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The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

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Cooper William Tview full entry
Reference: The botanical art of William T. Cooper / Wendy Cooper. [’William T. Cooper was one of the world's most esteemed bird painters. In his paintings, birds nibble at plump red berries, they rest on twisted vines and branches covered with lichen, and they clutch forest fruits and leaves in their claws. These botanical details, the backdrops to his bird portraits, are the subject of this lavishly illustrated book written by his botanist wife, Wendy Cooper. For the bird lover, Bill's lush, full-colour paintings, many from private collections, are reproduced here, alongside Wendy's notes and Bill's diary entries about bird feeding habits. Wendy describes seeing King Parrots in the wet sclerophyll forest and rainforest at their home in Bungwahl, New South Wales, feeding on the juicy black berries of the Narrow-leaved Palm Lily (Cordyline stricta). The parrots were extracting the seeds and dropping the flesh.’] Includes index.
Publishing details: NLA Publishing, [2021, vi, 317 pages : illustrations (colour and black & white)
Ref: 1000
Molnar Georgeview full entry
Reference: see illustration with notes in Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, p83
Publishing details: State Library of NSW, Winter 2021.
Badham Herbertview full entry
Reference: see illustration with notes in Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, p85
Publishing details: State Library of NSW, Winter 2021.
Ohlfsen Dora ANZAC medalview full entry
Reference: see Smalls Auction, Militaria, Carvings, Autographs, Jewelry, Coins & other Curios
October 3, 2021, lot 87, Australia 1914-18 Bronze ANZAC Medal In Eternal Remembrance.
This evocative medal by Dora Ohlfsen came with a small card (missing) which read "in aid of Australians & New Zealanders maimed in the War 1914-18"
Notes: The entry in 'Australian Commemorative Medals' by Les Carlisle reads " Dora Ohlfsen, the designer of this medal, was born in Ballarat, Victoria, and later went to live in Rome where she studied sculpture under Dantel, specialising in medallic art. She gained an important assignment top work on the War Memorial in Formia, Italy, after the 1014-18 conflict. Other medallic portraits by Ohflsen include Mussolini and d'Annunzio. On the obverse is a silhouette of van Anzac in likeness to Dora Ohlfsen's brother. The reverse portrays a beautiful girl, representing Australia bending to kiss her fallen son. The female model was a Miss Alix Simpson who was living in Rome at the time."
Fogwell Dianneview full entry
Reference: A Printmaker’s Cookbook: Images in Relief.
Publishing details: Australian Galleries? Hardcover, 192 pages, full colour
Ref: 1000
Robertson-Swann Ronview full entry
Reference: Ron Robertson-Swann OAM: Weighty Matters 1997-2019 Sculpture by the Sea. Foreword by David Handley AM
essay by Dr. Michael Hill.
Publishing details: Australian Galleries (?) 40 pages.
Ref: 1000
Syme Evelynview full entry
Reference: See Joels auctions press release 25.9.21: ‘THE VIBRANT, MODERN WORLD OF EVELINE SYME’, ‘“Eveline Syme studied Classics at University but became a champion of the modernist style in Australia in the 1920s and 1930s. A traveller to Europe for creative development including as a student of London’s Grosvenor School of Modern Art, upon return she would freely share her artistic learnings with fellow artists and the public in Australia. The two works being offered for sale through Leonard Joel were both created around 1936 and display Syme’s skills in capturing her environment in a modernist style. The Elvet Bridge, Durham is a delightful example of her appreciation of European architecture.  Sydney Tram Line celebrates the modern urban age; as cars and trams traverse Sydney’s Double Bay”
– John Keats, Art Researcher and Consultant .
‘Leonard Joel’s annual Women Artists Auction is one of our most anticipated events for collectors, showcasing an array of female artists who often did not receive the recognition they deserved during their lifetimes, or even today. Within this October’s curated selection, we are proud to present works by Eveline Syme. Syme is arguably one of the most talented and respected modernist artists from the period, becoming an advocate for the modernist movement in Australia and a voice to be heard for women artists.
