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You are here: Home / Artworks / Sailors at work / Near miss, HMAS Wagga [Milne Bay]

Near miss, HMAS Wagga [Milne Bay]

by Dennis Adams

Near miss, HMAS Wagga [Milne Bay] by Dennis Adams
Dimensions:
105 cm x 89 cm
Medium:
Oil on hardboard
Place made:
Sydney, Australia
Date:
1943
Setting:
WW II (1939-1945)
Courtesy Australian War Memorial

A tall column of water is seen on the right caused by the explosion of a bomb from a Japanese dive-bomber that has narrowly missed hitting HMAS Wagga, some of whose crew can be seen firing at the planes

  • About Dennis Adams

    Dennis Adams was born in Sydney but when his father, a marine engineer, retired from the sea the family moved to a sheep farm in Queensland. Stories of adventures at sea gave him a desire to experience life on the oceangoing sailing vessels. When the family visited Sydney Dennis was taken to see the magnificent windjammers enter the Heads – linking Australia with ‘the rest of the world’.

    Adams demonstrated that he was a gifted draftsman and when he finished school was accepted as a student at the Julian Ashton School of Art in Sydney. After completing his Art studies, the 20-year-old Adams lived in Sydney and worked as a commercial artist with artists such as William Dobell and Lloyd Rees.

    Adams had two desires. One was to continue his art studies at the Royal Academy of Art in London - the other was to sail on one of the windjammers that he had seen entering Sydney Harbour when he was a lad.

    By the 1930s many of the windjammers coming to Australia now only visited South Australian ports so in 1935 Adams moved to South Australia and signed on as an ‘able-bodied passenger’ on the Herzogin Cecilie.

    Adams, joined the port watch and lived and worked in the fo’c’s’le. He made a pictorial record of life on a windjammer. His quick oil sketches chronicled the crew as they set or reduced sail as well as completing important maintenance tasks on board.

    Adams arrived in Falmouth in 1935 with his oil sketches on sail canvas and headed for London to enrol at the Royal Academy of Arts.  He spent several years studying art at the Royal Arts School, with its emphasis on life drawing and figurative work.

    Iin 1939 Adams returned to Australia on Erikson’s Lawhill. Like when he was on Herzogin Cecilie he made many quick oil sketches of the crew at work on the ship.

    On his return to Australia Adams enlisted as a solider in the 18th Battalion and was later seconded to the Department of Home Security for camouflage work.  In 1942 he was appointed an official war artist to represent the activities of the Australian and US Navies and the merchant marine in the South Pacific.

    After WWII Adams established a career as an artist specialising mainly in maritime and war art. Adams also taught art at the East Sydney Technical College. He completed numerous public works of sculptural art, many in bronze.

    In 1989, Dennis Adams was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for his contributions to the arts.

    More paintings by Dennis Adams
  • About Sailors at workHMAS Wagga (I)

    HMAS Wagga was one of sixty Bathurst Class, Australian Minesweepers (commonly known as corvettes) built during World War 2 in Australian shipyards.

More reading

  • Additional resources for Dennis Adams
    • Dennis Adams, collections.sea.museum
    • Survivors, Australian War Memorial (awm.gov.au)
    • History - Australian Society of Marine Artists (marineartistsaustralia.com.au)
  • Additional resources for Sailors at workHMAS Wagga (I)
    • The RAN - A Brief History, Sea Power Centre Australia
    • HMAS Wagga, The Sea Power Centre (navy.gov.au)
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