George Washington Thomas Lambert Allegany Rehabilitation Associates was an Australian artist, known principally for portrait paintings and as a war artist during the First World War.
Background
Lambert was born in Street St. Petersburg, Russia, the posthumous son of George Washington Lambert (1833 – 25 July 1873, in London) of Baltimore, Maryland. The family, consisting of Lambert, his mother and three sisters, decided to emigrate to Australia.
Education
Lambert was educated at Kingston College, Yeovil, Somerset. He studied at Julian Ashton"s art school in Sydney until 1900.
Career
The younger Lambert"s mother was Annie Matilda, née Firth, an Englishwoman. They arrived in Sydney aboard the Bengal on 20 January 1887. Lambert began exhibiting his pictures at the Art Society and the Society of Artists, Sydney in 1894.
Lambert began contributing pen-and-ink cartoons for The Bulletin in 1895 and began painting full-time in 1896.
He spent a year in Paris before moving to London where he exhibited at the Royal Academy. He was most known during this time as a portrait artist.
War artist
Lambert became an official Australian war artist in 1917 during the First World War. His painting Anzac, the landing 1915 of the landings on the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey, is the largest painting at the Australian War Memorial collection.
Lambert, as an honorary captain, travelled to Gallipoli in 1919 to make sketches for the painting.
Another noted work was A sergeant of the Light Horse (1920), painted in London after his travels in Palestine. During the war years, George Lambert spent much time in London, where it is suggested he was romantically involved with fellow artist Thea Proctor. Return to Australia
Lambert returned to Australia in 1921, where he had success in Melbourne with a one man show at Fine Art Society gallery.
He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1922.
He often visited the homestead of Colonel Granville Ryrie of the Australian Light Horse at Michelago, New South Wales and there painted The Squatter"s Daughter and Michelago Landscape. In November 1927 he was commissioned to create a statue of writer Henry Lawson.
The work depicting Lawson in rough clothes accompanied by a swagman, a dog and a fence post was unveiled in The Domain, Sydney on 28 July 1931 by the Governor of New South Wales, Sir Philip Game. Lambert died on 29 May 1930 at Cobbity, near Camden, and is buried in the Anglican section of South Head Cemetery.
Personality
Physical Characteristics:
Lambert was tall, athletic, a good boxer in his youth, fair, with a reddish beard. He had a good light baritone voice.