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Topics

Vehicles (war and conflict)

  • Summary
Chieftain Tank in a Wooded Landscape
© the copyright holder. Image credit: The REME Museum

Chieftain Tank in a Wooded Landscape

Ivan Stuart Appleton (1891–1974)

The REME Museum

Chariots, the earliest military vehicle (apart from the horse), carry Greek and Roman gods and goddesses in Renaissance and baroque paintings, and feature in Alexander von Wagner’s over-the-top Chariot Race of c.1882. In the many paintings of battles from the fourteenth to the nineteenth centuries, more humble vehicles, such as wagons and gun carriages, play a minor and distant part, the emphasis always being on the fighting people and horses.


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With the arrival of armoured vehicles in the First World War, tanks and armoured cars played a very prominent role on the front line and feature in the works commissioned by the official war artist schemes of the First and Second World Wars, and later, and also by the many specialist military museums.

Artworks

  • The Chariot Race
    The Chariot Race Alexander von Wagner (1838–1919)
    Manchester Art Gallery
  • Halifax at Elvington
    Halifax at Elvington Trevor Shoesmith (1944–2011)
    Yorkshire Air Museum
  • Normandy D-Day Landings
    Normandy D-Day Landings Oliver Fox (1920–2014)
    Derby Civic Treasures
  • Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers in the Field
    Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers in the Field J. Forester
    The REME Museum
  • The Repair of a Churchill Tank at the Mill Hill Workshop
    The Repair of a Churchill Tank at the Mill Hill Workshop Grace Frances Ward (1896–1975)
    The REME Museum
  • Beach Recovery
    Beach Recovery Bernard King (active 1983–1988)
    The REME Museum
  • Lancaster 111 JB421 K-King of 49 Squadron
    Lancaster 111 JB421 K-King of 49 Squadron Colin Ashford (1919–2020)
    Yorkshire Air Museum
  • 74 more

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® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).