Ellis Silas

Full name:
Ellis Luciano Silas
Born:

London, Middlesex
England
Died:

London, Middlesex
England
Arrival in Australia:
Occupation:
Education:
Home schooled by private tutors
Fate:

Discharged on 17 August 1916 owing to being permanently unfit for war service at home or abroad

Days in conflict:
672
Highest rank:
Private
Enlistment:
Decorations/ commendations:
Service:
Australian Imperial Force
Service Number:
634
Conflict:
World War I 1914-1918
Military event:
Gallipoli Campaign 1915
Unit:
16th Battalion AIF

Biography of Ellis Silas 1885 to 1972

Ellis Luciano Silas, artist, was born in London on 13 July 1885. His father was an artist and designer and his mother an opera singer. He was educated by private tutors before working in his father's studio, where he studied under the well-known artist Walter Sickert. Marine art became his main interest and he painted in English coastal towns.

In 1907, Ellis Silas sailed to Australia where he spent time painting in Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide before he settled in Perth.

Detail from a studio portrait of Ellis Silas, London, 1919. AWM P02801.001

On 16 October 1914, Silas that joined the AIF as a signaller with the 16th Battalion. He had served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNVR) for 3 years and had a strong sense of patriotism. But he was doubtful about his ability to be a successful soldier and would have preferred a position as a medical orderly. On 18 November, he embarked with the battalion on the Dimboola, for Melbourne. The ship stopped at Adelaide and the men were given 4 hours leave. It gave Silas just enough time to:

Dash off to the Art Gallery to see one of my favourite paintings, "Circe invidiosa" by Waterhouse—colour glorious and general treatment most decorative.

[Ellis Silas, The Diary of an Anzac, p.5, typescript, ML MSS.1840, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales]

The Dimboola went on to Melbourne, where the men disembarked and started training at Broadmeadows camp.

On 22 December 1914, Silas sailed with his battalion on the Ceramic for Egypt, where he trained at Heliopolis, near Cairo. He found army life distasteful, but persevered with signalling, and when possible, continued his sketching and painting.

At about 6:00pm on 25 April 1915, Silas went ashore at Gallipoli with the 16th Battalion. The battalion was sent immediately to Pope's Hill at the head of Monash Valley, where they spent the night digging in under intense rifle fire. Silas later recorded his first experiences in his painting, The End of the Great Day: The 16th Battalion, AIF digging the original trenches on Pope's Hill on the evening of the landing at Anzac, 25 April 1915—By an eyewitness (Signaller Ellis Silas, 16th Battalion AIF).

For the next 5 days, the 16th held Pope's Hill against the Turks. As Silas recorded in his drawings of that period:

The repetition of shrapnel in each sketch is not a fad of mine, but just the natural order of things: they became as much part of the landscape as the clouds.

['The Snipers', Ellis Silas, Crusading at Anzac AD 1915, London, 1916]

Constant exposure to heavy fire during his time at Gallipoli caused Silas to suffer from neurasthenia, otherwise known as shell-shock. On 17 May, he was put aboard the hospital ship Galeka and eventually admitted to No. 1 AGH (Australian General Hospital) in Egypt with neurasthenia and enteric fever. Silas was sent to convalesce in England and was discharged from the AIF as medically unfit on 17 August 1916. Silas' experience of Gallipoli, recorded in his diary and sketchbook, were published in 1916 as Crusading at Anzac AD 1915. In his foreword, he wrote:

In this work I have not touched upon the big historical facts, but have endeavoured to portray War as the soldier sees it, shorn of all its pomp and circumstance; the War that means cold and hunger, heat and thirst, the ravages of fever; the War that brings a hail of lead that tears the flesh and rends the limb, and makes of men, heroes.

[Ellis Silas, Crusading at Anzac AD 1915, foreword, London, 1916]

While waiting in London for a passage back to Australia, Silas painted works depicting war at Gallipoli. Three of these were bought for the Australian War Memorial collection, including his piece 'Roll Call'. Silas was one of very few artists who recorded in sketches and paintings his own first-hand experiences of the Australian participation at Gallipoli.

In 1921, Silas returned to Australia and lived in Sydney where he worked as a commercial artist and contributed cartoons and articles to the Bulletin. In 1922, he went to the Trobriand Islands, New Guinea, to paint, and in 1925 returned to England to work as a marine artist. His painting 'The Price of Glory', begun in Perth and depicting the First Dutch War, caused a minor sensation at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1934. It now hangs in the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England. Silas also designed posters, illustrated books and painted commissioned works to hang on ocean liners.

Silas married Ethel Florence Detheridge in London in 1927, and she survived him when he died in London on 2 May 1972.

Bibliography

  • Captain C Longmore, The Old Sixteenth: being a record of the 16th Battalion, AIF, during the Great War 1914-1918, Perth, 1929.
  • Julie Russell, 'Ellis Silas', Geoffrey Serle (ed), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 11, Melbourne, 1988, pp 451–453.
  • Ellis Silas, Crusading at Anzac, AD 1915, London, 1916.
  • 16th Battalion War Diary, Unit War Diaries 1914-18 War, item no 23/33/1-5, AWM 4.
  • Theo Barker, Signals: A History of the Royal Australian Corps of Signals 1788-1947, Canberra, 1987.
  • CEW Bean, The Story of Anzac: The Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-1918, Vol I, Brisbane, reprinted 1988.
  • Julie Russell, 'Ellis Silas', in G Serle (ed), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol 11, Melbourne, 1988, pp 451–453.
  • Ellis Silas, No 634, First World War Dossier, B2455/1, National Archives of Australia.
  • Ellis Silas, Crusading at Anzac, AD 1915, London, 1916.
  • Ellis Silas, The Diary of an Anzac, August 1914-May 1915, revised version, prepared 1916, ML MSS 1840, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.
  • 16th Battalion War Diary, Unit War Diaries 1914-18 War, item Nos 23/33/1-5, AWM4.

Last updated:

Cite this page

DVA (Department of Veterans' Affairs) ( ), Ellis Luciano Silas, DVA Anzac Portal, accessed 26 November 2024, https://anzacportal.dva.gov.au/stories/biographies/ellis-luciano-silas
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