ARTICLE WRITTEN BY COMBAT ARTIST JIM POLLOCK
COMPLETE ARTICLE AS PUBLISHED-ONE DAY IN VIETNAM
US Army Combat Art Team IV
15 August-15 October, 1967, Vietnam
16 October-31 December 1967, Hawaii
Team IV members:
Sp/4 James Pollock from South Dakota
Sp/4 Samuel Alexander from Mississippi
Sp/5 Burdell Moody from Arizona
Sgt. Ronald Wilson from Utah
James Pollock's home state was and still is South Dakota. At the time of
his selection to US Army Combat Artist Team IV he was serving as a Sp/4
postal clerk with First Base Post Office, 8th US Army, and was stationed
at Camp Ames near Taejon, South Korea. All artwork completed as a soldier
artist are in the Military History War Art Collection in Washington D.C.
The following was written by US Army Vietnam Combat Artist Team IV member
James Pollock and published in SOUTH DAKOTA HERITAGE magazine Vol. 17 No.
2 June, 1991 pp. 2-9.
____________________
AN ARTIST
IN VIETNAM
(c) Copyright 1989 Jim Pollock All Rights Reserved
Reproduced Drawings
Currently in the U. S. Army
War Art Collection
Washington, D.C.
ARTISTS AND WAR, it is a paradox, but we were there.
Flack jackets, pistols, iodine pills, insect lotion, sketch pads wrapped
in plastic bags, open travel orders, $65 per month extra combat pay. . .
All that stuff.
All together 30 of us.
Officially we were attached to the Office, Chief of Military History, Headquarters
Company USARV, Special Troops.
Department Of The Army Circular No. 28-30 dated 20 July 1967, if there are
still any around, gives all the details of the program.
The U. S. Army Combat Art program, as it was called, consisted of six teams
of artists, each team comprised of 5 TDY (Temporary Duty) soldier artists.
Combat Art Teams rotated, two months in Vietnam gathering material, seventy
five days in Hawaii doing finished work. No two teams were in Vietnam at
the same time.
The schedules for Teams IV, Team V and Team VI were:
Team IV- 15 August-15 October, 1967, Vietnam; 16 October- 31 December 1967,
Hawaii.
Team V- 1 November- 30 December, 1967, Vietnam; 31 December, 1967- 15 March
1968, Hawaii.
Team VI- 1 February- 30 March, 1968, Vietnam; 31 March- 15 June, 1968, Hawaii.
Resumes and samples of art were submitted into army- wide competition. Final
selection of artist team members was made by a committee.
I was chosen and assigned to Team IV along with Sp/4 Daniel Lopez from California,
Sp/4 Samuel Alexander from Mississippi, Sp/5 Burdell Moody from Arizona
and Sgt. Ronald Wilson from Utah.
Our job, according to circular 28-30, was '"' to record military operations
and mission functions in Vietnam. . . as a permanent contribution to American
military history'"'.
At one time I estimated that we had visited 52 units and traveled 3600 miles.
Regardless of the exact numbers, we saw a lot of units and a lot of country.
We were different than artists that had sketched and artistically depicted
other wars.
In other wars and in other branches of the services, most artists were chosen
from established civilian professionals. Artists of commercial renown, who
were well known and respected in their field.
We were not well known, except to our family and friends. We were young
soldiers, drafted or enlisted, who had no thoughts upon entering the service
of using our art talents to record history.
Using active duty regular soldier artists was a bold and innovative program
for the Army.The results were just as bold.
If you have had a chance to view one of these army Vietnam traveling art
exhibits, chances are that slick and commercial rendering is not what catches
your eye. It is the directness of spirit.
Many of the soldier artists had not developed a mature professional style.
Even so, you can feel that every mark on paper or canvas meant something,
every mark came from their hearts.
This soldier art, every sketch, every painting, became the property of the
U. S. Army and is currently in the Army's permanent War Art Collection in
Washington, D.C.
On a continuing basis the army has traveling exhibits of selected Vietnam
art. The Vietnam sketches in this article are the property of the U. S.
Army and in the Army's permanent War Art Collection.
VIETNAM, AUGUST 1967-
THE HEAT is not what caught my attention when I arrived in Vietnam. It was
hot all right, but having been stationed in Korea, I was somewhat accustomed
to humidity and heat.
It was the activity. I think that is what caught my attention first.
It seemed like everything was moving. In the air, helicopters were flying
in all directions. Planes were landing and taking off. On the ground, soldiers
were running around. Jeeps and other vehicles were moving in every direction,
like ants trying to find their way back to their hill.
There was an atmosphere or feeling of hyperactivity in Vietnam. I really
cannot explain this feeling, but it remained with me the whole time I was
there. Maybe it was because everything was so new and different, maybe it
was because I was excited. Maybe it was fear. Who knows.
All I know is that I didn't have to be there. I had actively competed with
other artists for this job. Some of my friends back in Korea thought I was
a little light in the head for wanting to go TDY to Vietnam, but this was
my choice. I was going to do my job to the best of my ability.
