Canadian
Artillery in Action
This
painting is based on The Battle of Somme, which took place in 1916 right in the
middle of WW1 and created by Captain Kenneth Forbes in 1918.
Kenneth
Keith Forbes was a Canadian portrait and landscape painter born on July 4th
1892 in Toronto, Ontario. Born with a father who painted portraits for a
living, he had already had experience with paint. After going through
schooling, and studying art, he enlisted in the army in 1914 but was soon
wounded in a warzone, then gassed. He ended his career in the army as second in
command of the 32nd battalion, Machine Gun Corps. He then went on to
use his schooling as a recognized war artist.
I
think anyone looking at this painting will be interested in the details behind
the photo; it gives out a dark vibe. It shows a deeper meaning to the war, and
shows another side to it then what people might have thought war was like back
then. Depending on the person it can make you feel uneasy or sad because the
men work to get the machine loaded while you can see men lying in a still position.
The
artist clearly knew what war was like because he added the smallest details to
the painting. If we didn’t know that he had previously been in the war it may
not be so easy to tell that he knew what he was doing and he knew what the
point was trying to get across.
Yes
I believe it does represent the war accurately because not only was he there at
one point but why would he try and manipulate what people believe war was like.
There’s also a lot going on, it looks hectic and in my view that’s what it
would be like in the moment.
It is a very detailed painting. I agree that it looks hectic and shows just how hard the soldiers had to work.
ReplyDelete