Bruce Munro's Field of Light:Avenue of Honour,Albany.Credit:Mark Pickthall
In the strikingly contemporary National Anzac Centre in the Western Australian town of Albany,the names of the 41,265 Australians and New Zealanders who left on the first and second convoys to the First World War are recorded on a slowly revolving digital scroll submerged in water.
The poignancy of the names is heightened by the view. Sitting atop Mount Clarence,the centre's glass walls frame a vast cobalt blue sky and,below it,in a slightly darker shade,beautiful King George Sound,from where,in 1914,more than 50 ships set sail for the battlefields of Europe,Northern Africa and Gallipoli.
The centre's black and white photographs,historical artefacts and interactive displays,enable visitors to mentally transpose onto this idyllic view a squadron of naval ships,their smoke stacks billowing in preparation for departure. For many of the Anzacs,Albany's King George Sound would be their last glimpse of home.
The art installation employs 16,000 shining glass spheres.Credit:Mark Pickthall
As history's darkest days are expertly evoked in this state-of-the-art centre,hope for the future is similarly awakened a short walk away. Marking the centenary of Armistice Day,Field of Light:Avenue of Honour,an art installation by UK artist Bruce Munro,extends 350 metres either side of the road leading up to Mount Clarence War Memorial,the site of Australia's first commemorative dawn service.
The 16,000 shining glass spheres that Munro brings to life against a silhouette of gum trees along the Avenue of Honour is coincidentally but fittingly close to the number of Anzacs who set out from King George Sound but never returned.
The ultra-low energy LED lights,sitting on knee-high acrylic stems and linked by a squiggly mess of 153,000 metres of optic fibre cables,bloom in the dark like thousands of static glow worms. As you walk along the avenue,clusters of lights change from luminescent green to soft white and gold,colours that represent New Zealand kowhai flowers and Australian wattle.
The ultra-low energy LED lights sit on knee-high acrylic stems and are linked by 153,000 metres of optic fibre cables.Credit:Mark Pickthall
An audio guide,streamed through my smartphone,describes Munro's artistic process and brings to life the Anzac stories. The narrator describes each globe of light as"a token of appreciation for those we lost,and a beacon of hope for a brighter,peaceful world reborn from the memories of past wars".