The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Forgotten life of artist, and very hidden hero

Master of disguise, even in one of his own oil paintings

- Joseph Gray’s Camouflage by Mary Horlock is published by Unbound

presence. There was a lot of his artwork in the house, but while she had his paintings she didn’t have him. That was something that had an effect for a lot of his life.

“I became aware that as she grew older, there was a lot about him that she didn’t know.

“They say that artists create their own opportunit­ies and I think that for a lot of the time he kept reinventin­g himself.”

Although there was sadness and separation, Maureen still had cherished early memories. She died only recently at the age of 97. And a couple of years earlier, as she worked on the book, Mary revisited Tayside along with her grandmothe­r.

“I took her to the Black Watch Museum in Perth and also to the Dundee Art Gallery which has his big First World War painting After Neuve Chapelle.

“It was amazing to be standing there with my grandmothe­r and hear her recall how she used to bring her friends there after school and tell them that it was her dad that painted it.

“She was 95 at the time and it was lovely to think of her there as a 10-year-old.”

Art has always run in Mary’s family, with her mum also an artist. With Joseph’s evocative paintings, often of Scottish scenes, on the walls of both her mum’s and gran’s houses, she’s sure that was part of the inspiratio­n that led her, too, to follow an artistic career.

She worked at the Tate Gallery and became fascinated with the contrast between the modern artworks there and what were seen as Joseph’s more unfashiona­ble, traditiona­l paintings.

She wanted to find out more about the man she had heard about but had never met.

“When I started this part of what I wanted to do was help my grandmothe­r understand him better. He’d gone off during the Blitz so she only knew bits of his life,” said Mary.

“I wasn’t setting out to portray him as a hero or show him as an undiscover­ed genius.

“But there are many remarkable people who served in the World Wars whom we don’t hear much about.

“I hope people learn more not just about Joe but also artists involved in this strange world of camouflage.

“He was more proud of his work with than anything else.

“I got hold of a lot of his personal letters and what shone through was despite everything he saw and lived through, he wasn’t scarred by it.

“There was a lot of sadness and he lost a lot of friends, but he always seemed to be incredibly upbeat. That was a lovely thing for me to take away.” The master of camouflage, Joseph Gray, even managed to hide himself in one of his first but most famous paintings.

Hooded and almost lost in the top right corner, he appears in “A Ration Party of the 4th Black Watch at the Battle of Neuve Chapelle, 1915”.

It shows the soldiers running for cover after delivering rations to their comrade. As author Mary Horlock describes them “ragged spectres...half sunk in mud, half lost in shadow.”

As Gray did throughout his career as a artist, he portrayed the men who had been at the scene, asking them to model for his paintings (or if they had been killed in combat, using photograph­s).

Since he was there, he included himself, although typically, almost completely concealed.

After realising his artistic skills, an awareness of colour, light and shade, made him an expert in camouflage. By 1936 he had completed a comprehens­ive report, Camouflage and Air Defence.

Such was his expertise, the War Office recruited him as a Major in the Royal Engineers and he was tasked with helping hide vital military targets.

Mary said: “He had seen large covers used on the battlefiel­ds and wanted to work out how to make them fit for big buildings and cities.

“He went round hardware stores trying all sorts of materials and hit on the idea of using steel wool.

“It could be stretched and painted and rolled out quickly to hide factories or gas works that the Luftwaffe would try to bomb.

“He even talked about giant covers that could be dropped from aircraft. While some of the ideas were very extreme, many were so practical.

“If something couldn’t be hidden completely, the thinking was to bamboozle the enemy as much as possible.”

 ??  ?? Joseph Gray, right, drafted innovative plans for camouflage, left, including fake trees and houses made of steel wool to conceal military secrets
Joseph Gray, right, drafted innovative plans for camouflage, left, including fake trees and houses made of steel wool to conceal military secrets
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Joseph Gray painted himself, almost hidden, in top right of famous painting
Joseph Gray painted himself, almost hidden, in top right of famous painting
 ??  ?? A modern day sniper in camo
A modern day sniper in camo
 ??  ??

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