Syme’s artistic career was forged by her close friendship with fellow artist, Ethel Spowers. The pair travelled abroad in the 1920s to London where they attended The Grosvenor School of Art under the teachings of Claude Flight, a popular destination for those interested in printmaking. It was during this time that the school nurtured several talented female artists – such as Dorrit Black, Sybil Andrews and Lill Tschudi – all adopting and practicing Flight’s approach of multi-layered linocuts, which captured the speed and energy of the modern world.
Following her time abroad, Syme’s work followed the modernist and vibrant conception of the Grosvenor School linocut. She often illustrated scenes from her international travels, as well as rural and industrial landscapes across Australia. Along with many other artists of the time, she was drawn to Australian landmarks that reflected the progress of the 20th Century.

Eveline Syme (1888-1961) The Elvet Bridge, Durham c.1936, wood-engraving ed. 8/50, 15 x 10cm | $1,500-2,000
Sydney Tram Line 1936, captures the winding streets of Sydney, demonstrating her adapted portrayal of movement. Using three bold colours and an over-laying technique, Syme created one of the most lyrical colour linocuts of the period. Curiously, in this edition of Sydney Tram Line 1936, Syme has signed, editioned and titled the sheet upon the verso instead of the front – perhaps she was experimenting with different perspectives for the image, or perhaps it is just the result of an artist working swiftly.
The Elvet Bridge, Durham, also featured in this collection, complements Eveline Syme’s body of work, with architecture as the focus. During the 1930s she produced numerous artistic examples of the industrialisation and urbanisation that was unfolding around her. These were key themes running through all Grosvenor artists’ works and central to the Claude Flight iconography.
It was artists like Eveline Syme who were influential in bringing the ideas and techniques of the colour linocut to Australia and contributing to the vital thread of modernism that is seen across institutions and collections today.
Leonard Joel would like to thank John Keats for his contribution to this article and for the cataloguing of these works. John Keats is currently writing the catalogue raisonnés for both Eveline Syme and Ethel Spowers. If you would like to find out more about these influential artists, the Canberra Museum and Gallery are exhibiting a rare insight into the collaboration between Syme and Spowers – Spowers & Syme, 13 August – 6 November 2021.
HANNAH RYAN / Art Specialist
September 2021’
Snow Peter 1927-2008view full entry
Reference: See Duke’s auction, UK, 08 Oct 2021, lot 245: PETER SNOW (1927-2008) A FOLIO OF SKETCHES including figural, landscape and cityscapes, to include a view of Sydney Harbour Bridge Provenance: The Studio of Peter Snow (1927-2008) Peter Frederick Briscoe Snow was an English painter, theatre designer and teacher. From the 1960s to the 1990s he was head of postgraduate theatre design at the Slade School of Fine Art
Marrington John 1920-1994view full entry
Reference: see BAMFORDS AUCTIONEERS & VALUERS, UK, 15 Oct 2021 , lot 963: John Marrington (Australian Artist, 1920-1994) Sunday Morning, Liverpool Street, Paddington, Sydney, Australia signed and dated 68, titled and inscribed to verso, oil on board, 48cm x 59.5cm
Adie Edith Helena 1865-1947view full entry
Reference: see Lawrences Auction, UK, 13.10.21, lot 653: EDITH HELENA ADIE (1865-1947)
THE SWAN RIVER, PERTH
Signed, watercolour
11 x 26cm.
Provenance: London, The Greatorex Galleries, `41 Watercolours around Perth and Western Australia`, October 1920, no.29; Burford, Wren Gallery, March 8th 1995
++ faded in sky; small spot of surface mildew (?) near left
Nankivell Edith view full entry
Reference: see David Killen Gallery auction 16.9.21, lot 150: Etching NY by Edith Nankivell, dated 1925, titled: Monroes Home
Etching (sight to mat): 4" x 5.25"
Frame: 8.5" x 10"
Edith Nankivell
(Source: artoftheprint.com) An American etcher and painter, Edith Nankivell received her primary education in the arts from her father, Frank Nankivell (Australia, 1869 - New York, 1959), who was an accomplished etcher, painter and illustrator. Known particularly for her fine architectural etchings, Edith Nankivell exhibited her art in New York, Philadelphia, Washington and Boston during the 1930s and 1940s.
ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN AND TASMANIAN ROCK CARVINGS view full entry
Reference: ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN AND TASMANIAN ROCK CARVINGS AND PAINTINGS WITH A PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATION OF ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN DECORATIVE ART.Originally published in 1937 and 1937 in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. "Davidson was the most important ethnographer of his time and his reputation for the quality and quantity of work produced is unmatched. In 1937 F.D. McCarthy described the 1936 volume as "the first monograph of aboriginal rock carvings and paintings". All subsequent students of Aboriginal Art owe a debt to Davidson's work. Not only do the volumes extensively cover the rock engravings and paintings but discuss in detail techniques and styles of decoration, on weapons, baskets and containers, pearl shells, baobab nuts, tree carvings, grave posts, bullroarers, churingas, waningas and many others objects. The symbolism and distribution of design elements and originating areas are also discussed. This is an essential volume for anyone with an interest, scientific, aesthetic, or commercial, in Aboriginal art and artifacts." (publisher's blurb)’
Publishing details: Perth: Hesperian Press, 2011.
Facsimile Edition.
25cm x 17cm. [viii], xi, 151, 6, xiii, 147 pages, black and white illustrations, colour plates. Illustrated glossy papered boards.
Ref: 1000
ABORIGINAL ARTview full entry
Reference: see ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN AND TASMANIAN ROCK CARVINGS AND PAINTINGS WITH A PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATION OF ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN DECORATIVE ART.Originally published in 1937 and 1937 in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. "Davidson was the most important ethnographer of his time and his reputation for the quality and quantity of work produced is unmatched. In 1937 F.D. McCarthy described the 1936 volume as "the first monograph of aboriginal rock carvings and paintings". All subsequent students of Aboriginal Art owe a debt to Davidson's work. Not only do the volumes extensively cover the rock engravings and paintings but discuss in detail techniques and styles of decoration, on weapons, baskets and containers, pearl shells, baobab nuts, tree carvings, grave posts, bullroarers, churingas, waningas and many others objects. The symbolism and distribution of design elements and originating areas are also discussed. This is an essential volume for anyone with an interest, scientific, aesthetic, or commercial, in Aboriginal art and artifacts." (publisher's blurb)’
Publishing details: Perth: Hesperian Press, 2011.
Facsimile Edition.
25cm x 17cm. [viii], xi, 151, 6, xiii, 147 pages, black and white illustrations, colour plates. Illustrated glossy papered boards.
rock carvingsview full entry
Reference: see ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN AND TASMANIAN ROCK CARVINGS AND PAINTINGS WITH A PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATION OF ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN DECORATIVE ART.Originally published in 1937 and 1937 in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. "Davidson was the most important ethnographer of his time and his reputation for the quality and quantity of work produced is unmatched. In 1937 F.D. McCarthy described the 1936 volume as "the first monograph of aboriginal rock carvings and paintings". All subsequent students of Aboriginal Art owe a debt to Davidson's work. Not only do the volumes extensively cover the rock engravings and paintings but discuss in detail techniques and styles of decoration, on weapons, baskets and containers, pearl shells, baobab nuts, tree carvings, grave posts, bullroarers, churingas, waningas and many others objects. The symbolism and distribution of design elements and originating areas are also discussed. This is an essential volume for anyone with an interest, scientific, aesthetic, or commercial, in Aboriginal art and artifacts." (publisher's blurb)’
Publishing details: Perth: Hesperian Press, 2011.
Facsimile Edition.
25cm x 17cm. [viii], xi, 151, 6, xiii, 147 pages, black and white illustrations, colour plates. Illustrated glossy papered boards.
Constable Alanview full entry
Reference: VIEWFINDER. Alan Constable.

Publishing details: Melbourne: Arts Project Australia, 2011.
First Edition.
26.5cm x 21cm. 48 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Armstrong Ianview full entry
Reference: see artists website:
Ian Armstrong began his career in 1940 as a student at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology studying art under Murray Griffin. In 1943 he started at the National Gallery School, Melbourne, under William Rowell.  Armstrong also took art lessons at the George Bell School and life drawing classes at Victorian Artists Society.