ONE DAY IN VIETNAM
5TH SEPTEMBER 1967-
EARLY IN THE morning we caught a flight on a C130 plane via Pleiku, An Khe
to Quinhon.
At the 45th Engineer Group (Construction) under the 18th Engineer Brigade
unit an officer introduced us to the local PIO (Public Information Office).
One of their staff was to go with us.
We checked out a 3/4 ton truck from the motor pool and started for a civic
action project located at a village called Go Boi, about 15 or 20 miles
from the main base at Quinhon.
Civic action programs basically were civilian aid programs directed toward
the Vietnamese civilian population. They were designed to win the hearts
of the Vietnamese through peaceful means. Go Boi was boasted as one of the
most successful of these civic action programs.
The day was hot and muggy, but at least the sun was shining and it was not
raining. Lopez, Moody and I rode in the rear of the 3/4 ton truck, Go Boi
our destination.
As we drove along, and the breeze hit our faces, it reminded me of riding
out to the hay field in the back of a pickup.
We took an artery road from the main road. It was more of a path than a
road.
In the rice paddies alongside the road we could see Vietnamese farmers busy
doing fieldwork. As we drove a few miles along this road, passing rice paddy
after rice paddy, we noted that we no longer saw farmers working in the
fields.
Baskets and primitive tools left unattended on the ridges between the rice
paddies led us to believe the farmers had left their fields in a hurry.
In Asia it was unusual to see personal property unattended.
The farther we drove on the road, the more it became apparent something
was wrong. The driver slowed down as we approached a small hamlet.
Suddenly, the driver stopped. Immediately we grabbed rifles and jumped out
of the back of the truck. Something was wrong. We were in the middle of
a village, fires used for cooking were burning, and not a soul in sight.
We split up. The PIO officer continued to drive slowly, one of us walked
in front of the truck and two of us walked the sides of the road.
In about ten minutes we saw someone coming across a rice paddy with a rifle.
It was an ARVN (Army Of The Republic Of Vietnam) troop. We also observed
fresh mortar holes in and around the rice paddies.
After language barrier difficulty, we managed to deduct that Viet Cong had
mortared the area approximately 45 minutes before we arrived and they were
believed to be still in the immediate vicinity.The mortar attack was why
the farmers and villagers had left their fields and homes.
This hamlet was fairly close to Go Boi, so we decided to continue on to
the civic action project with caution. The mortar attack had occurred at
least 45 minutes ago. Hit and run was a common tactic of the Viet Cong,
so we thought it was unlikely they would shell the area again right away
, especially with ARVN troops in the area. The attack was probably intended
to scare the locals, not to do them physical harm.
Upon arrival at Go Boi we were greeted by a crowd of giggly young girls
and curious old men. We observed no young or middle aged men in the village.We
were concerned about this, but not alarmed, they could have been out in
the fields working.
The PIO officer had a polaroid camera. He took a picture of an old woman
with grey hair and black teeth and gave it to her. Soon everyone in the
village crowded around the soldier to see the magic device that mirrored
the image that looked into it.
Old ladies began pulling on his sleeve, jabbering in Vietnamese. First pointing
to the camera, then to themselves.
'"'This camera will make more friends a hell of a lot easier and faster
than $10,000 worth of aid. Not only that, but the Viet Cong can't lay claim
to giving them what I do. Villagers say 'The American with the magic box,
my friend gave me this','"' remarked the PIO officer.
Lopez moved around the village taking pictures. I sat down and made a few
quick sketches not totally convinced it was worth the trip.
It wasn't long and I heard a woman scream and a lot of loud chattering.
Lopez, who had walked outside the village, called for us to come at once.
The road from the village ran parallel to a rice paddy which was approximately
12 feet lower than the road. A steep grassy incline stretched from the top
of the road into the rice paddy.
A crowd had gathered on the roadside as I ran toward Lopez. He was in the
ditch pushing on a cart.
At the bottom of the grassy incline was an old two wheeled cart partially
immersed in muddy rice paddy water. The cart was tilted back.A small horse
harnessed to the cart was laying on its side. Apparently, as the cart had
tilted back, the horse had somehow been thrown off its feet and pinned to
the ground.
The horse was thrashing about, squealing in furious fright to regain its
balance. A Vietnamese man stepped up and freed the horse from the cart.
Lopez was already at the back of the cart trying desperately to tilt the
cart forward to its proper balance position.
Lopez yelled, '"'Hurry, come over here.'"'
In a moment I saw why Lopez was so excited and desperate. An old Vietnamese
woman was pinned between the murky rice paddy water and the cart.
We all ran over to assist Lopez. Together we easily lifted the cart. The
woman scrambled free and stood up.She just stood their with a frightened
look on her face.
She was obviously terrified, but otherwise uninjured. Had the same thing
happened on hard ground she might have been seriously injured.
Only minutes after we returned to the village area we heard automatic weapon
fire. It sounded like it might be a half mile away.
Quinhon, where we had come from, was the nearest support unit. It was at
least 20 miles away.
I wasn't even real sure where we were in relation to where we had come from.
Three artists and one PIO officer in the boondocks. We were sitting ducks
and we had no business being there without support.
