Reality in flames: artworks
Russell Drysdale’s Soldier (1942) is a crucial work in the exhibition, capturing as it does the disquieting mood of a nation at war. It was created at a time when there was great fear that Nazi Germany might triumph in Europe and when recent Japanese attacks on mainland Australia had sent shockwaves through the nation. Concerned about the Japanese raids on Sydney, Drysdale left the city and moved his family inland to Albury. Soldier is one of many works he completed that depicts the men he often saw waiting at Albury railway station, an important junction on the line between Melbourne and Sydney. The soldier’s heavy winter uniform and kitbag, and the dark lighting, help to convey a sense of isolation. He waits for a train to take him to his next posting, then possibly to a theatre of war.
Official war artist Dennis Adams traveled through Britain and Europe to cover the Australians fighting there. Dennis Adams’s work repeatedly explores the many unfamiliar and highly dangerous roles people fulfilled during the war. Rear gunner, Halifax (1944), for instance, presents a man isolated in his gun turret at the back of a bomber aircraft, which would fly night-time missions at high altitude and for thousands of kilometers across Europe.
Many other artists focused on the new foreign and cultural encounters experienced abroad and at home. Sali Herman, a refugee from Switzerland, became an Australian War Memorial official artist in 1945, covering the late stages of the war in the Asia–Pacific region. Like other artists and soldiers, he was struck by the diverse cultures encountered throughout the war. In Waiting room at Finschhafen he pictures one such scene, which he described as follows:
At that time [Finschhafen] was most likely one of the busiest airports in the world … Men came from everywhere and had to wait for further transport. Sitting and standing in the waiting room were Australians, Americans, and Negroes in an atmosphere of smoke, boredom and tiredness.
Sybil Craig was one of three female official war artists commissioned during the war. She covered the home-front production of munitions. Craig’s Girls working in the Container Production Room (Commonwealth explosives factory, Maribyrnong) (1945) depicts women absorbed in factory work. Their bodies work in harmony with the machines and they are shown as confident and in control, performing what was traditionally considered a man’s role. It is one of many works in this exhibition that explore the ways in which gender roles changed during the war.
Frank Hinder’s painting Bomber crash (1949) also explores destruction, drawing on his firsthand experience of a plane crash whilst serving in the Australian Infantry Forces as a camouflage artist in 1940. Using an arrangement of futurist-inspired curvilinear forms, Hinder recreated the explosions, flames, and dark plumes of smoke that engulfed the crashed plane. Hinder wrote in his diary of this experience:
Roared up runway – seemed to take long time to get the tail up … getting close to end of field … lot of noise and racket, tried to protect head and face waiting for next bump and crash. Came to rest and flames shot up all round … Before door opened wondered what it would be like to be incinerated.
Reality in flames presents artists’ reactions to the dangers and challenges faced by soldiers abroad and to the complex changes war brought to the home front. It provides a rich visual commentary on the Second World War, while commemorating Australia’s contribution and the war’s enduring impact on our society.
In the late 1920s Dore Hawthorne co-edited the Sydney based modernist literary and art journal Undergrowth: a magazine of youth and ideals. During the Second World War, however, her life became consumed by her work in the Small Arms Factory in Lithgow. Her painting Gauges and Components represents gun parts and factory objects related to the manufacture of Bren guns. It forms part of a series of forty works by Dore Hawthorne exhibited, in 1945, under the title Factory Folk, which depicts life and work at the factory with humour and sympathy. She painted the series under the pseudonym 'Brendorah', conflating her name and the gun that dominated her life.
Eric Thake, who had been working in a surrealist mode since the early 1930s, wrote of his experience in New Guinea as an official artist for the Royal Australian Air Force: “I’m seeing so much every day that is new and strange. I am seeing in minutes and hours and days more than I ever expected to see in my lifetime.” His Kamiri searchlight (1945) presents an anti-aircraft searchlight as a precise tool of war, set amongst an exotic costal setting, which was the backdrop to many battles in Southeast Asia.
In 1942, Albert Tucker served in the army for several months, and his many images from this period represent the military as bleak and dehumanizing.
In 1943 Albert Tucker started creating his Images of modern evil series. Through this work Tucker pictures a strident sexuality, real and imagined, played out in the blacked-out Melbourne streets. For the artist, this personal imagery symbolised social disintegration. Tucker believed there was nothing dignified in war and he felt compelled to create images that clearly presented this reality.