Pilot station, Colombo or Singhalese lookouts identifying ships approaching

Pitchforth began the Second World War painting scenes of bomb damage around London, first on short-term contracts, and, from 1940, as a salaried artist for the Wart Artists' Advisory Committee, before moving on to factory subjects or WAAFs themes. In the spring of 1943, he was assigned to the Admiralty, when his focus shifted to maritime warfare, recording a variey of vessels and subjects in London, Birmingham, Bristol, Manchester, the south coast of England, Scotland, Northern Ireland as well as sailing on convoys to Gibraltar and the Azores. He painted on board ships in the Western Approaches from Spring 1944, and in 1945 he was dispatched to the Far East to record the Allied campaigns in Burma and Ceylon.
Before and after the war, Pitchforth taught art, notably at St Martins School of Art, the Royal College of Art and Camberwell.

Object Details

ID: PAJ2949
Type: Drawing
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Pitchforth, Roland Vivian
Places: Colombo Harbour
Date made: 1945
People: Pitchforth, Roland Vivian
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London. Presented by the War Artists Advisory Committee 1947
Measurements: Frame: 860 mm x 1080 mm x 45 mm;Image: 550 x 788 mm