Deception by Design

"The untold story of the art of deception in war."

Artists and the military might seem strange bedfellows, but painters, sculptors, photographers and set designers have played a critical but little-known role in modern warfare. Despite resistance and often ridicule, artists were recruited in both the first and second world wars to devise ways to protect troops and deceive the enemy by using their artistic skills and intimate knowledge of perspective, illusion, shadow and movement. Inspired by nature and influenced by the modernist art movements of their day, camoufleurs created bizarre decoys, dummy tanks and elaborate sets to conceal military installations. They painted thousands of ships in bold, arresting stripes and patterns to confuse enemy submarines. When war went hi-tech there was no room for artists, but over the past few decades artists have reclaimed camouflage for their work.

Loading countdown...
A Long Way from Nowhere

A Long Way from Nowhere

1970

Centinelas del Silencio

Centinelas del Silencio

1971

Adventures in Perception

Adventures in Perception

1971

The Numbers Start with the River

The Numbers Start with the River

1971

Somebody Waiting

Somebody Waiting

1972

Norman Rockwell's World... An American Dream

1972

This Tiny World

This Tiny World

1972

The Tide of Traffic

The Tide of Traffic

1972

The Bolero

The Bolero

1973

One Day Pina Asked...

One Day Pina Asked...

1989

Princeton: A Search for Answers

Princeton: A Search for Answers

1974

Four Stones for Kanemitsu

Four Stones for Kanemitsu

1973

Planet Ocean

Planet Ocean

1974

Don't

Don't

1975

City Out of Wilderness

City Out of Wilderness

1974

Exploratorium

Exploratorium

1974

Naked Yoga

Naked Yoga

1974

Conquest of Light

Conquest of Light

1975

The End of the Game

The End of the Game

1976

Whistling Smith

Whistling Smith

1975