Making a New World consisted of commemorative exhibitions, installations and experiences at the Imperial War Museum, London. Climaxing on 2018’s Remembrance Day with a series of events to mark war’s end, it explored how WW1 shaped the society we live in today. The best poster was an Evening Standard billboard with the single word in red: Peace. But peace was only the start. The themes of the rooms were:
Renewal: Life after WW1,
Rebuilding Society,
Rebuilding the Individual and
Reshaping the World.
Renewal: Life after WW1 in Photographs, one part of Making a New World, was in just three rooms. It showed 130 black and photographs from the museum’s enormous archive, plus contemporary documents and the odd artefact thrown in eg a grotesque head from a cathedral in France, nicked by British soldiers as a souvenir.
Post-WW1 countries, cities and individuals had to regenerate and rebuild themselves on a huge scale as a new world emerged. Through a rich collection of photographs, visitors discovered the innovation and resourcefulness that shaped the rebuilding and regeneration of the world post-war, revealing resilience and creativity in times of great change.
Reconstructive Plastic Surgery, IWM
Highlighting the ways in which individual lives, landscapes and national identities recovered, evolved and even flourished in the aftermath of war, this extensive collection of photographs, documents and objects examined renewal and the complex process of reconstructing a home, town or continent. From images of refugees returning to ruined homes, through the reconstruction of Ypres, to battlefields depicting the destroyed villages and were never rebuilt, these rarely seen photographs from this little-explored time period revealed the extent of destruction and change in war-torn Europe and beyond.
Photographs told more than words: the Amiens couple with their little boy gazing at the devastation that was once their home; the exuberance of the swarm of soldiers piled up on a vehicle for the Armistice parade. Rebuilding was correct when it came to the devastation of the cathedral in Amiens, or the jolly cigarette shop that sprang up in the ruins of Ypres, but also model housing schemes built here. A sad note observed that residents often felt that their nice new dwellings had less community spirit than the old homes.
The photos charted the initial optimism that followed WW1, as well as the realities of displacement, demobilisation, social change and the fall of empires. Many individuals found themselves in new nations as borders were re-drawn and empires ended, but while the devastating effects of war were felt all over, developments in materials and new technologies also led to innovations. Reshaping the World had the ill-fated Treaty of Versailles with one photo of the sheer swarms of observers and press in the Hall of Mirrors.
Military equipment was repurposed for civilian use and advances in medicine and plastic surgery enabled the reconstruction of bodies. So Rebuilding the Individual was optimistic but painfully literal. There were pictures of legless soldiers being trained to use prosthetic limbs and a Captain Francis Derwent measuring a disfigured former soldier for facial reconstruction.
Of course photos couldn’t show the mental scars. But this Exhibition inspiringly revealed the strength, inventiveness and brilliance of people after a horrific war, during times of unrivalled social and political change. The prosthetic limbs, for which there was great demand, increased the will of the medical profession to help the young men who gave so much to their country.
Renewal: Life after WW1 in Photographs, one part of Making a New World, was in just three rooms. It showed 130 black and photographs from the museum’s enormous archive, plus contemporary documents and the odd artefact thrown in eg a grotesque head from a cathedral in France, nicked by British soldiers as a souvenir.
Post-WW1 countries, cities and individuals had to regenerate and rebuild themselves on a huge scale as a new world emerged. Through a rich collection of photographs, visitors discovered the innovation and resourcefulness that shaped the rebuilding and regeneration of the world post-war, revealing resilience and creativity in times of great change.
Highlighting the ways in which individual lives, landscapes and national identities recovered, evolved and even flourished in the aftermath of war, this extensive collection of photographs, documents and objects examined renewal and the complex process of reconstructing a home, town or continent. From images of refugees returning to ruined homes, through the reconstruction of Ypres, to battlefields depicting the destroyed villages and were never rebuilt, these rarely seen photographs from this little-explored time period revealed the extent of destruction and change in war-torn Europe and beyond.
Photographs told more than words: the Amiens couple with their little boy gazing at the devastation that was once their home; the exuberance of the swarm of soldiers piled up on a vehicle for the Armistice parade. Rebuilding was correct when it came to the devastation of the cathedral in Amiens, or the jolly cigarette shop that sprang up in the ruins of Ypres, but also model housing schemes built here. A sad note observed that residents often felt that their nice new dwellings had less community spirit than the old homes.
The photos charted the initial optimism that followed WW1, as well as the realities of displacement, demobilisation, social change and the fall of empires. Many individuals found themselves in new nations as borders were re-drawn and empires ended, but while the devastating effects of war were felt all over, developments in materials and new technologies also led to innovations. Reshaping the World had the ill-fated Treaty of Versailles with one photo of the sheer swarms of observers and press in the Hall of Mirrors.
Military equipment was repurposed for civilian use and advances in medicine and plastic surgery enabled the reconstruction of bodies. So Rebuilding the Individual was optimistic but painfully literal. There were pictures of legless soldiers being trained to use prosthetic limbs and a Captain Francis Derwent measuring a disfigured former soldier for facial reconstruction.
Of course photos couldn’t show the mental scars. But this Exhibition inspiringly revealed the strength, inventiveness and brilliance of people after a horrific war, during times of unrivalled social and political change. The prosthetic limbs, for which there was great demand, increased the will of the medical profession to help the young men who gave so much to their country.
