List of camoufleurs


A Camouflage Officer, or camoufleur, is a person who designed and implemented military camouflage in one of the world wars of the twentieth century. The term originally meant a person serving in a First World War French military camouflage unit. In the Second World War, the British camouflage officers of the Middle East Command Camouflage Directorate, led by Geoffrey Barkas in the Western Desert, called themselves camoufleurs, and edited a humorous newsletter called The Fortnightly Fluer. Such men were often professional artists. The term is used by extension for all First and Second World War camouflage specialists. Some of these pioneered camouflage techniques. This list is restricted to such notable pioneers of military camouflage.
's ink and watercolour sketch Le canon de 280 camouflé, c.1917, shows a Cubist artist's work for the French army in the First World War.
Surrealist artist Roland Penrose wrote that he and Julian Trevelyan were both "wondering how either of us could be of any use in an occupation so completely foreign to us both as fighting a war, we decided that perhaps our knowledge of painting should find some application in camouflage." Trevelyan later admitted that their early efforts were amateurish. Working in camouflage was not a guarantee of a safe passage through the war. Lucien-Victor Guirand de Scévola's Section de Camouflage, founded in September 1914 in the French army, developed many new techniques, some of them highly dangerous, such as putting up artificial, camouflaged trees at night to replace actual trees with cramped observation posts. The cubist painter André Mare was wounded while preparing one such observation tree. Fifteen of his camoufleur colleagues were killed during the First World War.
Some camoufleurs such as Solomon J. Solomon, aged 54 at the start of the First World War, believed that artistic skill was necessary for the design or construction of effective camouflage. He wrote that "the camoufleur is, of course, an artist, preferably one who paints or sculpts imaginative subjects... He must leave no clues for the detective on the other side in what he designs or executes, and he must above all things be resourceful. But his imagination and inventiveness should have free play".
Not all the camoufleurs were artists. John Graham Kerr and Hugh Cott were zoologists, though Cott was also a skilled illustrator. Both men believed passionately that effective disruptive camouflage was vital, especially in the face of aerial observation, but they had difficulty persuading authorities such as the British Air Ministry that their approach was the right one. At least one Royal Air Force officer felt that Cott's camouflage was highly effective, but, since it would demand the presence of a skilled artist for every installation, too costly to be practical.

First World War

NameDatesNationalityDescription
Lucien-Victor Guirand de Scévola1871–1950FrenchSymbolist pastel painter; leader of French Camouflage Department in First World War
Jean-Louis Forain1852–1931FrenchImpressionist painter, member of de Scévola's team
John Graham Kerr1869–1957ScottishEmbryologist, advocate of ship dazzle camouflage in First World War, influence on Hugh Cott
Paul Klee1879–1940German-SwissPainter using expressionism, cubism and surrealism. Camouflaged aircraft during the war.
Loyd A. Jones1884–1954AmericanLeader of scientific research section of U.S. Navy camouflage unit in First World War
Franz Marc1880–1916GermanExpressionist painter, printmaker; pioneered pointillist canvas tarpaulin camouflage
André Mare1885–1932FrenchCubist painter, camouflaging artillery guns and observation trees
Kimon Nicolaïdes1891–1938AmericanArt teacher, served in France with the American Camouflage Corp
Solomon Joseph Solomon1860–1927BritishAcademic painter, pioneer of camouflage netting
Abbott Handerson Thayer1849–1921AmericanPainter, discoverer of countershading
Leon Underwood1890–1975BritishAvant-garde sculptor, colleague of Solomon, made 'tree' observation posts
Edward Wadsworth1889–1949Britishvorticist painter, designer of dazzle camouflage for ships
Everett Warner1877–1963AmericanImpressionist painter, inventor of Warner System camouflage measure for ships
Norman Wilkinson1878–1971BritishMarine painter, pioneer of dazzle camouflage for the Royal Navy and the U.S. Navy

Second World War

NameDatesDescription
Tony Ayrton1909–43British painter, camouflage in Western Desert: Operation Bertram died 1943.
Geoffrey Barkas1896–1979British film maker, Director of Camouflage, Middle East Command
Hugh Casson1910–99British architect, worked on camouflage for Air Ministry 1939–1944
John Codner1913–2008British painter, camouflage in Western Desert
Edward Bainbridge Copnall1903–73British sculptor, born in Cape Town; camouflage in Western Desert 1942
Hugh Cott1900–87British zoologist, author of textbook Adaptive Coloration in Animals, government Advisory Committee on Camouflage 1939-40, advisor to British Army during Battle of Britain, Chief Instructor at Camouflage Training and Development Centre, Middle East at Helwan, Egypt
Frederick Gore1913–2009British fauvist painter, camouflage officer for southeast England preparing for D-Day landings
Stanley William Hayter1901–88British surrealist painter, printmaker; with Roland Penrose set up camouflage training unit
Ivan Konev1897–1973Russian general, responsible for maskirovka including army-scale camouflage and dummy units in the Battle of Kursk, achieving tactical surprise
Jasper Maskelyne1902–73British stage magician, camouflage in Western Desert 1942, exaggerating his role and effectiveness
Oliver Messel1904–78English stage designer, pioneer of pillbox camouflage
Colin Moss1914-2005British social realism artist, camouflage officer at Civil Defence Camouflage Establishment, Royal Leamington Spa, senior lecturer of figure drawing at the Ipswich Art School
Roland Penrose1900–84English surrealist artist; teacher of camouflage, author of Home Guard Manual of Camouflage
Peter Proud1913–89Scottish film art director, camouflage in Western Desert 1942 including Siege of Tobruk and dummy port at Ras el Hillal; invented "Net Gun Pit"; the second-in-command, to Barkas, in Middle East camouflage
Fred Pusey1909–83British film art director and production designer, camouflage in Western Desert 1942 including dummy railhead at Misheifa, dummy port at Ras el Hillal and Operation Crusader
Brian Robb1913–79English painter, illustrator, Punch cartoonist; camouflage in Western Desert, Operation Bertram 1942
Johann Georg Otto Schick1882-?German art professor, from 1935 director of the newly formed camouflage department where he designed a series of disruptive patterns for camouflage clothing including Platanenmuster and erbsenmuster for the Waffen-SS.
Peter Scott1909–89British ornithologist, conservationist and painter of wildfowl, and naval officer exploring ship camouflage
Edward Seago1910–74English post-impressionist painter, camouflage advisor to Field Marshal Auchinleck; invalided 1944
Alan Sorrell1904–74English neo-romanticist painter and illustrator; camouflaged Royal Air Force aerodromes
Basil Spence1907–76Scottish architect ; officer in British Army's Camouflage Training and Development Centre at Farnham
Steven Sykes1914–99British stained glass designer, ceramist and painter; first Grade 2 Camouflage Staff Officer in British army; created dummy railhead at Misheifa, Egypt in 1941, dummy port at Ras al Hilal, Cyrenaica in 1942.
Ernest Townsend1880–1944British portrait painter; camouflaged roofs of Rolls-Royce aircraft engine factories in Derby as houses
Julian Trevelyan1910–88British printmaker and teacher; pioneer of desert camouflage and deception

Post-war

NameDatesDescription
Timothy O'NeillAmerican designer of digital camouflage pattern MARPAT.