works. These include a set of eleven larger-than-life sized statues of famous artists (Phidias, Raphael, Durer, Michelangelo, Titian, Murillo, Da Vinci, et al) that are now at the Norfolk Botanical Garden, Norfolk, Virginia. The Bust of Thomas Jefferson at the U.S. Capitol and others.

Religious Liberty by Moses Jacob Ezekiel. Commissioned by B'nai B'rith for the United States Centennial, dedicated in Philadelphia’s Fairmount Park on Thanksgiving Day in 1876. Currently in front of the National Museum of American Jewish History.  Photo from Philart.net http://www.philart.net/artist.php?id=70

“Religious Liberty” by Moses Jacob Ezekiel. Commissioned by B’nai B’rith for the United States Centennial, dedicated in Philadelphia’s Fairmount Park on Thanksgiving Day in 1876. Currently in front of the National Museum of American Jewish History. Photo from Philart.net

Then there is his martial work.

Confederate Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery, perhaps Ezekiel's most famous work, although controversial today for its inclusion of several depictions of African American confederate soldiers http://scvcalifornia.blogspot.com/2008/07/black-confederates-southern-fantasy-or_20.html

Confederate Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery, perhaps Ezekiel’s most famous work, although controversial today for its inclusion of several depictions of African American confederate soldiers

Statue of Stonewall Jackson (1910) by Moses Jacob Ezekiel, West Virginia State Capitol, Charleston, West Virginia.

Statue of Stonewall Jackson (1910) by Moses Jacob Ezekiel, West Virginia State Capitol, Charleston, West Virginia.

VMI cadets marching past Ezekiel's "Virginia Mourning Her Dead" (1903), Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Virginia. He attended the dedication of this statute, which includes the graves of eight cadets killed at New Market to include his friend, Thomas Jefferson Garfield. He said at the time that, “something arose like a stone in my throat, and fell to my heart, slashing tears to my eyes” upon seeing the cadets on the field again.  http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/biographies/moses-ezekiel.html

VMI cadets marching past Ezekiel’s “Virginia Mourning Her Dead” (1903), Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Virginia. He attended the dedication of this statute, which includes the graves of eight cadets killed at New Market to include his friend, Thomas Jefferson Garfield. He said at the time that, “something arose like a stone in my throat, and fell to my heart, slashing tears to my eyes” upon seeing the cadets on the field again.

The Lookout (1910) by Moses Jacob Ezekiel, Confederate Cemetery, Johnson's Island, Ohio. The site was a POW camp for Confederate soldiers including several VMI cadets.

The Lookout (1910) by Moses Jacob Ezekiel, Confederate Cemetery, Johnson’s Island, Ohio. The site was a POW camp for Confederate soldiers including several VMI graduates.

His last work completed was the Statue of Edgar Allan Poe (1917), currently at the University of Baltimore. It should be remembered that Poe grew up as a poor kid in Richmond, a soldier, and, briefly, a cadet at the USMA.

His last work completed was the Statue of Edgar Allan Poe (1917), currently at the University of Baltimore. It should be remembered that Poe grew up as a poor kid in Richmond, a soldier, and, briefly, a cadet at the USMA.

Ezekiel was celebrated in his lifetime, winning the Michel-Beer Prix de Rome, Crosses for Merit and Art bestowed by the Emperor of Germany and the Grand Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, the Gold Medal of the Royal Society of Palermo and the Raphael Medal from the Art Society of Urbino. King Victor Emmanuel of Italy gave him the titles of Chevalier and Officer of the Crown of Italy, as well as a knighthood.

Portrait_of_Moses_Jacob_Ezekiel

When World War One came to Italy, Ezekiel threw himself into helping organize the Red Cross before dying in March 1917 at age 72. He was moved to Arlington National Cemetery in 1921, where he was buried at the foot of his gothic Confederate Memorial. His honor guard of eight handpicked VMI cadets included Randolph McCall Pate, later the 21st Commandant of the Marine Corps.

Ezekiel’s inscription is simple, “Moses J. Ezekiel, Sergeant of Company C, Battalion of Cadets of the, Virginia Military Institute.”

In addition to his art and legacy, his papers are maintained by the American Jewish Archives in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Frank William Brangwyn

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors, and the like that produced them.