In 1946 he jointly purchased a block of land in Lilydale with fellow art students Fred Williams and Harry Rosengrave, where they built a shack as their headquarters to paint the Lilydale landscape en plein air until 1951.
Awarded the Retailers Traders Jubilee Travelling Scholarship of New South Wales in 1951, Armstrong travelled to Europe and studied at the Slade School of Fine Art, London.
Returning to Australia in 1953 he married Kathleen Parker in 1954.
Armstrong taught art at Collingwood and Sandringham Technical School until 1961, before being appointed Drawing Master at National Gallery School working with John Brack.
After leaving the National Gallery School in 1966 Armstrong worked full time on his art, holding over 60 solo exhibitions and is represented at the National Gallery of Australia and most state and regional galleries.
Ian Armstrong Art Trust
Ian Armstrong Art Trust was established after his death to conserve and catalogue his art work.
Photo credit: Audrey Shoobridge
Publishing details: http://ian-armstrong.com.au/about/
Kemp Rogerview full entry
Reference: Roger Kemp - A selection of etchings from The Estate. Online Exhibition. 25 works illustrated online.
‘Some excerpts from Hendrik Kolenberg’s introduction to the exhibition he presented of Roger Kemp: The Complete Etchings (84 in number) at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1991:

 Roger Kemp's etchings are quintessentially works of maturity.  They belong to the last important period of his development, produced (though not all printed and editioned) over a few short years, and therefore have a quality and unity which invites separate study and enjoyment.
Kemp’s etchings were also largely a product of one of the first contemporary printmaking workshops in Australia.  They would not have been made without the timely establishment of George Baldessin’s print workshop at his studio in Melbourne during the first half of the 1970s.
...
The two years Roger Kemp spent in London [1970-71] were crucial years for his work, which took on monumental proportions.  His largest painting ever, about 17.5 metres in length, was produced there… Prior to this, Kemp had begun to favour the more sympathetic surface of canvas and paper, rather than hardboard, and his drawings also reflected a similar note of renewal. 
...
…with Baldessin’s encouragement Kemp was soon etching larger and far more ambitious plates, and with a startling confidence and command over the technique which immediately established him as a major new force in printmaking.
...
Kemp inscribed each metal plate with considerable vigour, literally scoring his plate as an engraver might, with but casual reference to drawings.  Rather than just scratching through the bituminous ground to reveal the metal beneath for etching in an acid bath, Kemp reveled in the resistance of the soft metal, scoring deeply with sweeping rhythmical lines and points of focus.  He rapidly completed each plate and once a proof print was taken, rarely added or corrected.  He had an instant and instinctive rapport with the technique.’
Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 2021.
Stranger Artist Theview full entry
Reference: The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting, by Quentin Sprague.
[’At a hinge-point in his life, artist and ex-gallerist Tony Oliver travelled to the East Kimberley, where he plunged into the crosscurrents and eddies of the Aboriginal art world. He would stay for almost a decade, working alongside a group of senior Gija artists, including acclaimed figures Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms, to establish Jirrawun Arts, briefly one of the country's most successful and controversial Aboriginal painting collectives. The Stranger Artist follows Oliver's journey and the deep relationships he formed, an experience that forever altered his life's trajectory. His story will draw readers close to what he came to know of Kimberley life: the immersion of culture and spirituality in the everyday, the importance of Law, the deep and abiding connection to country, and the humour and tragedy that pervade the Aboriginal world. Evocative and absorbing in equal measure, The Stranger Artist tells not only of the connections that can be formed through the sharing of mutual interests and experiences, but of what it takes to live between cultures. Set in the striking landscape of the East Kimberley, The Stranger Artistis a true story of life, loss and friendship that cuts to the heart of one of Australia's most celebrated art movements. ‘]
Publishing details: Hardie Grant Books, 2020, pb, 275pp
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting, by Quentin Sprague.
