Painting of a pink building labeled “Badhuis,” with uniformed women interacting with children outside on a quiet street.
    Learn About

    Women in the
    Second World War

    through the art of

    Molly Lamb Bobak

    Grades 9-12

    Women in the Second World War
    through the art of Molly Lamb Bobak

    Molly Lamb Bobak (1920–2014) was the first female war artist in Canada. Canadians played an important role in the Second World War, both on the home front and overseas, and people from all parts of Canada participated in and were affected by the war in countless ways. Lamb Bobak became a member of the Canadian Women’s Army Corps in the fall of 1942 and served there until 1946. Lamb Bobak documented her experiences in a journal: W110278: The Personal War Records of Private Lamb, M. Her sketches and paintings provide us with a detailed account of Canadian women’s involvement in the Second World War. This guide focuses on exploring Lamb Bobak’s work to develop students’ knowledge of an important Canadian artist and the role of Canadian women in the Second World War.

    Learning Activities
    • What was the Canadian Women’s Army Corps (CWAC)? A careful observation
    • Exploring women in propaganda posters of the Second World War
    • Black Canadian women in the Second World War
    • Correspondence exercise based on character studies of women
    Related Subjects
    • Dramatic Arts
    • English
    • History
    • Visual Arts

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