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The Last of the Few: John Hemingway by Alistair Morrison, digital photograph, inkjet-printed onto Hahnemuhle paper
Fine Art, 2023, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, X008-9477
Alistair Morrison photographed Group Captain John ‘Paddy’ Hemingway DFC AE (17 July 1919 - 17 March 2025) in 2023, at age 104, honouring him as the last surviving Battle of Britain pilot.
Damaged Propellers Arrive at a Maintenance Station by Roland Vivian Pitchforth, watercolour on paper
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1793
From the Air Ministry allocation of works from the War Artists' Advisory Committee, 1947. Original accession number: LD5014.
Fired Out Engines by Roland Vivian Pitchforth, watercolour on paper
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1794
From the Air Ministry allocation of works from the War Artists' Advisory Committee, 1947. Original accession number: LD1989.
Veteran Mechanic by Robert Austin, charcoal and pastel on paper
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1903
From the Air Ministry allocation of works from the War Artists' Advisory Committee, 1947. Original accession number: LD607. On loan from the RAF Air Historical Branch (MOD).
The Bastard Word Studies by Fiona Banner aka The Vanity Press, graphite on Fabriano paper
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, X008-7568
Fiona Banner's art explores the relationship between language and conflict. Her suite of drawings, The Bastard Word Studies, signifies how the failure of language fuels war.
Walrus Amphibian Aircraft by Raymond McGrath, watercolour on canvas board
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1785
An amphibious biplane, the Walrus was used for RAF air-sea rescue missions to patrol British waters, the Mediterranean and the Bay of Bengal, to recover crew from downed aircraft.
The Battle of Egypt: Advanced Dressing Station Interior by Anthony Gross, graphite and watercolour on paper
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1912
Anthony Gross made over 30 watercolours of the First Battle of El Alamein in July 1942 when, as an Official War Artist, he was commissioned to record the Middle East theatre of war.
Going to be Decorated: Bomber Command by Alfred Reginald Thomson, oil on canvas
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1885
In this work, Bomber Command airmen in a hut celebrate news of their awards for distinguished service. After an evening of drinking, they have left behind an empty decanter and glasses, and have playfully climbed to the rafters of the building.
A.C.1 J.D.S Gordonu, RAF Halton by Alfred Reginald Thomson, oil on canvas
Fine Art, 1943, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1678
600,000 African servicemen supported the Allies in the Second World War.
Pegu Airstrip: Afternoon Storm by Thomas Hennell, graphite and watercolour on paper
Fine Art, London, Art Gallery, Hangar Three, L001-1859
After Eric Ravilious’ death, Hennell, an esteemed watercolourist, replaced him in an Official War Artist's Admiralty assignment to Iceland. Then from May 1945 he undertook a six-month commission with the Air Ministry in India and Burma (now Myanmar), sending watercolours to London ‘via the hand of a squadron leader’.
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