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Frank William Brangwyn

Sir Frank William Brangwyn, RA, RWS, RBA, may have been born in Bruges, Belgium in 1867, but he was 100% British. His father was a skilled mechanical artist, being an architect, and likely helped young Frank with his early work. By age 17 the largely self-taught Brangwyn was painting up a storm and for the next several decades plunged head first into just about every type of art imaginable, making murals (including for the 1st class dining room of the RMS Empress of Britain and others commissioned by the House of Lords), paintings, posters, stained glass, pottery, and everything in between. In fact, he is thought to have produced over 12,000 pieces in his professional career (to include 230 designs for functional hardwood furniture!)

About his myriad of styles and mediums, Brangwyn was candid, saying, “An artist’s function is everything: he must be able to turn his hand to everything, for his mission is to decorate life… he should be able to make pots and pans, doors and walls, monuments or cathedrals, carve, paint, and do everything asked of him.”

The artist himself

The artist himself

Frank William Brangwyn, "The freedom of the seas," 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, “The freedom of the seas,” 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Still life; Fish, by FW Brangwyn, From the Royal Academy Collection

Still life; Fish, by FW Brangwyn, From the Royal Academy Collection

Seascape by Frank William Brangwyn, From the Northhampton Museum collection

Seascape by Frank William Brangwyn, From the Northhampton Museum collection

When the Great War came, Brangwyn, then 47, did his full part. He produced images for war relief organizations, bonds drives, and he likewise became an Official War Artist, traveling to the Continent to capture what he saw first hand.

War to Arms Citizens of the Empire

War to Arms Citizens of the Empire

National Fund for Welsh Troops

National Fund for Welsh Troops

'Help your country stop this" Frank William Brangwyn

‘Help your country stop this” Frank William Brangwyn

Road near Cataples by Frank Brangwyn, from the William Morris Collection

Road near Cataples by Frank Brangwyn, from the William Morris Collection

"Soldiers under airburst fire"

“Soldiers under airburst fire”

Making Sailors: The Lookout circa 1917 Sir Frank Brangwyn 1867-1956 Presented by the Ministry of Information 1918 http://www.tate.org.uk/art/work/P03012

Making Sailors: The Lookout circa 1917 Sir Frank Brangwyn 1867-1956 Presented by the Ministry of Information 1918. From the Tate Museum

Frank William Brangwyn, Going aboard, 1917

Frank William Brangwyn, Going aboard, 1917

Frank William Brangwyn, "The gun," 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, “The gun,” 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, "Duff," 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, “Duff,” 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, Boat drill, 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, Boat drill, 1917. From the NZ National Art Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, Youthful ambition, 1917, From the NZ War Collection

Frank William Brangwyn, Youthful ambition, 1917, From the NZ War Collection

Knighted in 1941, he lived through his second world war and died in Sussex at age 89 in 1956.

Works of Frank William Brangwyn’s are everywhere, especially in the UK and Commonwealth countries. The BBC as part of their ‘Your Paintings” series has an amazing 197 of his works online while the William Morris contains the second largest collection. The Arentshuis Museum in Bruges holds the largest collection of his work (some 400 that the artist presented to the city in 1936), but visit http://www.frankbrangwyn.org/ for a full list of galleries and museums in the UK and beyond.

Thank you for your work, sir.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Joseph Hirsch

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors and the like that produce them.

Combat Gallery Sunday: The Martial Art of Joseph Hirsch

Philadelphia-born Joseph Hirsch began serious art study in 1927 while just a teenager at the Philadelphia Museum. Traveling extensively in the late 1920s and 30s, he emerged as a serious painter in the Social Realism School, studying both in France and under both Henry Hensche in Provincetown and George Luks. When the Depression hit everyone, Hirsch, then a young man in his SC, signed up with the Public Works of Art Project and then the WPA during the New Deal and worked both easel painting and murals. During this period he traveled the country making murals at union halls on both coasts, as well as the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Building and several Philadelphia public buildings including the Municipal Court, which today remains as the home of the Family Court:

Joseph Hirsch mural, Philly City Courtroom C, Family Court Photo: Plan Philly.com

Joseph Hirsch mural, Philly City Courtroom C, Family Court Photo: Plan Philly.com

He was well received. In 1934, when Joseph Hirsch was only 23, he won the coveted Walter Lippincott Award then went on to grab the First Prize at the New York World’s Fair (1939), and two back to back Guggenheim Foundation Fellowships. Interestingly across his 50-year career, he worked in inks, pencils, watercolors, oils, etchings and other forms, mastering all he touched.