A refugee family returning to Amiens, 17 September 1918, IWM
First World War Propaganda Poster, IWM
There were also fascinating photos of the conflicts that persisted or began after the war. Some derived from the Russian Revolution, between communist and anti-communist forces. Some were forgotten. One picture showed a British plane flying over the mountains of Iraq, and there was a finely structured photo of Ukrainian troops clambering up a hill in snow. Some soldiers were saved from unemployment by joining the permanent forces eg the optimistic poster called See the World and Get Paid For Doing It. More realistic photos showed soldiers in the Indian-Afghanistan mountains.
This exhibition, which ended in 2019, may have been small but it constantly promoted questions. In its documentation of the scale of the cost and consequences of the war, it showed WW1 to be as horrific as our grandparents said.
There were also fascinating photos of the conflicts that persisted or began after the war. Some derived from the Russian Revolution, between communist and anti-communist forces. Some were forgotten. One picture showed a British plane flying over the mountains of Iraq, and there was a finely structured photo of Ukrainian troops clambering up a hill in snow. Some soldiers were saved from unemployment by joining the permanent forces eg the optimistic poster called See the World and Get Paid For Doing It. More realistic photos showed soldiers in the Indian-Afghanistan mountains.
This exhibition, which ended in 2019, may have been small but it constantly promoted questions. In its documentation of the scale of the cost and consequences of the war, it showed WW1 to be as horrific as our grandparents said.
17 comments:
1918: The Decisive Year in Soldiers' Own Words and Photographs was written by Richard Van Emden and published in 2018. The book is made out of a collection of soldiers’ diaries and photographs, very different from the normal in that the pictures were taken illegally by the soldiers themselves. Press photographers were not included.
I had been fascinated with the advances made in medicine and plastic surgery that enabled the reconstruction of severely damaged soldiers bodies. As the Museum showed.
But I had been even more fascinated with the post called Repairing British and Australian soldiers after WW1. Australian and New Zealand doctors had been so important in this pioneering process.
https://melbourneblogger.blogspot.com/2013/11/repairing-british-and-australian.html
Amazon
many thanks. And perfect timing for publishing and releasing a book on 1918: The Decisive Year. I will see if the CAE has the book in the history library.
Dr Joe
Doctors and nurses who worked in army hospitals during WW1 were very keen to work as hard for the war effort as the ordinary soldiers in the trenches did. As the photos in the Museum exhibition showed, the armistice offered little consolation to those who were indelibly marked by war: missing legs, horribly scared faces and gassed lungs. Clearly the medicos and surgeons were inventive, brave and tireless.
Hi Hels - that would have been fascinating to see ... so much to cope with 100 years ago, yet so much change since ... yet how much is the same.
There's a new museum in St Bartholomew's Hospital - the hospital is nearly 900 years old, the museum tells the story of nine centuries of health care. I have to say I'd like to see it - if I ever get up to London again. Cheers Hilary
Hilary
You must see the new museum at St Bartholomew's Hospital, as soon as we are all confident about Covid being under control. I haven't been on ANY plane since mid 2019 and I am really keen to catch up on the collections opened or closed since then. For example I was very upset to have missed the 2021 exhibition at Sweden's Nationalmuseum, called "18th century: Sweden and Europe".
In the meantime, I wonder if the National Gallery of Victoria or Canberra would consider bringing the "Making a New World Exhibition" to Australia.
By the death and maiming toll, it really did deserve the title The Great War. We forget at our peril and the exhibition was a good reminder.
Andrew
Exactly. There had been horrible wars before 1914, but each one had _not_ covered most of the world and no wars in the past had been so industrialised in their massacres. In WW1 there were c20 million war deaths, 21 million seriously wounded, and 50 million soldiers and civilians died from the 1918 flu epidemic.
It was unthinkable that there would ever be a world war again, let alone 105,000 civilians massacred in 2 atomic bombs in Japan. If people had not remembered the tragedy between 1919 to 1939, I have no expectation that they will remember the WW1 tragedy into the future.
I love that you know far more about current exhibitions in London than I do. Another one for me to add to the list.
Fun
I am a member of our National Gallery Victoria, thankfully, and have kept up to date with exhibitions via our weekly newsletters and monthly magazines. It has been worth every penny!
Alas "Making a New World" Exhibition at the Imperial War Museum in London finished in 2019, before Covid even started. But you can still buy the catalogue or art books from the I.W.M bookshop.
Fun60
I also read The Art and Design section of The Guardian. It is excellent on Museums + Exhibitions
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/museums+artanddesign/exhibition
Oh Helen, how I long to the London Imperial War Museum again! It is double annoying that I can't at the moment as I try to see every photo exhibition I can find.
Thank you for letting me participate in this way!
Britta
thank goodness for Blogging, I say, absolutely. Noone can get to every exhibition that grabs their attention, for all sorts of valid reasons. But sharing in our blogs is second best. As long as the catalogue is then available by mail :)
Rahul
perfect connection. I hope you had some role in organising the Making a New World exhibition.. it was very well done.
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Rahul
thanks for reading the post. But no advertising please
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