Place | Europe: France, Picardie, Somme, Amiens Harbonnieres Area, Glisy |
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Accession Number | ART03486 |
Collection type | Art |
Measurement | sheet: 35.4 x 51 cm; image: 35.4 x 51 cm |
Object type | Work on paper |
Physical description | watercolour with pencil on paper |
Maker |
Streeton, Arthur |
Place made | France: Picardie, Somme, Amiens Harbonnieres Area, Glisy |
Date made | 1918 |
Conflict |
First World War, 1914-1918 |
Copyright |
Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain This item is in the Public Domain |
Ammunition dump, Glisy
Depicts an ammunition dump at Glisy screened by camouflage netting, a warning sign post, stacks of shells for 18-pounder guns, a separate stack for fuze caps, some shells in steel ammunition boxes and sandbag walls at intervals along the dump.There are two soldiers working in the centre of the dump. Arthur Streeton is best known as one of the painters of the Heidelberg School in Melbourne in the late nineteenth century. His name is linked with Tom Roberts, Charles Conder, and Frederick McCubbin as responsible for developing in Australia an impressionist technique of painting, and depicting scenes that embraced the nationalistic concerns of the last two decades of the nineteenth century. During his lifetime he was acknowledged as the finest painter of the Australian landscape; he was the first Australian painter to be honoured by a retrospective exhibition in his own lifetime; and only the second to be knighted.
In 1918 while based in London, he was appointed by the Australian War Memorial as an official war artist and travelled to France to record the involvement of Australians in the battles taking place along the Somme River. During the period of his employment he produced ten paintings and eighty-six drawings that are held by the Memorial. These were all executed in the years 1918 and 1919. The Memorial later purchased his HMS Renown, Sydney Harbour painted in 1922, and commissioned several large paintings of significant wartime subjects.