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28 November 2025

Art was 'an instrument of war' used by the British during the 'Troubles' – new book reveals

In her book, The Deployment of Art: The Imperial War Museum’s Artistic Records Committee, Dr Clare Carolin argues that artwork commissioned during the conflict was a form of British propaganda.

Ken Howard, King Billy and the Brits (1978).  Watercolour and ink on paper 38 x 55 cm. © IWM ART MW (A49)
Ken Howard, King Billy and the Brits (1978). Watercolour and ink on paper 38 x 55 cm. © IWM ART MW (A49)

The book, published by Routledge, explores how the newly-formed Artistic Records Committee (ARC) of the Imperial War Museum (IWM) in the UK was established to commission artwork involving British Armed Forces deployed in the North of Ireland.

Dr Clare Carolin, Senior Lecturer in Art and Public Engagement from the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries at King’s, argues that this was a form of propaganda by the British government.

It was quite clear, by the British government’s own admission, that they needed to win hearts and minds on both sides of the Irish sea. The British Prime Minister at the time, Edward Heath, called his military and political aides to a secret meeting, reminding them ”we are in Northern Ireland fighting not only a military war, but a propaganda war”.

Dr Clare Carolin, Senior Lecturer in Art and Public Engagement

Bloody Sunday

On 30 January 1972, British armed forces shot 29 unarmed civilians participating in a protest in Derry, Northern Ireland campaigning for civil rights for Catholics, 14 were killed. The day became known as ‘Bloody Sunday’. A long-running inquiry found the British forces actions were "unjustified" and "unjustifiable" and the British Prime Minister at the time of the report findings, David Cameron, apologised.

Criminal proceedings against the alleged killers continued until October 2025 when in his judgement against one of them Judge Patrick Lynch told the Belfast court the former paratroopers had been "serially untruthful",  had intended to kill when they opened fire, and "had lost all sense of military discipline". 

Through investigation of artworks, archival research, and interviews with artists, former IWM staff, and a former British Army psychological operations expert, Dr Carolin argues that the ARC was implicated in the ‘propaganda war’ that the British Government waged to counteract negative public perceptions of British military presence and activity in the North of Ireland after ‘Bloody Sunday’.

In the immediate aftermath of Bloody Sunday, these images of bloodshed and community solidarity were transmitted around the world. Photographic reporting of these events was a public relations disaster for the British government who wanted their operation in the North to be seen as a friendly peacekeeping mission.

Dr Carole Carolin, writing in the RTÉ
Army Information Services Office, Belfast (1971) [Colin Wallace seated far right] Courtesy Colin Wallace .jpg
Army Information Services Office, Belfast (1971) Courtesy: Colin Wallace.

During the 1970s progressive artists were experimenting with film, performance and Conceptual art. By contrast the ARC’s army approved art consisted of traditional oil paintings and watercolour sketches. In an era when newspaper ‘colour supplements’ and television were for the first time readily accessible in most British and Irish households the conservative style of the ARC commissioned work meant it could easily be reproduced in print and on TV.

Photographic reporting of the Falklands/Malvinas war of 1982 were severely restricted due to the combined practical constraints of a combat fought some 8,000 miles from Britain and state censorship of media reporting. ARC commissioned art helped to convey to the public a softened picture the realities of brutal combat in the freezing South Atlantic.

Carolin says that understanding this history is equally relevant to the present day.

Today's world of social media and digital imaging technology is saturated with images of conflict the accuracy of which are constantly in dispute. Understanding the individuals who create images of war and the forces that drive them is key.

Dr Carole Carolin, writing in the RTÉ
Deployment of Art book cover by Clare Carolin
The Deployment of Art by Dr Clare Carolin.

You can read the full RTÉ article, authored by Dr Carolin on the RTÉ website.

The Deployment of Art: The Imperial War Museum’s Artistic Records Committee is available on the Routledge website.