TORONTO — Joanne Tod is sickened every time
she hears about the death of another Canadian soldier in
Afghanistan, even though she plans to paint the portrait of each
and every one.
It’s a work, she says, that will remain
unfinished until either the war is over or Canada pulls out its
troops.
The prominent contemporary artist has painted
every detail of what she says are 36 beautiful faces but she’s
yet to catch up to the total of 76 soldiers who have died since
the mission began in 2002, including two who died over this past
weekend.
"It’s a sad questioning of when does it end,"
Tod told Reuters, calling the piece a gesture of appreciation to
the soldiers, and an homage to an uncle – also an artist – who
was killed during World War Two.
The Toronto artist, who’s been painting
portraits for 30 years, was moved to begin painting the six- by
five-inch wood panels last September. She works chronologically
and began with four soldiers who were killed by friendly fire
during the Afghan mission.
Tod clips the soldiers’ photos out of
newspapers or searches the Canadian military’s web site. She
said she realizes how long the war has gone on because the
images begin as formal studio shots and are turning into updated
candids of soldiers, wearing their fatigues in the desert.
"These look like happy people," said Tod, who
also teaches at the University of Toronto. "They look well fed,
and fit and cute, with nice smooth skin, and I get a nice
contact with what I think their character might have been like."
Her plan is for the wood panels to be
interlocked, much like a mosaic or a quilt, with other panels
that make up a Canadian flag about 8 feet by 16 feet, she said.
So far, all the soldiers she’s painted have
been men – except for 26-year-old Nichola Goddard. Along with
the soldiers, she has also painted Canadian diplomat Glyn Berry,
who was killed in Afghanistan a year ago in a suicide bombing.
Tod says she has been approached by family
members, who support her work. However, she won’t sell the
portraits individually, but would like to see the entire series
exhibited as one piece.
She describes herself as anti-war and says
she wishes the soldiers were in a peacekeeping role, helping
rebuild Afghanistan, rather than on a combat mission.
"I feel very ambivalent about the whole thing ... when I see
these faces coming up, one after the other and I spend time with
each of them," she said. "It is a waste of strong, healthy
people. – Reuters