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Rorkes Drift 22nd January 1879 - Defending the Hospital by Jason Askew - Military Art

Rorkes Drift 22nd January 1879 - Defending the Hospital by Jason Askew


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Rorkes Drift 22nd January 1879 - Defending the Hospital by Jason Askew

By about 6pm the Zulu attacks had extended all around the front of the post, and fighting raged at hand-to-hand along the mealie-bag wall. Lieutenant Chard himself took up a position on the barricade, firing over the mealie-bags with a Martini-Henry, whilst Lieutenant Bromhead directed any spare men to plug the gaps in the line. The men in the yard and on the front wall were dangerously exposed to the fire of Zulu marksmen posted in the rocky terraces on Shiyane (Oskarsberg) hill behind the post. Several men were hit, including Acting Assistant Commissary Dalton, and Corporal Allen of the 14th. Surgeon Reynolds treated the wounded as best he could despite the fire. Once the veranda at the front of the hospital had been abandoned, the Zulus had mounted a determined attack on the building itself, setting fire to the thatched roof with spears tied with burning grass. The defenders were forced to evacuate the patients room by room, eventually passing them out through a small window into the open yard. Shortly after 6pm Chard decided that the Zulu pressure was too great, and ordered a withdrawal to a barricade of biscuit boxes which had been hastily erected across the yard, from the corner of the store-house to the front mealie-bag wall. In this small compound the garrison would fight for their lives throughout most of the coming night.
Item Code : JA0002Rorkes Drift 22nd January 1879 - Defending the Hospital by Jason Askew - This Edition
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Image size 25 inches x 16.5 inches (64cm x 42cm)none£20 Off!Now : £40.00

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Other editions of this item : Rorkes Drift 22nd January 1879 - Defending the Hospital by Jason Askew. JA0002
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PRINTSigned edition. Image size 25 inches x 16.5 inches (64cm x 42cm)Artist : Jason Askew£45 Off!Now : £40.00
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POSTCARDPostcard Postcard size 6 inches x 4 inches (15cm x 10cm)none£2.20VIEW EDITION...
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The print has slight damage to the border area, mostly on a corner. Not noticeable once framed.
Image size 25 inches x 16.5 inches (64cm x 42cm)Artist : Jason Askew£47 Off!Now : £38.00
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Image size 25 inches x 16.5 inches (64cm x 42cm)Artist : Jason AskewSOLD
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Artist Details : Jason Askew
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Jason Askew

Jason Askew was born in south africa, went to the Johannesburg school of art ballet,and music, and attended the City and Guilds of London Art College, Kennington. His interest in military history started as a teenager in the history of South Africa, The Zulu and South African wars, where he got his inspiration for his first major epic series of the Zulu war. Everyone doing national service had a choice of going to the army or the police. He was in the police - the police and army training being very similar. In South Africa, the police service was, and is still bearing the brunt of the civil unrest, and the crime wave (average of 19000 murders per year for the last ten years) It is through the experience of the police, and what he had to confront, that motivated him to paint these experiences, and it was very good for somoene with an interest in military history to see the effects of fighting first hand, particularly in the brutal, sometimes hand to hand killing that is the norm in South African situations. He was based at Hillbrow (the bronx of Joburg) and also served with the SAPS flyng squad. All the experiences that he had in the SAPS directly inform the paintings that Jason Askew does. : I never lose sight of the fact that real people are often caught in the middle of conflicts that are created by politicians/governments/reasons beyond the control of individuals, yet it is always individuals that suffer. Jason Askew is often commisisoned by many British and overseas regiments. 2RGR the gurkhas,The Queens Lancashire Regiment, the Coldstream Guards,the Staffordshire Regiment to name a few. He was also an official war artist for the Staffordshire Regiment in Iraq. Cranston Fine Arts are proud to be publishing a majority of art prints by Jason Askew since 2005 and are planning a major series of releases which they have commissioned over the next few months, including an outstanding series of eight First World war battlescenes of many of the major western front battles. This series started in 2007 and will be completed by the end of 2008. Also included is a series of four Battle of Waterloo and four Zulu War limited editions, all specially priced for collectors.


      
Jason Askew presenting a recent painting to the Gurkha Regiment.

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