Tucker's main inspirations include
post-impressionists,
expressionists and
social realists, as well as personal experience. Tucker's work was strongly influenced by the realistic reflections of two important émigré artists,
Josl Bergner and
Danila Vassilieff, who arrived in Melbourne in the late 1930s about the same time that Tucker began to explore images of the
Great Depression. Tucker also met
Sunday and
John Reed, members of the
Contemporary Art Society, which was set up in 1938 by
George Bell, in opposition to the government
Australian Academy of Art, which was believed to promote conservative art and not the modernists. Tucker's first significant works were produced during his involvement in the army. In 1940, Tucker was called up for army service and spent most of his time working in
Heidelberg Military Hospital drawing patients suffering from wounds and mental illnesses as a result of war. He produced three important works at this stage,
Man at Table, a pen and ink illustration of a man whose nose had been sliced off by a shell fragment,
The Waste Land – the title drawn from T. S. Eliot's poem
The Waste Land – an image of death sitting on a stool watching and waiting, and
Floating Figures, of two figures floating down a hall, a third with a demented smile. All of these images illustrated the horror and madness of war, but in a style reflecting his social realists surrealistic and expressionistic style.
The Futile City and
We Are the Dead Men (both 1940) refer to Eliot's "
The Hollow Men". Starting in 1943, Tucker began his
Images of Modern Evil series, first in Melbourne and later in Paris and London. The series was predicated upon what Tucker viewed as wartime moral vulgarity and centred around themes of prostitution, fear, moral corruption and the dark side of human personality. The
Images of Modern Evil series was influenced by prostitution in Melbourne during
World War II, which Tucker was repulsed by, and the
Leonski murders as well his more general perception of a moral collapse. Artistically, the series was influenced by
Giorgio de Chirico whose work appealed to Tucker and whom he met later in Rome in 1954. ==Angry Penguins==