Although he volunteered to join the Army, he was assessed as unfit to fight. In 1917, his participation in the war was limited to a civilian job outside
Reading, processing tens of thousands of Canadian horses en route to France — and often to death. Later, he was assigned to one of the horse remount depots on the Western Front. Munnings's talent was employed as a
war artist to the
Canadian Cavalry Brigade, under the patronage of
Max Aitken, in the latter part of the war. During the war he painted many scenes, including in 1918 a portrait of General
Jack Seely mounted on his horse
Warrior (now in the collection of the
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa). Munnings worked on this canvas a few thousand yards from the German front lines. When General Seely's unit was forced into a hasty withdrawal, the artist discovered what it was like to come under shellfire. (before 1919),
Canadian War Museum In 1918 Munnings also painted ''Charge of Flowerdew's Squadron''. After what is known as "the last great cavalry charge" at the
Battle of Moreuil Wood,
Gordon Flowerdew was posthumously awarded the
Victoria Cross for leading
Lord Strathcona's Horse in a successful engagement with entrenched German forces. The
Canadian Forestry Corps invited Munnings to tour its work camps in France, and in 1918 he produced drawings, watercolors, and oil paintings, including
Draft Horses, Lumber Mill in the Forest of Dreux. This role of horses in the war was critical and under-reported; and in fact, horse
fodder was the single largest commodity shipped to the front by some countries. The Canadian War Records Exhibition at the Royal Academy after the Armistice of November 1918 included forty-five of Munnings's canvasses. After the war, Munnings began to establish himself as a sculptor, although he had no formal training in the discipline. His first public work was the
equestrian statue of Edward Horner in
Mells, Somerset, a collaboration with his friend
Sir Edwin Lutyens, who designed a plinth for the statue. This work led to a commission from the
Jockey Club for a sculpture of
Brown Jack.
Later career Munnings was elected president of the
Royal Academy of Arts in 1944. He was made a
Knight Bachelor in July of the same year, and was appointed a
Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order in the
1947 New Year Honours. His presidency is best known for the valedictory speech he gave in 1949, in which he attacked modernism. The broadcast was heard by millions of listeners to BBC radio. An evidently inebriated Munnings claimed that the work of
Cézanne,
Matisse, and
Picasso had corrupted art. He recalled that
Winston Churchill had once said to him, "Alfred, if you met Picasso coming down the street would you join with me in kicking his ... something something?" to which Munnings said he replied, "Yes Sir, I would". In 1950, Munnings, through a ruse, got hold of some of
Stanley Spencer's Scrapbook Drawings and initiated an unsuccessful police prosecution against him for obscenity. Sir Gerald Kelly, Munnings' successor as president of the Royal Academy, intervened with the police on Spencer's behalf. Munnings died at
Castle House,
Dedham, Essex, on 17 July 1959. His ashes were interred at
St Paul's Cathedral, with an epitaph by
John Masefield ('O friend, how very lovely are the things, The English things, you helped us to perceive'). After his death, his widow turned their house in Dedham into a museum of his work. The village pub in Mendham is named after him, as is a street there. Munnings was portrayed by
Dominic Cooper in the film
Summer in February, which was released in Britain in 2013. The film is adapted from a novel by
Jonathan Smith. ==At auction==