MOORE, Alan
Service Numbers: | 418862, VX93880 |
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Enlisted: | 19 June 1942 |
Last Rank: | Lieutenant |
Last Unit: | Military Historical Section HQ |
Born: | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 1 August 1914 |
Home Town: | Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria |
Schooling: | National Gallery of Victoria Art School, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Occupation: | Artist, War Artist, Art Teacher |
Died: | Natural causes, Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, 24 September 2015, aged 101 years |
Cemetery: |
Amphitheatre Public Cemetery |
Memorials: |
World War 2 Service
19 Jun 1942: | Enlisted Royal Australian Air Force, Corporal, 418862 | |
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29 Nov 1943: | Discharged Royal Australian Air Force, Corporal, 418862 | |
2 Dec 1943: | Enlisted Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Lieutenant, VX93880 | |
2 Dec 1943: | Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Lieutenant, VX93880, Military Historical Section HQ | |
28 Nov 1946: | Discharged Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Lieutenant, VX93880 |
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Add my storyBiography contributed by Michael Silver
Alan Moore was born in Melbourne in 1914 and began life drawing art classes at age 16 but was forbidden by his father from continuing because the subjects were nude. He took up his studies again when he turned 18 at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School and later studied at Melbourne Technical College.
In 1939 he married Maria Robina Savieri in Sydney, a partnership that was to last 43 years until her death in 1982.
Following the outbreak of the Second World War, Alan Moore's aspirations to be an official war artist were not realised immediately. He enlisted in the RAAF in 1942 and was assigned the task of drawing diagrams of Allied planes. He also won the Grace Joel Scholarship that year, awarded for painting from the nude. In February 1943 the Australian War Memorial Art Committee considered Moore's official war artist application, and were impressed by recommendations from William Dargie and Harold B. Herbert. Moore was appointed in November 1943 and attached to the army, with the rank of lieutenant. His commission was to depict the activities of the RAAF working in New Guinea, the Middle East and Europe.
In December 1943 Moore undertook a jungle training course in Queensland, and then on New Year's Day he flew to Milne Bay. His drawings and watercolours at Milne Bay, and later of Goodenough Island, were destroyed by wet weather. While in New Guinea, he changed his practice to suit the tropical environment, working in oils rather than acrylics. In early March 1944 Moore was painting in the Admiralty Islands and witnessed the battle on Los Negros Island. He later voyaged to Port Moresby and completed some works there.
Alan Moore returned to Melbourne in April 1944 to complete several paintings. A few months later he set sail on a Merchant Navy ship bound for Cairo. He visited a number of places in the Mediterranean to depict RAAF activities, including Malta and Bari. For the next couple of months he travelled by truck to the northern Adriatic coast and was based at Fano, painting RAAF bases such as Falconara. He spent Christmas Day in 1944 in northern Italy.
In March 1945 Moore was sent to London. With the end of the war in Europe drawing close, he was to visit the AIF Transit Camp at Eastbourne, Sussex, to sketch the reception of the Australian prisoners of war. Moore suggested instead that he travel to Germany to sketch the prisoner of war camps and this proposal was approved. In April he began recording the release of Australian prisoners of war in places such as Celle, while Stella Bowen was given the assignment in Eastbourne, where she recorded the debriefing and medical examination of Australian prisoners of war.
While accompanying the British troops in their advance across occupied Europe, Moore witnessed the liberation of the Bergen-Belsen camp on 15 April 1945. He recorded his observations in paintings, drawings and photographs. These distressing works convey the wretched atmosphere of the camp, and they describe some of the hellish scenes that confronted the artist. As well as depicting the victims of the camp, he drew the camp officials such as the chief physician Dr Fritz Klein.
Moore then travelled to Belgium to document the RAAF ex-prisoners of war. Later in 1945, he spent time in France at Villers Bretonneux and in England at Eastbourne. At the end of his commission as an official artist, Moore presented over 140 works to the Memorial. The Memorial later commissioned Moore for several large paintings, including portraits of Generals MacArthur and Allen.
After the war Moore spent some years in Europe and painted images from his Belsen sketches and photographs. They were exhibited commercially, but failed to sell. The Australian War Memorial initially rejected the material because it did not depict Australian soldiers; however it accepted them in 1969 when they were donated by Moore. In 2013–14 the Belsen images formed the basis of a year-long exhibition at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, which Moore himself visited at the invitation of the Memorial.
Alan Moore and his wife, Maria returned to Melbourne in 1958 and he taught painting at the Swinburne Technical College from the early 1960s. During the 1970s the Australian War Memorial commissioned Moore to paint several large portraits, including one of Generals Douglas MacArthur and Arthur Samuel Allen.
Alan Moore continued to paint at his studio in Avoca, Victoria until he was 95, stopped by arthritis and failing vision.
VX93880 Lieutenant Alan Moore, war artist died on 24 September 2015 aged 101.
References: https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/P65112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Moore_(war_artist)