"Man With Sprite" by Joseph Hirsch

“Man With Sprite” by Joseph Hirsch

"Lunch Hour" 1942. Joseph Hirsch, 1910-1981. Lithograph. Printed by George Miller. Distributed by Associated American Artists. LC-USZC4-6718 © Mrs. Genevieve Hirsch. (25) Joseph Hirsch's father, a noted Philadelphia surgeon, posed for the sleeping figure in Lunch Hour, which the artist then transformed into a sensitive portrait of an African American youth. In 1944, the Library of Congress awarded this print the Second Purchase Prize, formerly known as the Pennell Prize.

“Lunch Hour” 1942. Joseph Hirsch, 1910-1981. Lithograph. Printed by George Miller. Distributed by Associated American Artists. LC-USZC4-6718 © Mrs. Genevieve Hirsch. (25) Joseph Hirsch’s father, a noted Philadelphia surgeon, posed for the sleeping figure in Lunch Hour, which the artist then transformed into a sensitive portrait of an African American youth. In 1944, the Library of Congress awarded this print the Second Purchase Prize, formerly known as the Pennell Prize.

"Till We Meet Again." Early war bonds poster done by Hirsch before his war correspondent hitch.

“Till We Meet Again.” Early war bonds poster done by Hirsch before his war correspondent hitch.

When WWII came, he signed up to be a pictorial war correspondent for the U.S. Navy. He worked with noted military artist and LSOZI Combat Gallery Alumni Georges Schreiber at Pensacola Naval Air Station in 1943, documenting the cradle of Naval Aviation.

“Pilot in Blackface.” Joseph Hirsch. The Navy pilot, if unprotected from icy blasts while on cold-weather patrol, might suffer serious frostbite. To prevent facial freezing and maintain efficiency of aircrews, wind masks are provided. Aerial observation and scouting requires sharp observation, and sometimes it is necessary for the airman to open ports or push aside the cockpit enclosure for unimpeded vision. Joseph Hirsch. US Navy Art Collection.

“Pilot in Blackface.” Joseph Hirsch. The Navy pilot, if unprotected from icy blasts while on cold-weather patrol, might suffer serious frostbite. To prevent facial freezing and maintain efficiency of aircrews, wind masks are provided. Aerial observation and scouting requires sharp observation, and sometimes it is necessary for the airman to open ports or push aside the cockpit enclosure for unimpeded vision. Joseph Hirsch. US Navy Art Collection.

"Making the Buoy" Joseph Hirsch oil on canvas, circa, 1943. Gift of Abbott Laboratories. 88-159-EX. Back from hours in the air on patrol, a flight of four-engine patrol bombers settle to the water and maneuver up to the beaching buoys preparatory to beaching. To weary, hungry pilots and crew, the signals of the beaching crew are a welcome sight. After making their planes fast to the buoys, handling wheels and lines will be attached to the plane's hull and it will be towed up to the ramp. The beaching crew, clad in swimming trunks, waits until time to wade down the ramp to attach beaching gear.US Navy Art Collection

“Making the Buoy” Joseph Hirsch oil on canvas, circa, 1943. Gift of Abbott Laboratories. 88-159-EX. Back from hours in the air on patrol, a flight of four-engine patrol bombers settle to the water and maneuver up to the beaching buoys preparatory to beaching. To weary, hungry pilots and crew, the signals of the beaching crew are a welcome sight. After making their planes fast to the buoys, handling wheels and lines will be attached to the plane’s hull and it will be towed up to the ramp. The beaching crew, clad in swimming trunks, waits until time to wade down the ramp to attach beaching gear.US Navy Art Collection

"Back From Patrol" Joseph Hirsch. Watercolor, circa, 1943. Gift of Abbott Laboratories 88-159-FH.  A Navy PBM, the Martin Mariner, rides with idle engines off its ramp waiting to be hauled out. Already the beaching crew, clad in summer suits, is wading out to attach lines and beaching gear. An officer of the bomber crew has climbed through a hatch and stands on the starboard wing roof to observe operations. US Navy Art Collection.

“Back From Patrol” Joseph Hirsch. Watercolor, circa, 1943. Gift of Abbott Laboratories 88-159-FH. A Navy PBM, the Martin Mariner, rides with idle engines off its ramp waiting to be hauled out. Already the beaching crew, clad in summer suits, is wading out to attach lines and beaching gear. An officer of the bomber crew has climbed through a hatch and stands on the starboard wing roof to observe operations. US Navy Art Collection.

