Blog: Gallipoli Mission

Lambert in Melbourne

24 August 2007 by Janda Gooding. News, , , , . Leave a comment

Entrance to exhibition at Ian Potter Museum of Art, MelbourneEntrance to exhibition at Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne

Here are some of the latest pics of the George Lambert exhibition at the Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne. You can see that it looks quite different to how it did in Canberra. As each venue has different physical spaces and facilities and even different visitor patterns, the exhibition is ‘re-designed’ for each specific venue. Whereas in Canberra we used dark wall colours, in Melbourne the works hang on white walls with an even wash of light over them. With slightly more space the exhibition has an ‘airy’ feel about it. And the order in which the paintings and drawings are displayed is very different. Some groups have remained the same but generally, the hanging order has taken into account the way people move around the two adjacent galleries.

View inside the exhibition when at the Australian War MemorialView inside the exhibition when at the Australian War Memorial

Exhibition at Ian Potter Museum of Art, MelbourneExhibition at Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne

ANZAC Cove

10 May 2007 by Janda Gooding. George Lambert: Gallipoli and Palestine Landscapes, , , , , , . Comments (2)

‘ANZAC Cove’ 1919 by George Lambert (ART02839)‘ANZAC Cove’ 1919 by George Lambert (ART02839) ART02839
On their first day in the ‘Old ANZAC area’*, Lambert and Hubert Wilkins (the official photographer of the Australian Historical Mission) were taken down to ANZAC Cove by Charles Bean. Bean was keen to introduce them to the area and show them the dugout that he had occupied during 1915. The following day, 16 February 1919 Lambert made another visit to the beach and then again the next day. As a group they retraced the steps of Hedley Vicars Howe who as a Private had landed with 11 Battalion on the morning of 25 April 1915. Howe’s account of the landing and climbing up Plugge’s Plateau would also largely inform the narrative that runs through Lambert’s large commissioned work ANZAC, the landing 1915. (a separate post to follow)

Lambert held off painting an ANZAC Cove subject until towards the end of his stay on Gallipoli with the Australian Historical Mission. On 5 March he made a painting of the beach with the hills of Suvla in the distance and wrote: “In the afternoon I did a picture, not a sketch, of ANZAC Cove, chiefly palette-knife, and quite like it”. This work – unusual for Lambert in that as he observes he used a palette knife – is quickly sketched in with only the barest indication of the complex topography of the slopes leading up from the beach. But, his painting also shows the debris of war still littered across the beach including the ruins of a water-condensing plant.

‘ANZAC Cove, February 1919′ photo by Hubert Wilkins (P03631.232)‘ANZAC Cove, February 1919′ photo by Hubert Wilkins (P03631.232) P03631.232
Hubert Wilkins also took a photograph of the scene from the beach level and this more clearly shows the remnants of the terraces and rubbish along the water line. Wilkins’ and Lambert’s images are both classically composed with the sweeping curve of the bay, but each conveys a different sort of information. Wilkins’ photo indicates the stucture of the altered landscape and gives an immense amount of information – Lambert gives us an impression of the confused and still raw landscape of war.

In 2007 the scene has changed dramatically. The beach is shallower due to the build up required to support the road and possibly the natural shifting processes of coastlines has contributed to this erosion. Ari Burnu headland is clothed in green scrub and any terrace contours are invisible in the dense vegetation. However, as you come around the road past Hell Spit and see ANZAC Cove for the first time, it is still instantly recognisable by the curve of the beach and distinctive profile of the headland.

Anzac Cove with Ari Burnu headland, April 2007Anzac Cove with Ari Burnu headland, April 2007

* Charles Bean used the term ‘Old ANZAC area’ in his book Gallipoli Mission to denote all the ground held by the ANZAC forces from April 1915 until the second major thrust in August 1915.

George Lambert and ‘Windamere’

08 February 2007 by Janda Gooding. George Lambert: Gallipoli and Palestine Landscapes, , , , , , . Leave a comment

Windamere, CobbittyWindamere, Cobbitty

Lenore Heath who works in the Photographs section at the Memorial has an interesting link to George Lambert. Lenore’s grandparents, Ben and Alice Heath, owned the guesthouse ‘Windamere’ where Lambert died in May 1930.

