Army Camp

Place Oceania: Australia, Northern Territory
Accession Number ART96871
Collection type Art
Measurement Overall: 16.8 x 19.6 cm
Object type Work on paper
Physical description watercolour and pencil on paper
Maker Rafty, Tony
Date made 1942
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Copyright

Item copyright: Unlicensed copyright

Description

Depicts a scene of an army camp, with tents, washing on the line and palm trees, in the NT during the Second World War. Born Anthony Raftopoulos, Tony Rafty (1915-2015) was largely self-taught and joined 'The Sun' in 1940 as a cartoonist. He enlisted with the Commonwealth Military Forces on 29 December 1941 and in early 1943 was invalided from the Northern Territory, where he had created drawings while a hospital patient in Darwin. Rafty was brought to the attention of Lieutenant Colonel Treloar, and a few months later transferred to the Military History Section in Melbourne. Here he was employed in connection with the production of the Services Annuals; the original drawings he produced for these are held in the Australian War Memorial’s Art collection. Although employed as an illustrator, Rafty was sent to New Guinea in early 1944. Rafty served as a war artist and journalist for the Australian Army, serving in New Guinea, Borneo and Singapore. He sketched the surrender of the Japanese in Singapore, and covered the release of POWs from prison camps, including Batu Lintang camp in Kuching, Sarawak.