Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem to lie uneasily between photojournalism, propaganda and record keeping. It is argued here that the photographer’s artistic aspirations, and his love of a good story, coloured his response to the brief from Wellington House to record the war effort on the home front. This is photography as pictorial history, but it is also photography as theatre. What we see are stages in a process of bodily and psychological transformation: the preparations of the new recruit and the meticulous ‘repair’ of ‘war’s ravages’. Nicholls relies upon the serial quality of his photographs to develop a narrative of the body, first the making of the civilian soldier, th...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Social historians increasingly adopt a new perspective by concentrating on behavioural clusters, and...
Aftermath I (2014) 9 x 150mm x 150mm Photographic Emulsion Lifts “The wounds are horrible, and I...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
This paper seeks to provide insight into contemporary creative practice-based research, exploring th...
Summary. Among the most disturbing images from the Great War are the close-up photographs of wounded...
Between 1914 and 1918, military, press and amateur photographers produced thousands of pictures. Eit...
World War I was one of the first wars to be extensively photographed. What was done with these photo...
World War I was one of the first wars to be extensively photographed. What was done with these photo...
Soldiers of the First World War viewed their experience not only through the lens that surrounds a c...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Social historians increasingly adopt a new perspective by concentrating on behavioural clusters, and...
Aftermath I (2014) 9 x 150mm x 150mm Photographic Emulsion Lifts “The wounds are horrible, and I...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
Horace Nicholls’ photographs of wartime army recruitment, and post-war facial reconstruction, seem t...
This paper seeks to provide insight into contemporary creative practice-based research, exploring th...
Summary. Among the most disturbing images from the Great War are the close-up photographs of wounded...
Between 1914 and 1918, military, press and amateur photographers produced thousands of pictures. Eit...
World War I was one of the first wars to be extensively photographed. What was done with these photo...
World War I was one of the first wars to be extensively photographed. What was done with these photo...
Soldiers of the First World War viewed their experience not only through the lens that surrounds a c...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Social historians increasingly adopt a new perspective by concentrating on behavioural clusters, and...
Aftermath I (2014) 9 x 150mm x 150mm Photographic Emulsion Lifts “The wounds are horrible, and I...