[’At a hinge-point in his life, artist and ex-gallerist Tony Oliver travelled to the East Kimberley, where he plunged into the crosscurrents and eddies of the Aboriginal art world. He would stay for almost a decade, working alongside a group of senior Gija artists, including acclaimed figures Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms, to establish Jirrawun Arts, briefly one of the country's most successful and controversial Aboriginal painting collectives. The Stranger Artist follows Oliver's journey and the deep relationships he formed, an experience that forever altered his life's trajectory. His story will draw readers close to what he came to know of Kimberley life: the immersion of culture and spirituality in the everyday, the importance of Law, the deep and abiding connection to country, and the humour and tragedy that pervade the Aboriginal world. Evocative and absorbing in equal measure, The Stranger Artist tells not only of the connections that can be formed through the sharing of mutual interests and experiences, but of what it takes to live between cultures. Set in the striking landscape of the East Kimberley, The Stranger Artistis a true story of life, loss and friendship that cuts to the heart of one of Australia's most celebrated art movements. ‘]
Publishing details: Hardie Grant Books, 2020, pb, 275pp
Gija artistsview full entry
Reference: see The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting, by Quentin Sprague.
[’At a hinge-point in his life, artist and ex-gallerist Tony Oliver travelled to the East Kimberley, where he plunged into the crosscurrents and eddies of the Aboriginal art world. He would stay for almost a decade, working alongside a group of senior Gija artists, including acclaimed figures Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms, to establish Jirrawun Arts, briefly one of the country's most successful and controversial Aboriginal painting collectives. The Stranger Artist follows Oliver's journey and the deep relationships he formed, an experience that forever altered his life's trajectory. His story will draw readers close to what he came to know of Kimberley life: the immersion of culture and spirituality in the everyday, the importance of Law, the deep and abiding connection to country, and the humour and tragedy that pervade the Aboriginal world. Evocative and absorbing in equal measure, The Stranger Artist tells not only of the connections that can be formed through the sharing of mutual interests and experiences, but of what it takes to live between cultures. Set in the striking landscape of the East Kimberley, The Stranger Artistis a true story of life, loss and friendship that cuts to the heart of one of Australia's most celebrated art movements. ‘]
Publishing details: Hardie Grant Books, 2020, pb, 275pp
Bedford Paddy view full entry
Reference: see The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting, by Quentin Sprague.
[’At a hinge-point in his life, artist and ex-gallerist Tony Oliver travelled to the East Kimberley, where he plunged into the crosscurrents and eddies of the Aboriginal art world. He would stay for almost a decade, working alongside a group of senior Gija artists, including acclaimed figures Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms, to establish Jirrawun Arts, briefly one of the country's most successful and controversial Aboriginal painting collectives. The Stranger Artist follows Oliver's journey and the deep relationships he formed, an experience that forever altered his life's trajectory. His story will draw readers close to what he came to know of Kimberley life: the immersion of culture and spirituality in the everyday, the importance of Law, the deep and abiding connection to country, and the humour and tragedy that pervade the Aboriginal world. Evocative and absorbing in equal measure, The Stranger Artist tells not only of the connections that can be formed through the sharing of mutual interests and experiences, but of what it takes to live between cultures. Set in the striking landscape of the East Kimberley, The Stranger Artistis a true story of life, loss and friendship that cuts to the heart of one of Australia's most celebrated art movements. ‘]
Publishing details: Hardie Grant Books, 2020, pb, 275pp
Timms Freddie view full entry
Reference: see The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting, by Quentin Sprague.
[’At a hinge-point in his life, artist and ex-gallerist Tony Oliver travelled to the East Kimberley, where he plunged into the crosscurrents and eddies of the Aboriginal art world. He would stay for almost a decade, working alongside a group of senior Gija artists, including acclaimed figures Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms, to establish Jirrawun Arts, briefly one of the country's most successful and controversial Aboriginal painting collectives. The Stranger Artist follows Oliver's journey and the deep relationships he formed, an experience that forever altered his life's trajectory. His story will draw readers close to what he came to know of Kimberley life: the immersion of culture and spirituality in the everyday, the importance of Law, the deep and abiding connection to country, and the humour and tragedy that pervade the Aboriginal world. Evocative and absorbing in equal measure, The Stranger Artist tells not only of the connections that can be formed through the sharing of mutual interests and experiences, but of what it takes to live between cultures. Set in the striking landscape of the East Kimberley, The Stranger Artistis a true story of life, loss and friendship that cuts to the heart of one of Australia's most celebrated art movements. ‘]
Publishing details: Hardie Grant Books, 2020, pb, 275pp
Jirrawun Artsview full entry
Reference: see The Stranger Artist: Life at the edge of Kimberley painting, by Quentin Sprague.
