Overseas exhibitions •
Britain at War was the committee's major overseas exhibition with oils and watercolours from over thirty artists. It opened at the
Museum of Modern Art, New York, in May 1941, with some 3,000 people attending on the opening day. The selection of works was aimed at undermining American neutrality. The exhibition went on to Baltimore before fourteen images, with Canadian themes, were added for showings in Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal. The exhibition was then split in two for display in Pittsburgh and London, Ontario before the entire catalogue was exhibited in San Francisco in 1942.
Britain at War then toured Central and South America in place of 111 WAAC paintings that had been lost when the ship taking them to Rio de Janeiro was sunk. •
India in Action, which toured Australia, New Zealand and the United States in 1944 and 1945, consisted of fifty-one drawings by
Anthony Gross, made in 1941-43 of Indian forces in the Far East. • An exhibition of over one hundred pictures was displayed in South Africa from 1944 to 1947.
UK exhibitions WAAC organised exhibitions around the United Kingdom on a large scale and to a regular schedule. • The
Museums Association organised an exhibition of WAAC items which visited 65 venues, mostly regional museums and well established galleries. • Four exhibitions of WAAC war art were toured by the British Institute of Adult Education to eighty smaller, more informal locations. • With the National Gallery's own collection evacuated from London, WAAC used space in the Trafalgar Square building to display works from its growing collection. From July 1940 onwards, new works were added at regular intervals and the exhibition remained open throughout the war, bar a short period in October 1940 due to damage from air raids. •
The War at Sea;- shown at the National Gallery in September 1944 consisted of 52 paintings by
Norman Wilkinson. Wilkinson was a World War I navy veteran and during World War II he travelled extensively on Royal Navy ships and was aboard on D-Day. WAAC bought one painting from Wilkinson and he donated the other fifty-one paintings to the committee. Throughout 1945 and 1946 the exhibition was shown in Australia and New Zealand. • 400 works from the collection were exhibited at the
Glasgow Art Gallery in the spring of 1945. • A final exhibition of the WAAC collection was held at
Burlington House between 13 October and 25 November 1945. The exhibition consisted of 1028 drawings, paintings and prints plus twenty-one sculptures, but attracted less than 20,000 paying visitors in total. ==Legacy==