{"title":"Üç Anzak Ressamın Gözüyle Çanakkale Muharebesi","authors":"S. Pınarbaşı","doi":"10.26650/artsanat.2021.16.0016","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"An important front during the First World War was Canakkale. Canakkale battles took place between November 3, 1914 and January 9, 1916. The Allied Powers, after being defeated by the strong Ottoman defense on March 18, 1915, began to prepare a landing army, as they realized that the strait could not be crossed by naval forces without land support. Britain started propaganda efforts to recruit soldiers from its colonies, Australia and New Zealand, for this landing. This collection of soldiers were nicknamed Anzac, for the English initials of the Australian and New Zealand Corps (Australian & New Zealand Army Corps). These Anzac troops included the painters Horace Millichamp Moore-Jones, Frank Rossiter Crozier, and George Washington Thomas Lambert, whose lives and paintings will be discussed in this paper. Two of the painters took part in the war, and one was sent to Canakkale after defeat. Horace Millichamp Moore-Jones, one of the soldiers active in the battle, found it sufficient to document the war visually instead of commenting on it verbally. In the illustrations of Frank Rossiter Crozier, who served as a stretcher bearer in the war, themes such as homesickness and despair are seen. The paintings of the official war painter George Washington Thomas Lambert, who came with special permission after the defeat in 1919 and depicted war scenes and portraits, are interesting in terms of showing the Anzacs’ view of the region after defeat. Lambert’s paintings reflect the grave consequences of the Anzac occupation for his country. Each of these three Anzac painters who depicted the Battle of Canakkale in Gallipoli Peninsula reveal different attitudes about the conflict.","PeriodicalId":29879,"journal":{"name":"Art-Sanat","volume":"103 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2021-08-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Art-Sanat","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.26650/artsanat.2021.16.0016","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ART","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
An important front during the First World War was Canakkale. Canakkale battles took place between November 3, 1914 and January 9, 1916. The Allied Powers, after being defeated by the strong Ottoman defense on March 18, 1915, began to prepare a landing army, as they realized that the strait could not be crossed by naval forces without land support. Britain started propaganda efforts to recruit soldiers from its colonies, Australia and New Zealand, for this landing. This collection of soldiers were nicknamed Anzac, for the English initials of the Australian and New Zealand Corps (Australian & New Zealand Army Corps). These Anzac troops included the painters Horace Millichamp Moore-Jones, Frank Rossiter Crozier, and George Washington Thomas Lambert, whose lives and paintings will be discussed in this paper. Two of the painters took part in the war, and one was sent to Canakkale after defeat. Horace Millichamp Moore-Jones, one of the soldiers active in the battle, found it sufficient to document the war visually instead of commenting on it verbally. In the illustrations of Frank Rossiter Crozier, who served as a stretcher bearer in the war, themes such as homesickness and despair are seen. The paintings of the official war painter George Washington Thomas Lambert, who came with special permission after the defeat in 1919 and depicted war scenes and portraits, are interesting in terms of showing the Anzacs’ view of the region after defeat. Lambert’s paintings reflect the grave consequences of the Anzac occupation for his country. Each of these three Anzac painters who depicted the Battle of Canakkale in Gallipoli Peninsula reveal different attitudes about the conflict.
恰纳卡莱是第一次世界大战中的一个重要前线。恰纳卡莱战役发生于1914年11月3日至1916年1月9日。盟军在1915年3月18日被强大的奥斯曼帝国击败后,开始准备登陆部队,因为他们意识到没有陆地支援,海军部队无法穿越海峡。为了这次登陆,英国开始从其殖民地澳大利亚和新西兰招募士兵。这批士兵被昵称为Anzac,这是澳大利亚和新西兰军团(Australian and New Zealand Corps)的英文缩写。这些澳新军团包括画家贺拉斯·米利尚·摩尔·琼斯,弗兰克·罗西特·克罗泽和乔治·华盛顿·托马斯·兰伯特,他们的生活和绘画将在本文中讨论。两个画家参加了战争,一个战败后被派往恰纳卡莱。霍勒斯·米利彻姆·摩尔-琼斯是战斗中的一名士兵,他发现用视觉记录战争比口头评论更有效。在弗兰克·罗西特·克罗泽(Frank Rossiter Crozier)的插图中,他曾在战争中担任担架担架员,他的插图中体现了乡愁和绝望等主题。官方战争画家乔治·华盛顿·托马斯·兰伯特(George Washington Thomas Lambert)在1919年澳新军团战败后获得了特别许可,他的画作描绘了战争场景和肖像,从表现澳新军团战败后对该地区的看法来看,这幅画很有趣。兰伯特的画作反映了澳新军团占领对他的国家造成的严重后果。这三位描绘加里波利半岛恰纳卡莱战役的澳新军团画家都表现出对这场冲突的不同态度。