Oil painting on canvas. Camouflaged Renault T17 with camouflaged ball crossing a trench in foreground. Camouflaged Renault T17 in left background. Grey smoke above in top left background.
Ink wash sketch on white paper, mounted on white card stock. This sketch is a portrait of an American soldier relaxing on a folding chair. He is looking a nondescript object that he is holding in his hand, (maybe a letter?). The soldier is wearing an American helmet and uniform.
Charcoal sketch on paper. Sketch depicts a group of trees on "Hill 204" that have been damaged from shelling durring the Battle of Château-Thierry in World War I. Part of a bunker is visible on the lower right corner of the sketch, where a round of ammunition and a part of a gun are located. There are larger hills in the background.
Charcoal sketch on white paper. German soldiers run towards unseen enemy. A demolished wagon and dead horse are seen in the foreground. German helmets, guns, and dead bodies are strewn about on the ground. Two trees and two tanks are seen in the background on the right side.
Ink wash on white paper. A group of American and French officers that are part of an ammunition train eat in a hilly field. The officers are sitting on crates, possibly filled with supplies. They're positioned directly in front of a big white tent. There is a large tree on the righthand side, and another tent visible in background on a hilltop.
Charcoal and watercolor sketch on white paper. Two American soldiers holding revolvers are standing at the entrance of a German trench. One of the soldiers has his revolver aimed at a German soldier standing in the doorway of the trench, whose hands are thrown up in surrender. There is another American soldier in the background.
Charcoal sketch on white paper. A tank, (possibly a Renault FT-17?), descending a hill. The tank has camouflage netting on the back. There are indistinguishable shadows in the background, which are most likely trees or buildings.
Charcoal sketch on paper. This somber scene of soldiers picking through the ruins of a village church was a familiar one to the American forces fighting in France during World War I. The artwork's title, Pathway to Peace, is an ironic nod to the devastation of the conflict.