War - Home Activity Planner (Major) Task Example

1 What do you understand http://www.ww1propaganda.com/ww1- by the term PROPAGANDA? poster/ammunition-and-remember- Make a copy of a famous bonds-buy-bullets poster used for PROPAGANDA. Poster showing a soldier with a machine gun in the heat of battle, reaching out for ammunition.

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2 Make a COLLAGE of images of The Woolmore Street British Restaurant people doing everyday things during works on a self-service basis, with diners taking their plates to

WW1 of WW2 (or both!). What do the counter to be served. Here we see 77 year old T Hambly you think it would be like under war receiving his lunch from one of the 'dinner ladies conditions?

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3 Make a copy of your favourite painting by a WW1 artist. Paul Nash Paul Nash is a good example as are David Spring in the Trenches, Ridge Wood, 1917 (1918), collection Bomberg, Wyndham Lewis and of the , London Christopher R. W. Nevinson.

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4 Draw a 'mock-up' of what you might like your final COMPOSITION to look like…do you want it to look Examples of year 7 work flat (2D) or 3D?

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5 At the end of the First World War artists and sculptors increasingly turned their attention to public expressions of remembrance. In this painting which was one of three works painted to To the Unknown British mark the Peace Conference in Paris in 1919, Orpen Soldier in France deliberately focuses on the “forgotten” ordinary soldiers rather than the politicians he saw arguing over the peace terms. Draw/paint a picture to show REMEMBERANCE for the victims of war.

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6 This painting was one of the first Eric Kennington based on first-hand experience of the conflict seen by the British public. It received huge public The Kensingtons at acclaim and generated much sympathy for the British soldiers on the Western Front.