WW1 Art

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WW1 In Vogue
This month marks 100 years since the start of World War One. In the August issue, Jo Ellison looks at Vogue's coverage of the Great War
Belgian Red Cross
A British WWI Poster to help raise funds for the Belgian Red Cross. Illustrated by Charles Buchel and printed by Johnson, Riddle & Co., Ltd., London, S.E., c. 1915. The poster shows a Red Cross nurse, with angel wings, tending to a wounded soldier, against the backdrop of a Belgian flag.
View from the Old British Trenches: Looking towards La Boisselle, Courcelette on the Left, Martinpuich on the Right | Art UK
View from the Old British Trenches: Looking towards La Boisselle, Courcelette on the Left, Martinpuich on the Right by William Orpen, 1917.
The Old German Front Line, Arras, 1916
'The Old German Front Line, Arras, 1916', by Charles Sims. 1919.
Paul Nash and World War One: ‘I am no longer an artist, I am a messenger to those who want the war to go on for ever… and may it burn their lousy souls’
Paul Nash and World War One: ‘I am no longer an artist, I am a messenger to those who want the war to go on for ever… and may it burn their lousy souls’
Antiques | 1stdibs
PAUL NASH (1889-1946) Shell bursting, Passchendaele (1918 England)
Picket | Nash, Paul | Nash, Paul | V&A Explore The Collections
Picket Object: Drawing Place of origin: Great Britain Date: 1919 Artist/Maker: Paul Nash, born 1889 - died 1946 (Artist) Paul Nash, born 1889 - died 1946 (artist) Materials and Techniques: Pen and ink, paper, drawing
Frederick Varley - Wikipedia
German Prisoners - Canadian war artist Frederick Varley (Group of Seven).
Paul Nash: Existence « Postcards From The Great War
'Existence' by Paul Nash (1917). Nash said of his work as an official war artist: ‘I am no longer an artist, I am a messenger to those who want the war to go on for ever… and may it burn their lousy souls’
10 Photos Of Life In The Trenches
paul nash war art - Google Search