Following this stateside work, he went overseas and saw the elephant. During this period, Hirsch made about 75 paintings and drawings between 1943 and 1944 in the South Pacific at the direction of Adm. Ross McIntyre, Surgeon General of the Navy, to document the efforts of Navy medicine, then was loaned to the Army to cover firsthand the GI’s medical efforts in Africa, and Italy.

Nurse in Newfoundland by Joseph Hirsch Newfoundland, World War II

Nurse in Newfoundland by Joseph Hirsch Newfoundland, World War II, via U.S. Army Center of Military History

Of his war experience, he later said :

It was hard and unforgettable and lonely and sometimes frustrating running into the real McCoy. You know, talking with — I saw soldiers in more hospitals — I had been in many hospitals in Philadelphia as my father was a doctor. The three trips I went on had to do with naval air training at Pensacola, Florida; then naval medicine in the Pacific; and army medicine in Italy and North Africa. I was of course moved most by the two medical assignments because I saw wounded kids. It was a very good experience. And the drawings that I did — I did about twenty-five pictures on each assignment, most of them done from sketches made on the spot. I didn’t have any camera with me. Not having a camera simplified everything because there was no censorship.

The majority of the work was done immediately upon my return. I’d go out for a couple of months and come back and spend another three or four months doing perhaps a dozen paintings and as many drawings both for the aviation series and the naval medicine and the Army medical. The Navy had never had any shore-based installations before World War II and they were very proud of whatever they had. I also visited a hospital ship. I suppose the most vivid experiences were down in Guadalcanal with the Marine Corps. I watched a hospital set up from landing until it was in operative condition in less than three hours from landing on the beach and set up in eight tents the entire thing with portable X-ray — everything within the space of three hours. It was a rehearsal landing with L.S.T.’s and dispersed units so that any aerial attack would not destroy the hospital. They were dispersed under the palm trees. This was on one of the beaches at Guadalcanal. To see the kind of organized spirit of cooperation was — I don’t know what the Navy’s Medical Corps is like now but at that time during the war to see a lot of wonderful improvisation made for material for good sketching and painting and drawing.

"Mercy Ship" Joseph Hirsch. Caption: Navy Hospital Ship USS Solace. The Navy's hospital ships operate under the laws laid down by the Geneva Convention, being unarmed, fully illuminated at night, and painted white. US Navy Art Collection

“Mercy Ship” Joseph Hirsch. Caption: Navy Hospital Ship USS Solace. The Navy’s hospital ships operate under the laws laid down by the Geneva Convention, being unarmed, fully illuminated at night, and painted white. US Navy Art Collection

"Latest Mode” Joseph Hirsch. Watercolor and tempera drawing, circa 1943 Gift of Abbott Laboratories 88-159-EZ Caption: These ambulatory wounded, all Marine raiders, wait on the lowered platform of an LST as it approaches Lunga Beach at Guadalcanal. The green tags indicate the specific injuries and the front line treatment administered. This particular group is returning from Rendova. US Navy Art Collection

“Latest Mode” Joseph Hirsch. Watercolor and tempera drawing, circa 1943 Gift of Abbott Laboratories 88-159-EZ Caption: These ambulatory wounded, all Marine raiders, wait on the lowered platform of an LST as it approaches Lunga Beach at Guadalcanal. The green tags indicate the specific injuries and the front line treatment administered. This particular group is returning from Rendova. US Navy Art Collection

"Night Shift" Italy 1944. Of this painting Hirsch said, "A lot of the things which look medically wonderful on paper, so far as supplies can, didn't cover all the exigencies of actual combat. For example, there is no way in which our Medical Department Supply Service can see to it that a wounded boy on a stretcher is carried down a horribly precipitous rock-not even dirt-at night time." US Army Collection.

“Night Shift” Italy 1944. Of this painting Hirsch said, “A lot of the things which look medically wonderful on paper, so far as supplies can, didn’t cover all the exigencies of actual combat. For example, there is no way in which our Medical Department Supply Service can see to it that a wounded boy on a stretcher is carried down a horribly precipitous rock-not even dirt-at night time.” US Army Collection.

"High Visability Wrap," Joseph Hirsch. A wounded soldier in Italy 1944. US Army Collection.

“High Visibility Wrap,” Joseph Hirsch. A wounded soldier in Italy 1944. US Army Collection.

