Just an addendum really to Kristy's fine summary of the significance of this monument.
The artist responsible for the bronze and marble figures depicted in the monument was Rayner Hoff, a sculptor of dutch descent who is also responsible for a number of war memorials in other capital cities of Australia.
The bronze figures towards the front of the monument are wonderfully expressive and well modeled. They contrast very well with the marble depiction of the "spirit of duty", the bronze contributing to the earthiness of the figures in comparison to the more ethereal nature of the marble spirit.
Aesthetics aside however, the depiction is quite trite, the stereotypical farmer, student and girl laying down their lives to the mythical "spirit of duty." is nothing short of military propaganda, and the reverse side of the monument, the after effects of war, is disastrously underplayed, you would hardly notice it was there.
I find the simple, but much more powerful depiction of the fallen soldier on Alexandria Avenue, to be a much more fitting tribute to those who lost their lives in the war, and one without the mythical fervor of the National War Memorial. read more