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You are here: Home / Artworks / Collins Class Submarines / The Torpedo Room HMAS DECHAINEUX at HMAS STIRLING Tube No’s Go Port 6 4 2 Starboard 1 3 5

The Torpedo Room HMAS DECHAINEUX at HMAS STIRLING Tube No’s Go Port 6 4 2 Starboard 1 3 5

by Robert McRae

The Torpedo Room HMAS DECHAINEUX at HMAS STIRLING Tube No's Go Port 6 4 2 Starboard 1 3 5
Dimensions:
420 × 590 mm
Medium:
Pastel on paper
Date:
2015
Setting:
Peace time operations
  • About Robert McRae

    Bob was born in New South Wales and attended the Alexander Mackie College of Advanced Education and Sydney Teacher's College during the 1970s. Since the 1980s, he has worked as a teacher at several TAFE colleges in New South Wales, including Wollongong and Dapto.

    Bob has been painting ships since the 1990s.

    During a painting trip to Darwin in 1999 to sketch the Northern Territory wetlands Bob painted several vessels stationed at the naval port. These vessels were part of the multinational force preparing for operations in East Timor.

    He then moved on to become an official artist with the Royal Australian Navy during various offshore exercises. June 2005 Bob drew and photographed the commissioning of HMAS Armidale at Darwin Naval Base. In February 2006 he drew and photographed on board HMAS Townsville during Operation Ocean Protector off Jervis Bay, NSW.

    In 2008, Bob was appointed Official Artist for the RAN Naval History Unit in the Iraq War. His role was to draw, paint and photograph naval activities. Most of the time, he was working aboard HMAS Arunta during patrols near Iraq.

    Bob is an established and accomplished watercolour painter and printmaker who has exhibited extensively in New South Wales and the Northern Territory. Works by Bob are held in the collections of the University of Wollongong, BHP (Shipping), the Australian War Memorial and the National Maritime Museum in Sydney.

    More paintings by Robert McRae
  • About Collins Class Submarines

    The RAN operates six Collins Class submarines which entered service between July 1996 and July 1999. Based at Fleet Base West in Western Australia, they are a formidable element in Australia's defence capability.

    Collins Class submarines are tailored specifically for their defence and two-ocean surveillance role in the Royal Australian Navy. The Swedish signed submarines built in Australia are as quiet as advanced technology can achieve.

    Collins Class submarines move silently on electric power supplied by banks of new-technology batteries charged by three on-board diesel generator sets.

More reading

  • Additional resources for Robert McRae
    • Robert McRae, Australian National Maritime Museum (sea.museum)
    • Robert Torrens McRae, as an artist and Official Naval Artist with the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) 2005-2008, interviewed by Edith Swift. | Australian War Memorial (awm.gov.au)
    • Wollongong war artist reflects on documenting the Navy at work - ABC News
  • Additional resources for Collins Class Submarines
    • Collins Class Submarines Submarine Institute of Australia
    • HMAS Collins, Sea Power Centre - Australia
    • HMAS Dechaineux, Sea Power Centre - Australia
    • HMAS Farncomb, Sea Power Centre - Australia
    • HMAS Rankin, Sea Power Centre - Australia
    • HMAS Sheean, Sea Power Centre - Australia
    • HMAS Waller, Sea Power Centre - Australia
    • Australia’s Submarine History – AE1 & AE2 To Collins, Naval Historical Society of Australia
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Other works featuring Collins Class Submarines

Royal Australian Navy Submarine

by Barry Spicer

Taking the heads off the diesels: with elephant balls above

by Robert McRae

One light on in the torpedo room Collins Class submarine

by Robert McRae

Commander Doug Theobold in HMAS Rankin departing Geelong

by Robert McRae

The Collins Submarine

by Dacre Smyth

HMAS Dechaineux at Sterling [sic] with dolphins

by Robert McRae

Tying up at HMAS Stirling

Tying up at HMAS Stirling

by Robert McRae

Engineers cleaning the diesel area in tight spaces HMAS Rankin, by Robert McRae

Engineers cleaning the diesel area in tight spaces HMAS Rankin

by Robert McRae

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