"Company in the Parlor" Joseph Hirsch, Italy 1944

“Company in the Parlor” Joseph Hirsch, depicting a battalion aide station in a ruined home, Italy 1944

'So What" Joseph Hirsch. A medic drinks from his M1 helmet, Italy 1944. Baltimore Museum of Art

‘So What” Joseph Hirsch. A medic drinks from his M1 helmet, Italy 1944. Baltimore Museum of Art

"Safe" Joseph Hirsch. Showing A Medical Corpsman comforting two orphans. Cassino, Italy, 1944

“Safe” Joseph Hirsch. Showing A Medical Corpsman comforting two orphans. Cassino, Italy, 1944

What he saw in war reinforced his feelings on the horror of conflict. In 1979, he protested to a magazine that had used one of his wartime hospital paintings to illustrate an article justifying the use of the atomic bomb.

After the war, he returned to Europe to study on a Fulbright Fellowship, and then returned to Government service by producing art for the Bureau of Reclamation in the 1960s and 70s.

“Construction at Soldier Creek” by Joseph Hirsch. Watercolor, 10 1/2" x 13 1/2" For the USBR.Showing Construction activities at Soldier Creek Dam, Bonneville Unit, Central Utah Project, Utah. http://www.usbr.gov

“Construction at Soldier Creek” by Joseph Hirsch. Watercolor, 10 1/2″ x 13 1/2″ For the USBR.Showing Construction activities at Soldier Creek Dam, Bonneville Unit, Central Utah Project, Utah. http://www.usbr.gov

Hirsch passed away of cancer at his home in Manhattan in 1981 at age 71.

According to the US Navy’s Historical Command, there are no less than 32 works of Joseph Hirsch in the Navy Art Collection and all of them are online.

Works of Joseph Hirsch are also in the permanent collections of these institutions:

Museum of Fine Art, Boston, MA
Butler Institute of Fine Art, Youngstown OH
Corcoran Gallery, Washington DC
Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas TX
Library of Congress, Washington DC
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia PA
Truman Library, Independence MO
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
The Army Center of Military History, Washington DC

An oral history interview with the artist recorded in 1970 is online at the Archives of American Art

Thank you for your work, sir.

 

Combat Gallery Sunday: The martial art of Vasili Verestchagin

The artist, soldier, sailor, writer and traveler himself.

The artist, soldier, sailor, writer and traveler himself.

Born during 1842 in the shadow of the medieval Cherepovets monastery in the historic Volga-Baltic waterway crossroads in Old Russia, Vasili Verestchagin (also transliterated as Vereshchagin) was the son of a nobleman. As such, when he was just a boy he was shipped off to the Junkers academies, as befitting his rank in society. During the Crimean War, he chose the life of a naval officer and served as a midshipman on the efficient new (built in New York) steam frigate Kamchatka as a teenager. Graduating first in his class in 1861, he left the naval service behind.

You see in the 19th century, every officer school instructed formal military drawing so that later in their service officers could reproduce realistic portrayals of what they had seen on scouting missions, or what an enemy soldier’s uniform had looked like, or how a weapon system, naval vessel or fortification was laid out. This awoke something in Verestchagin that he could not still and, leaving the navy behind, he took to drawing, sketching and painting with a stark realistic style that was to serve him well over the next 40 years.

"Eaters of Opium," by Vasili Verestchagin.The artist was one of the best-traveled gentlemen of his day, having moved about Europe, Asia and Africa extensively.

“Eaters of Opium,” by Vasili Verestchagin.The artist was one of the best-traveled gentlemen of his day, having moved about Europe, Asia and Africa extensively.

"The Spy" by Vasili Verestchagin. A common theme in his paintings.

“The Spy” by Vasili Verestchagin. A common theme in his paintings.

Between stints studying and painting abroad, Verestchagin managed to get attached to a variety of Russian military adventures as a war artist and followed General Kaufman’s 1866-68 expedition against the Khanate of Kokand and the Emirate of Bukhara, capturing Samarkand and gradually subjugating all of what is now Turkestan. It was a modern mid-19th century European army against the forces of a medieval power– with a predetermined outcome.

From this experience, VV produced a number of images.

"Mortally Wounded," Turkestan series, painted in 1873

“Mortally Wounded,” Turkestan series, painted in 1873

"After Failure," Turkestan series, painted in 1868. Note the calm demeanor on the Russian trooper's face as he lights his pipe.

“After Failure,” Turkestan series, painted in 1868. Note the calm demeanor on the Russian trooper’s face as he lights his pipe.