Ben was born in Slough, England in 1887 and migrated first to New Zealand and then Australia, settling in Sydney. He married Alice Ward in 1915 and shortly after enlisted in the Australian Flying Corps, serving three months in Egypt as a sergeant air mechanic before being invalided back to Australia after being diagnosed with an ‘irritable heart’.

The dining room and river views, WindamereThe dining room and river views, Windamere

Ben and Alice bought the property in Cobbitty in late 1925. It backed onto the Nepean River and was ideal for a guesthouse. In 1928 they built ‘Windamere’ that boasted facilities including its own electricity plant (bought from a Kings Cross theatre), a nine hole golf course and polo ground, dining, lounge and dance rooms, and a resident pianist. Activities advertised included billiards, tennis, table tennis, shooting, horse riding, swimming, and fishing. Ben and Alice were helped by their four children one of whom was Jeffrey, Lenore’s father.

In May 1930 Lambert stayed at ‘Windamere’. Lambert had contacted his friend Brigadier General George Macleay Macarthur-Onslow to ask about horses he could ride during his rest break. Macarthur-Onslow suggested that the owner of ‘Windamere’, Ben Heath would have some good horses, but Lambert decided to take his own horse ‘Old Iron’. Although Lambert was under medical instructions to have complete rest, this did not stop him from riding ‘Old Iron’.

It was at ‘Windamere’, that Lambert, while repairing a feedbox had a heart attack and died. A newspaper reported the incident: “Yesterday morning he [Lambert] took some light exercise, and, in the early afternoon, he decided to get a piece of timber to mend a feed-box. He walked directly to the wood-heap, and as he was about to split a piece of wood he fell forward unconscious. Help was quickly forthcoming, and Dr. Crookston, who was summoned, made a hurried journey to Windamere, but the famous artist was then beyond aid.”

‘Windamere’ continued operating for some years but business declined and the Heaths sold it. During the Second World War Ben enlisted in the US Army Small Ships Division and served in the South West Pacific for ten months. His son Jeffrey served in 30 Squadron, RAAF in Papua New Guinea and fortunately father and son were able to meet in New Guinea twice during the war.

Today, the 100 acre Windamere property is surrounded by the rapidly growing outer suburbs of Sydney’s south west. 

Lenore Heath and Janda Gooding

The rail journey from Gallipoli to Cairo

12 December 2006 by Janda Gooding. George Lambert: Gallipoli and Palestine Landscapes, , , . Leave a comment

When the Australian Historical Mission left Gallipoli on 10 March 1919 they sailed up to Constantinople (Istanbul) before embarking on a 1500 mile rail journey that would take them across Turkey, Syria, Palestine and Egypt and into Cairo where they dispersed. The rail link through the Taurus Mountains had only been recently opened and was being used to transport Tukish and Allied troops back and forth across Asia Minor.

George Lambert on a train travelling to Cairo, photo by Charles BeanGeorge Lambert on a train travelling to Cairo, photo by Charles Bean G02138

For their overland journey the party was assigned two long enclosed horse or cattle trucks in the train. One truck was converted to a mess room and kitchen where Lambert with the help of Sergeant G Hunter Rogers cooked the meals and slept. During the trip Lambert and Rogers frequently served up three course meals and Lambert regaled the group with impersonations of British officers and stories of his time in the Sinai with the Light Horse.

Turkish troops in train wagons in the Taurus Mountains 1919, photo by Charles Bean (G02134)Turkish troops in train wagons in the Taurus Mountains 1919, photo by Charles Bean (G02134) G02134

Charles Bean in Gallipoli Mission described the journey as one of “extraordinary interest and, in parts, through scenery both grand and beautiful, in country with a history going back much farther than St Paul; where Assyrians, Lydians, Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Arabs, Turks, Crusaders – and in these modern times Napoleon and ourselves – had marched and fought.” Along the way they passed trains crowded with Turkish troops who were demobilising.

