Art helps former soldier overcome horrors of Yugoslav wars - Action News
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Art helps former soldier overcome horrors of Yugoslav wars

A Canadian veteran and local art student is holding an exhibition to share some of his painful memories of war in former Yugoslavia.

Robert Bradley's exhibition V is for Veteran showcases 'painful' realities of war

Veteran Robert Bradley's favourite oil painting is of a village wher all the buildings are damaged by shrapnel or bullets. It shows the level of destruction people had to live through during the wars in former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, Bradley said. (Robert Bradley)

In October 1998,RobertBradley held a dyingman in Bosnia with one hand and a radio in the other, begging amilitary operations centretoairlift him to a hospital.

No help came because the dying man was a civilian. With no other option,Bradley drove him to the nearest hospital, 40 minutes away, where he eventually died.

To cope with the painful remembrance almost 20 years later, the former soldierhas entombed the memory inside a sculpture, now one of 14 artworks on display at theFritziGallery in Ottawa.

"The top half ofthesculpture, that is me.I have no mouth, so I cannot speak, I'm holding a radio [in]my left hand and I'm holding my face on the right with my eyes closed,"he toldCBCRadio's All in a Day.

"The whole process has been very hard [and]emotional."

Painting away the pain

Bradley, 51, pursued art therapy after hewas diagnosed with post-traumatic stressdisorder in May 2012.After 28 years of military service, he's a now a student at the Ottawa School of Art.

It was a great distraction from my reality, when I paint and sculpt.- Robert Bradley, veteran

His exhibition, called V is for Veteran, showcaseshis experience as a soldier and the realities of warthroughsculptures, paintingsand prints.

"It was a great distraction from my reality, when I paint and sculpt," Bradley said. "I kind of focus on what I'm doing. I'm not stressed about anything else;I'm just in a really nice place and producing something that expresses what I feel."

Bradley pursued art therapy to cope with the painful memories of war. He is now an art student at the Ottawa School of Art. This painting is one of 14 artworks displayed at the Fritzi Gallery in Ottawa. (Robert Bradley)

Bradley was sent on several missions around the world, and his most painful memories are ofthe wars informerYugoslavia during the 1990s. Each of his sculptures at theFritziGallery provide a snapshot of that period in his life.

Next to many of the art pieces, Bradley, who grew up in Newfoundland, has included journal excerpts detailing the memories that inspired them. Many of the descriptions are of destruction and darkness.

Memories of war

Bradley's sculptures incorporate the realities of war in a physical sense, too. Severalencase pieces of jagged shrapnelhe collected on beaches in Germany where he was once based.

"I use real shrapnel to show the reality of warthrough its jaggedly sharp steel intended to violently tear its targets apart," he wrote next to one of his marble sculptures."From past to recent conflicts, it's the shrapnel projectile that has maintained its presence."

This sculpture is another one Bradley's artworks currently on display. (Robert Bradley)

Bradley said he wanted to do something different for the exhibition,rather than create "just anothersculptureof a soldier."

His favourite painting is of a villagedepicting a crisp blue sky and subtle odes to war broken lights and holes inside the walls of buildings and homes.

"It shows the level of destructionand what people had to live in in their daily lives," Bradley said.

"There was not a house that was not touched by shrapnel or bullets, and the beauty of the town was destroyed. Butthere is also a beauty and a rawness in what wasremaining as well."

V is for Veteranruns at the FritziGalleryuntil April 22.

Bradley's favourite sculpture is called 'Untitled.' Made using translucent white alabaster and shrapnel, the sculpture represents one of his most painful memories of trying to rescue a local citizen in Bosnia. (Robert Bradley )