![Artwork depicting people and military outside of damaged building.](/sites/default/files/styles/callout_tile/public/images/editoral-stories/thumbnails/NMAH-2011-04153.jpg?h=9e3dbbfd&itok=4iZgY8QS)
Apr 06, 2017
Although the assignment of the eight AEF artists to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was purely a formality, they found the many and varied activities of this branch of the AEF interesting subject matter. The industrial scale of the military effort demanded an enormous technical and logistical presence. Tens of thousands of men served loading, unloading, stockpiling, moving, and maintaining the tons of war materiel sent to France in support of the combat troops.
Tressing Nets for Artillery Emplacements by Ernest Clifford Peixotto | Pen and ink wash, and charcoal on paper, 1918
Tressing Nets for Artillery Emplacements
Ernest Clifford Peixotto
Pen and ink wash, and charcoal on paper, 1918
The AEF WWI war art collection currently is held by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, Division of Armed Forces History, from which the artworks in this exhibition are on loan.
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