[’At a hinge-point in his life, artist and ex-gallerist Tony Oliver travelled to the East Kimberley, where he plunged into the crosscurrents and eddies of the Aboriginal art world. He would stay for almost a decade, working alongside a group of senior Gija artists, including acclaimed figures Paddy Bedford and Freddie Timms, to establish Jirrawun Arts, briefly one of the country's most successful and controversial Aboriginal painting collectives. The Stranger Artist follows Oliver's journey and the deep relationships he formed, an experience that forever altered his life's trajectory. His story will draw readers close to what he came to know of Kimberley life: the immersion of culture and spirituality in the everyday, the importance of Law, the deep and abiding connection to country, and the humour and tragedy that pervade the Aboriginal world. Evocative and absorbing in equal measure, The Stranger Artist tells not only of the connections that can be formed through the sharing of mutual interests and experiences, but of what it takes to live between cultures. Set in the striking landscape of the East Kimberley, The Stranger Artistis a true story of life, loss and friendship that cuts to the heart of one of Australia's most celebrated art movements. ‘]
Publishing details: Hardie Grant Books, 2020, pb, 275pp
Ozeanien Australien view full entry
Reference: Ozeanien Australien - Museum für Völkerkunde Wien, 1967, Cat. Coll. Ozeanien Australien,
Publishing details: Museum für Völkerkunde Wien, Vienna 1967.,
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: see Ozeanien Australien - Museum für Völkerkunde Wien, 1967, Cat. Coll. Ozeanien Australien,
Publishing details: Museum für Völkerkunde Wien, Vienna 1967.,
Prenzel Robertview full entry
Reference: see Sworders, October 19, 2021, Stansted Mountfitchet, United Kingdom, lot 15: Robert Prenzel (German, 1866-1941), Robert Prenzel (German, 1866-1941), two wood carved reliefs, one depicting a laughing Aboriginal man, the other depicting an Aboriginal woman smoking a pipe, signed and dated 'R. Prenzel 1917' and 'R. Prenzel 1918' respectively, the laughing man incised to the verso 'Robt. Prenzel, Toorak Rd South Yarra, Sept 1917', the man 45 x 35cm the woman 40 x 36cm (2) Robert Prenzel (1866-1941) Robert Prenzel was born in 1866 in the Prussian town of Kittliztreben, in present-day Poland. After a four-year apprenticeship, further studies at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, and another four years of work experience around Europe, he emigrated to Australia at the age of 22. Trained in the classical European styles, he went on to define Australian craft and design throughout the first quarter of the 20th century. Basing himself in Melbourne from 1888, Prenzel’s work was pivotal to the movement and epoch of 'Marvellous Melbourne'. In the early 1900s, he predominantly produced commissioned works for churches and public spaces in Continental, rococo and baroque styles, before opening his own furniture workshop on Toorak Road in central Melbourne in 1910. From there, Prenzel came to pioneer the secessionist movement of Australian woodcarving, known as Gum Nut Art Nouveau. Using predominantly native timbers, Prenzel produced everything from pictorial wall plaques to longcase clocks. Developing a unique artistic style, his works combined the vogue of European Art Nouveau with carved motifs of Australian flora and fauna, the majority of which were based on paintings, descriptive texts and photographs by his contemporaries. Through the use of this two-dimensional imagery, Prenzel often allowed for individual interpretations and imaginations of his subject matter, introducing minor changes and alterations to each three-dimensional rendering, giving each its unique characteristics. Prenzel’s work was phenomenally well received by his contemporaries, both in Australia and abroad. Throughout his career, he championed Australian flora and fauna, founding a botanical garden in South Melbourne and serving as an advisor on the subject to the Commonwealth government. However, his endeavours were cut short by the anti-German sentiments of the post-World War I era, eventually forcing him into retirement during the mid-1920s. In spite of this, he continued carving and working from his home in Black Rock until his death in 1941. Lot 15 shows Prenzel’s most recognised designs from the peak of his career. ‘Woman with a Pipe’ and ‘The Laughing Man’, after the original photograph by Henry King, were among his most frequent and celebrated subject matter, both as small embellishments and as standalone portrait carvings. Having been dismounted from their original backboards, these works are indicative of the intricacy and skill of Prenzel’s carvings.