"They Attack Unawares, " Turkestan series by Vasili Verestchagin

“They Attack Unawares, ” Turkestan series by Vasili Verestchagin

He later accompanied the Russian army into Turkish areas in 1877-78. Taking up a rifle when needed, he also did a fair bit of fighting when the bullets started flying, being one of the only war artists ever decorated for bravery when he should have been sketching. In fact, putting his naval training to good use, the civilian painter, garbed in his traveling clothes, took command of a small torpedo launch in the Danube and engaged Turkish gunboats, earning some hot lead in his body and a St George Cross from the Tsar, Russia’s highest military award– only given to soldiers and sailors.

"Snowy Trenches, Russian positions along the Shipka Pass 1877." Painted in 1881 by Vasili Verestchagin. It should be noted that the artist's brother was killed during this campaign.

“Snowy Trenches, Russian positions along the Shipka Pass 1877.” Painted in 1881 by Vasili Verestchagin. It should be noted that the artist’s brother was killed during this campaign.

However what he saw on the battlefield left a mark on his soul, which he turned into a number of pieces of rather anti-war art:

Apotheosis by

“The Apotheosis of War, dedicated to all great conquerors, past, present and future.” Currently in the collection at the Tretyakov. Based in theory on the death monuments left by Tamerlane in the 14th Century, it was one of the first pieces of hyper-realistic anti-war art.

"The Road of the War Prisoners, 1878-1879," portraying the route traveled by captured Turkish troops. By Vasili Verestchagin. Currently in the Brooklyn Museum.

“The Road of the War Prisoners, 1878-1879,” portraying the route traveled by captured Turkish troops. By Vasili Verestchagin. Currently in the Brooklyn Museum.

Having seen the elephant, he settled abroad for a while and painted progressively darker subjects such as “Blowing from Guns” a study of the British executions in India following the Sepoy Mutiny.

"Blowing from Guns," by Vasili Verestchagin

“Blowing from Guns,” by Vasili Verestchagin

His images of military subjects included an extensive series of works centered on the Napoleonic Wars, in particular the little Emperor’s journey into Russia in 1812, which were completed in 1893.

"The Arsonists. Executions in Moscow 1812," by Vasili Verestchagin

“The Arsonists. Executions in Moscow 1812,” by Vasili Verestchagin

"Shoot those with weapons in their hands" goes the order from Napoleon on captured Russian civilians/partisans, by Vasili Verestchagin

“Shoot those with weapons in their hands” goes the order from Napoleon on captured Russian civilians/partisans, by Vasili Verestchagin

"Hold on! Let them get closer!" -- Russian partisans wait to attack French army stragglers during the Great Retreat, by Vasili Verestchagin

“Hold on! Let them get closer!” — Russian Opolchenie militia partisans wait to attack French army stragglers during the Great Retreat, by Vasili Verestchagin

Well traveled, he popped up in the Philippines during the American campaign there against the local Muslim insurgents.

There he was cited as having replied when asked if the subject was worth his time, as the scale was nothing like that of Napoleon’s battles, which he was known for painting depictions of, saying, “You may call it a small war if you like, but it is none the less a fierce one. War is war everywhere. It is today what it was yesterday – what it will be tomorrow. Always the same.”

Now in his sixties, his work seemed muted, and not quite as vibrant by that stage:

Spy, 1898. by Vasili Verestchagin

Spy, 1898. by Vasili Verestchagin

Far From Home, by Vasili Verestchagin

Far From Home, by Vasili Verestchagin

By the time the Japanese finally decided they had enough of Imperial Russia’s shit over Manchuria and Korea and started a war with the Motherland in 1904, Verestchagin rushed to the fray, sketching scenes around embattled Port Arthur.

While accompanying the Russian fleet on a sortie against the Japanese aboard the new 12,000-ton battleship Petropavlovsk, flagship of the Pacific Fleet and war chariot of the great Admiral Makarov, Verestchagin was killed. You see the pre-dreadnought struck a Japanese mine and, in addition to Makarov, 26 officers and 652 men of the Russian Navy, the waves of the cold sea called Vasili Verestchagin down to the deep for one final roll call.

Some 50 of his works are at the Tretyakov while others are around the world.

Modern Military Art

Check out Michael Fay’s blog Fire and Ice

He is one of the best modern war artists and correspondents out there

And his work is so striking you feel like you need to make sure your anthrax shots are up-to-date to be able just to look at it.

In The Shadow of the Poppy Harvest, oil on canvas, 2011

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