Place | Middle East: Ottoman Empire, Palestine |
---|---|
Accession Number | ART19628 |
Collection type | Art |
Measurement | Overall: 29.3 x 110.3 cm |
Object type | Work on paper |
Physical description | brown ink and wash on paper |
Maker |
Hewett, Otho |
Place made | Ottoman Empire: Palestine |
Date made | 1918 |
Conflict |
First World War, 1914-1918 |
Copyright |
Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain
|
Looking East across the Jordan Valley from about Tel el Truny
Panoramic and topographical landscape looking East across the Jordan Valley from about Tel el Truny. "Musallabah", "The Bluff" and Abu Tellul are in the distance. During June 1918 Tel el Truny was an open area occupied by both the Ottomans and Australians. No permenant outposts were established upon this mound but it was the site for many proxy contests between the combatants.
Otho Hewett (1887- 1942) served with the 9th Light Horse Regiment and 3rd Light Horse Brigade Headquarters during the First World War. Trained as a designer is South Australia, he joined the ANZAC Divisional Headquarters at Romani as a panoramic artist and sketched each battlefield on the way to Jericho. He also contributed illustrations to Kia-Ora Coo-Ee, the magazine which was written and edited by Australian and New Zealand troops serving in Egypt, Palestine, Salonica and Mesopotamia, printed in Cairo and appeared in monthly issues between March and December 1918. Returning to Australia, Hewett lived in Adelaide during the 1920s and then moved to the town of Tintinara where he lived between 1929 and 1942, working as an artist, craftsman and cafe owner. He also made furniture and musical instruments. Hewett painted an Egyptian drop scene for the Tinitinara Hall when it opened in 1931 and died in 1942.