'The top of the Taurus range' 1919 by George Lambert'The top of the Taurus range' 1919 by George Lambert

Lambert described the rail journey (through the Taurus Mountains) as taking them through “what I think is the most spectacular country in all that part of the world that I have travelled in.” Fortunately, we have one image from this part of the trip that indicates how Lambert responded to the landscape. At one point the train made a brief halt high up in the mountains. Lambert was able to make a quick sketch of the landscape on the back of one of his Gallipoli paintings. The painting (right) was only roughly sketched in but clearly outlines the form of the place and the distant peak of the Taurus Mountains covered in snow.

'Aleppo' 1919 by George Lambert (ART02830)'Aleppo' 1919 by George Lambert (ART02830) ART02830

As the train wound down from the mountains it passed through Adana and then Aleppo where Lambert was able to make another quick study (left). Changing trains the group passed through Jerusalem and then onto Cairo where they dispersed in early April. Throughout most of April and May Lambert was confined to a Cairo hospital with dysentery and malaria. On 31 May he was discharged from hospital and travelled to Semakh where he resumed his work as a war artist.

Janda

Gallipoli wild flowers

07 December 2006 by Janda Gooding. George Lambert: Gallipoli and Palestine Landscapes, , , . Leave a comment

Lambert was interested in the small details of the landscape just as much as the grand vistas. By painting studies of the local flowers and bushes he was able to understand more thoroughly the character, form and colours of a particular site. When he arrived on Gallipoli he made notes about the local plants: “The scrub is greenish with nice dead stuff showing grey purple here & there. I propose getting a record of the various plants & flowers.” 

 

'Gallipoli wild flowers' 1919 by George Lambert (ART02838) 'Gallipoli wild flowers' 1919 by George Lambert (ART02838) ART02838

Lambert picked these flowers from the site of a Turkish artillery battery called ‘Beachy Bill’ that had regularly shelled Anzac Cove. On 27 February 1919 he wrote that “we discovered quite a wild garden to-day and I am fixed for a flower-piece if it rains.” The following day it did rain and it was cold and bleak with intermittent showers. With the flowers to hand, Lambert was able to spend the whole day and the next painting this still life. On 1 March he commented: “Again the rain and therefore the account of the day is easy. The flower-piece is finished … The flowers are in a biscuit tin on top of a bed for a tentpole.” He was pleased with the result but felt that he should be painting up at the Nek where the tragic charge of the 3rd Light Horse had taken place in August 1915.

Janda

The Gallipoli Mission

03 November 2006 by Janda Gooding. George Lambert: Gallipoli and Palestine Landscapes, . Leave a comment

In January 1919 a small group led by Charles Bean left London to travel to Gallipoli. The Australian Historical Mission was comprised of war records section staff, photographers and officers who had served at Gallipoli in 1915. The primary tasks of the mission were to report on the state of the war graves at Gallipoli and for Bean to try and resolve many of the riddles of the 1915 campaign. George Lambert was asked by Bean to go with the mission and to make oil and pencil studies that could later help him create two large works commissioned by the Australian Government for the future Australian War Memorial. Bean was particularly anxious that Lambert be the appointed artist as he felt that Lambert was the best of the Australian artists available. Bean also asked Hubert Wilkins a well known photographer to accompany the Mission and record the landscape through photography.

The AHM having a picnic at Gallipoli 1919, photo by Hubert WilkinsThe AHM having a picnic at Gallipoli 1919, photo by Hubert Wilkins G01904

'Zeki Bey' 1919, pencil drawing by George Lambert'Zeki Bey' 1919, pencil drawing by George Lambert ART02868

When the mission arrived at Gallipoli, a Turkish Officer Major Zeki Bey who had fought at Gallipoli joined the group. Zeki Bey walked the ground with Bean exchanging information and giving him a Turkish perspective of the 1915 campaign.

Additionally, the Graves Registration Unit was working in the area locating and identifying the remains of allied soldiers, reburying them and charting the cemeteries. The atmosphere in which Lambert painted was greatly influenced by the work going on around him as bones and bodies were constantly being unearthed, catalogued and then re-interred.The work he produced on Gallipoli is more sombre and muted in colour. He described the landscape of Gallipoli as disturbing and ‘melancholy’ and as he was making ready to depart he wrote to his wife “I cannot tell you how pleased I am at getting clear of this graveyard beautiful as it is nor can I explain how satisfied I am to have done what work I have done.”

Janda