Carmichael Rachel view full entry
Reference: see Ripley Auctions, Indianapolis, IN, USA, 10.10.21. lot 190: Rachel Carmichael England / Australia (b. 1960) Flying, 2008 mixed media Born in the United Kingdom 1955, Carmichael has lived in Australia since 1960. She began her career as a teacher in special education after graduating with an Honours degree from Sydney University, and several post-graduate qualifications from Teachers College, Nepean Campus and the University of NSW. In the late 1980’s, she taught young intellectually disabled children, and later worked as an interpreter/ tutor for hearing impaired HSC and TAFE art students. After leaving teaching in 1988, Rachel began to develop her own painting skills. She is a self-taught artist, working in acrylic paint and mixed media on board. A number of unusual decorative surfaces are employed such as gold leaf, foil, glitter, sand and multiple layers of matt, satin and high gloss varnishes.The work is figurative and slightly stylized. Each work is a small vignette or tableaux. The paintings are small narratives engaging the viewer and prompting a response. Since 1990 Rachel has been fortunate enough to paint full time. She paints her home on the south coast of NSW, in an old coal miner’s village, between the rainforest escarpment and the sea. These surroundings have obviously proved to be an inspiration for settings of her paintings. 17 1/4" x 19 1/4" (image), 21 1/4" x 23 1/4" (frame)
Dillon Cyril 1883 - 1974view full entry
Reference: see Broward Auction Gallery, Dania Beach, FL, USA, Lot 0552, Cyril Dillon (Australian, 1883 - 1974)
NAME: Sail Ship Neotsfield
MEDIUM: oil on canvas. Canvas applied to board.
CONDITION: Some paint losses mostly along edges. No visible inpaint under UV light.
SIGHT SIZE: 26 x 35 inches / 66 x 88 cm
FRAME SIZE: unframed
SIGNATURE: lower right
CATEGORY: antique vintage painting
AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US
SKU#: 118740
US Shipping $120 + insurance.

BIOGRAPHY:
Born in Melbourne in 1883, Cyril Dillon was well known as an etcher. He made etchings of Coombe Cottage for Dame Nellie Melba and sets of etchings for Melbourne public schools, as well as painting watercolour and oil scenes. He was vice- president of the Australian Painters Etchers Society for 10 years. He died in 1974.

Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: Fairweather and China By Claire Roberts. [’An exquisitely illustrated appraisal of Australia's 'greatest artist' that explores his fascination with China and its centrality to his body of work Ian Fairweather is one of the most significant twentieth-century artists to have worked in Australia. After a life of wandering, including time spent in China, Bali and the Philippines, Fairweather settled on Bribie Island, off the coast of Queensland, where he built his own house. In 1962 a leading art critic named him 'our greatest painter'. Fairweather is exceptional among modern artists for his experience of Chinese life and culture. He lived and worked in China for extended periods, learnt Chinese and published a book-length translation of the popular Chinese novel The Drunken Buddha (1965). From an early age Fairweather sought alternatives to art based on verisimilitude and single-point perspective. This led to a lifelong engagement with the principles of Chinese art and thought that profoundly shaped his own creative process. Drawing on letters, interviews and other archival materials to shed new light on Fairweather's artistic practice, Claire Roberts brings her own extensive knowledge of Chinese language and art to this absorbing re-examination of a revered artist. Fairweather and China shows how central the China experience is to his emergence as a key transcultural figure, connecting British, European, Chinese and Australian art histories in new and visionary ways. ‘]
Publishing details: MUP, 2021, pb., 320pp. With Index.
