Man in the mud

Man in the mud
Artist Peter Corlett
Year 1989 (1989)
Medium Fibreglass with wood, fabric and metal objects
Location Australian War Memorial, Canberra
Coordinates 35°16′50″S 149°08′57″E / 35.2805°S 149.1491°E / -35.2805; 149.1491
Accession 1989
Website AWM collection record

Man in the mud is a diorama by Peter Corlett which forms part of the collection of the Australian War Memorial (AWM). It depicts an Australian soldier of World War I sitting on a muddy battlefield in France. The diorama was commissioned by the AWM in 1986, and was placed on display in 1989. Man in the mud is popular with visitors to the Memorial, and remained on display after the AWM's World War I galleries were closed for major renovations in 2013.

Design and construction

In 1986 the Australian War Memorial commissioned Corlett to produce a diorama which depicted the difficult conditions endured by the Australian soldiers who fought on the Western Front during World War I.[1][2] Corlett selected a pose for the subject of the diorama from that of a soldier in a photo in the AWM's collection which depicts a group of gassed Australians at a casualty clearing station in France during May 1918.[3][4]

The diorama was designed using a live model, who Corlett photographed replicating the pose in the AWM photo. Corlett subsequently slightly altered the pose, however, to increase the tension of the soldier's body.[3] The figure and the mud in which he is seated are crafted from fibreglass.[1][2] The soldier wears a fibre uniform and metal helmet, and the diorama's backing is a brown-toned photograph of a muddy battlefield.[2]

In his book Peter Corlett : sculptures, Patrick Hutchings provides the following description of Man in the mud:

The diorama consists of a very large, curved photomural of a desolate landscape of guns, broken equipment and mud. Mud is everywhere. The foreground is a muck heap of mud, a broken duckboard and polluted water, marvellously realised in fibreglass and (for the water) clear polyester resin mixes, tinted variously and swirled together. On a little hummock sits a soldier in deep despair, elbows on knees, his face in his hands. The figure is in entirely correct historical uniform and forms part of a very convincing diorama. It also alludes, in its body language, to the eschatological figure of Michelangelo's Last Judgement in the Sistine Chapel.[5]

Reception

Man in the mud was completed in 1989, and placed on display in the AWM's World War I galleries that year.[1] As of 2005, the diorama was located immediately after the exit of the Memorial's gallery on the Gallipoli Campaign, and was the first item visitors saw when they entered the Western Front galleries. This placement was intended to stress the more impersonal and brutal nature of the fighting in France compared to that in Gallipoli.[6] A 1988 Canberra Times article labelled the then-incomplete diorama "very fine".[7] Hutchings also judged the work to be a success.[8]

The diorama is one of the most popular items on display in the AWM,[6][9] and the Memorial's website labels it "much-loved".[10] Responding to the realistic appearance of the soldier and the muddy battlefield, many of the memorial's visitors touch the work.[1][6]

Man in the mud was removed from the AWM's World War I galleries when they were closed for a major redevelopment in April 2013. It was placed on display in the Memorial's temporary exhibition space.[1][2]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Man in the mud.
Citations
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Man in the mud diorama". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Man in the mud". Collection. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  3. 1 2 Hutchings (1992), p. 90
  4. "E04850". Collection. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  5. Hutchings (1992), p. 88
  6. 1 2 3 "Two-up take on the Somme of all battles". The Canberra Times. Factiva. 16 July 2005. p. 18.
  7. "ART An icon of compassion and courage". The Canberra Times. ACT: National Library of Australia. 13 June 1988. p. 14. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  8. Hutchings (1992), p. 91
  9. Holmes, Bruce. "Canberra: Saluting the Aussies in Anzac". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  10. "First World War galleries". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
Works consulted
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.