Through the creation and sharing of art, the people who have fought, survived and returned from the many theatres of war are regularly remembered and often revered as heroes. Art is an open doorway used to recall the lasting impact of war without celebrating the brutality, pain, and loss of combat.



Remembrance Day each year is an ideal opportunity to delve into the volumes of well known, and well-regarded art from different warfare. Moving the gaze away from the primary depictions of white European men in highly decorated uniforms, there are images that show that the colour of war, under the umbrella of the far-reaching British Empire, is far from monotone.



More here: https://artuk.org/discover/stories/the-colour-of-war

Artists featured in this Curation: Desmond Doig (1921–1983), Robert M. Jones, Gertrude Ellen Burrard (1860–1928), Fordyce, William Menzies Coldstream (1908–1987), Edward Eugene Louis Mortelmans (1915–2008), Steve Joyce (b.1956), Marcel Watkins, Peter Milner (b.1951), Vereker Monteith Hamilton (1856–1931), and 46 more
72 artworks