[Study for Smoko]

Place Oceania: Australia, Northern Territory, Darwin
Accession Number ART95016
Collection type Art
Measurement Overall: 50.9 x 64.8 cm
Object type Work on paper
Physical description watercolour, pencil and charcoal on paper
Maker Pidgeon, William Edwin (WEP)
Place made Australia: Northern Territory
Date made 1943
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Copyright

Item copyright: AWM Licensed copyright

Description

Depicts a number of Australian servicemen standing around in the outdoors, with palm trees in the background, have a 'smoko' (cigarette break) in northern Australia, near Darwin, during the Second World War. William Edwin Pidgeon ('WEP') (1909-1981) was a painter, cartoonist, illustrator and newspaper critic. In 1926 as a 16 yr old, he became a cadet newspaper artist with the 'Sunday News' and began his professional career working for a number of newspapers. During the Second World War, he became a war correspondant with Consolidated Press, contributing illustrations that were published in the 'Australian Women's Weekly' magazine. His images, with their sardonic humour, richly conveyed the lives and personalities of Australian troops during the Second World War.