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During the First World War, two main streams of activity produced official art. The Imperial War Museum, established by Act of Parliament in 1917, was charged with collecting all kinds of material documenting the War, including art. Meanwhile a succession of government committees were also commissioning and purchasing art for propaganda, memorial and record purposes.At the end of the war, these collections were combined at the Imperial War Museum, and the records of all these activities were also brought together.
A more structured approach to official picture collecting was taken during the Second World War, when the Artists Advisory Committee, chaired by Sir Kenneth Clark, was established, soon after the outbreak. As in the previous war, the pictures collected were exhibited in London and in shows touring nationally and internationally. When the Committee was wound down, its duties transferred to the IWM, who administered the final phase of distributing the works to museums and galleries across the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth.
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The records are a unique source for many other subjects, including the involvement of women artists and women's experiences on the Home Front or in the services; official attitudes to art, which, in many cases, were much less conservative than might be supposed; the role of art in wartime, and public attitudes to it; and the history of the Imperial War Museum and its own collecting policies.