We had no radio, but we did have a large radio antennae on the truck. We
hoped the antennae would fool any enemy observers into believing we had
the capability to call in air strikes or other support. We didn't, of course.
We could still hear the clatter of automatic weapons in the distance. It
was not directed at us, but we decided it best to leave and without any
further discussion we jumped in the truck and headed back to Quinhon. I
never thought I would become a connoisseur of radio antennas, but I did.
This one was a nice one, real nice.
SAFELY BACK at Quinhon a decision needed to be made. We had to decide whether
to return to Long Bien (our headquarters) or stay over night in Quinhon
and return to Long Bien in the morning.
The consensus was that it would screw our schedules up if we didn't go back.
All of us had plans for visiting other units in the next day or two, so
we went to the airstrip to see if we could catch a ride to the Long Bien
area.
A Korean troop plane was going to Tonsonhut Airport in Saigon. Long Bien
was only a few miles out of Saigon. Our plan was to take this Korean troop
plane to Tonsonhut and take our chances at hitching another ride from Tonsonhut
to Long Bien.
When we arrived at Tonsonhut Airport we discovered the night curfew had
been put into effect. This meant that all non essential and regular traffic
was halted until morning. We were informed that special unscheduled flights
were still being made on a random basis, and we could sign up in hopes that
one of these flights was going to Long Bien.
We showed our travel orders and signed up on a waiting list. I suggested
that we go over to the EM(Enlisted Mens) Club and get something to eat while
we waited. It was close to the landing area and I was sure we could hear
any incoming air traffic from there.
Moody and Lopez said they didn't want to go. After confirming that my name
was on the waiting list I went over to the club by myself.
About 11 p.m. I went back to the helicopter pad waiting area. Moody and
Lopez were sitting on the floor. Still no flights to Long Bien.
I settled on the floor next to Moody and Lopez thinking we might spend the
night at this helicopter pad. I was tired and anxious to get back to the
barracks.
About 1 am the soldier at the desk says '"'hit the deck, the chopper
coming in has room for live bodies.'"'
I could hear the distinctive plop, plop, plop sound of a distant helicopter.
Dust flew up as it landed. I grabbed what gear I had, ran out to the pad
and jumped in one of the doors. Lopez and Moody did the same. A pilot, co-pilot
, a door gunner and a carrier were on board.
Immediately the engine revved up and the chopper started to lift off from
the pad. Picking us up seemed to be the only reason they had landed.
As I scrambled to situate myself in the center of the floor I realized why
the duty soldier had said '"'they have room for live bodies'"'.
Plastic sacks piled on top of each other were stretched across the floor,
sacks shaped and about the same size as sleeping bags. I don't know how
many bags were there, but there was a lot of them.
The smell inside the chopper was repulsive. The sacks contained KIAs (Killed
In Action).
Blood or some sort of liquid had spilled on the grated metal floor of the
helicopter. The carrier mumbled something about not being careful when loading
the body-bags. One bag had been punctured, leaking some of its liquid contents
onto the floor. A punctured bag also probably accounted for the strong odor.
Moving faster and faster the chopper lunged forward as it lifted from the
pad. The doors were wide open, the night air flowed freely through the helicopter,
and still the smell lingered.
We didn't bother to strap ourselves in, we just huddled together, back to
back, knees drawn to our chest, in the center of the floor. We were situated
so we could all see out the open doors of the huey helicopter.
I looked down and could see the organized lights of Tonsonhut runway and
the unorganized lights of Saigon. Far off in the distant horizon, continuous
flashes of light contrasted the black sky. Bright bursts of light from flares,
bombs, mortar and artillery.
The clatter of the rotor blades rang in my ears. The carrier didn't say
anything, neither did we.
I looked past my feet where the plastic bags held dead bodies. Yesterday
the occupants of these bags were vibrant, enthusiastic young soldiers.
It was hot, yet chills ran up and down my body.
Who were they?
I didn't ask who they were, or where or how they had been killed.
Not my relatives. In my family, I was the only one in the service, but they
were someone's relatives, someone's father, brother, son or cousin. Maybe
even someone's mother, sister or daughter.
Still, I cared. I knew in my heart they were my relatives, they were my
brothers and I cared.
Even before the chopper had settled firmly on the Long Bien landing pad,
I leaped out the open door to solid ground. I didn't want to stay in that
chopper any longer than I had to.
Leaving the landing pad Lopez, Moody and I went to a nearby medical dispensary
and called for MPs to come and take us to our barracks.
The dispensary stayed open all night. While we waited, the soldiers on duty
offered us coffee and chatted with us.
The ground between the dispensary and our barracks was not completely secured.
Only a couple of nights before, a jeep had been ambushed by Viet Cong supporters.
After emotions that were stirred up by my flight from Tonsonhut, this meant
nothing.
About 2:30 am the MPs delivered us safely at the door of our barracks.
I didn't even wash. I was tired and depressed. I knew I smelled, but I also
knew I smelled better than the KIA's in the body bags. I just wanted to
crawl in my bunk and go to sleep, it had been a very long day.
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