Currie and Tweedy RememberedSecond Battle of Ypres—around April 22, 1915, John Currie, Windsor, NS (left) and Osborne Tweedy, Kinlough, ON (right), prepared dinner on the front line near St Julien, Belgium. On April 23, the 15th Battalion's position was engulfed in chlorine gas, and the unit was effectively decimated. Currie was hit in the stomach by a large piece of shell and died instantly; the same shell knocked Wilfred Bickle, Toronto, ON (shadow) out. The following day, April 25, Tweedy was killed after having pulled a wounded Bickle into the trench.
GT’s View of Saint Stephen
Portrait at Noon
To Speak Rarely is Natural
A Reflective Gaze
Afternoon at Coach House Antiques
Waiting for Doors to Open
Portrait of the Artist's Mother, 1985