A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen’s Landview full entry
Reference: A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen’s Land, written and illustrated by Simon Barnard. Includes bibliographical references and index. For secondary school age. Children's Book Council of Australia Awards, Eve Pownall Award for Information Books, winner, 2015. [’Seventy-three thousand convicts were transported to the British penal colony of Van Diemen's Land in the first half of the nineteenth century. They played a vital role in the building of the settlements, as well as the running of the newly established colony. Simon Barnard's A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen's Land is a rich and compelling account of the lives of the men, women and children who were transported to Tasmania for crimes ranging from stealing bread to poisoning family members. Their sentences, punishments, achievements and suffering make for fascinating reading. And the spectacular illustrations, each one carefully drawn in meticulous detail from contemporary records, bring this extraordinary history to life.’]
Publishing details: Text Publishing Company, 2014, 87 pages : colour illustrations, colour maps. Hardcover.Large format
convictsview full entry
Reference: A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen’s Land, written and illustrated by Simon Barnard. Includes bibliographical references and index. For secondary school age. Children's Book Council of Australia Awards, Eve Pownall Award for Information Books, winner, 2015. [’Seventy-three thousand convicts were transported to the British penal colony of Van Diemen's Land in the first half of the nineteenth century. They played a vital role in the building of the settlements, as well as the running of the newly established colony. Simon Barnard's A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen's Land is a rich and compelling account of the lives of the men, women and children who were transported to Tasmania for crimes ranging from stealing bread to poisoning family members. Their sentences, punishments, achievements and suffering make for fascinating reading. And the spectacular illustrations, each one carefully drawn in meticulous detail from contemporary records, bring this extraordinary history to life.’]
Publishing details: Text Publishing Company, 2014, 87 pages : colour illustrations, colour maps. Large format.
Souter D Hview full entry
Reference: Bush babs with pictures

Publishing details: Sydney : Endeavour Press, 1933. Octavo, pictorial glazed boards, pp. 63, illustrated,
Ref: 1000
Cohn Olaview full entry
Reference: The Fairies’ Tree. By Ola Cohn in collaboration with Norman Davies. Illustrations and decoration by Marjorie Wood. Music by Tom King, cover design by Marjorie Wood.
Publishing details: Geelong : H. Tatlock Miller, The Book Nook, 1932. Quarto, illustrated paper wrappers over card
Ref: 1000
Wood Marjorie view full entry
Reference: see The Fairies’ Tree. By Ola Cohn in collaboration with Norman Davies. Illustrations and decoration by Marjorie Wood. Music by Tom King, cover design by Marjorie Wood.
Publishing details: Geelong : H. Tatlock Miller, The Book Nook, 1932. Quarto, illustrated paper wrappers over card
Ashton Robertview full entry
Reference: Underground portraits : Les Halles, Paris, 2009, by Robert Ashton
Publishing details:
[Airey’s Inlet, VIC : the artist, 2021]. Custom made folding clamshell box, 375 x 340 mm, housing 12 original photogravures, measuring 193 x 193 mm (plate line), each signed and numbered by the artist, with a signed colophon sheet. ‘This folio of 12 photogravure prints is in a limited edition of 5
Ref: 1000
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: La Fille aux Yeux d’Or. By Honoré de Balzac. Translated by Ernest Dowson. With six illustrations engraved on wood by Charles Conder.
Publishing details: London : Leonard Smithers, 1896. Octavo, purple lettered yellow cloth title page in red and black, pp. vii; 107, six illustrations after Conder engravings
Ref: 1000
Myers Valiview full entry
Reference: Vali Myers : drawings 1949-1979., with an introduction by Ed van der Elsken and an introduction by George Plimpton
Publishing details: London: Open House, 1980. First edition. Folio (340 x 250 mm), publisher’s gilt-lettered red cloth over boards, in the original pictorial dust jacket, 127 pp, illustrated throughout in colour,
Ref: 1000
Bowen Deanview full entry
Reference: Nitty-Gritty : The Sculpture of Dean Bowen (deluxe edition with original bronze sculpture). By STEPHENS, Andrew; BOWEN, Dean.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2021. Quarto, boards in illustrated dustjacket, pp. 232, extensively illustrated, housed in a bronze coloured slipcase. The deluxe edition, limited to only 9 copies plus one artist’s proof, accompanied by a companion volume, being a matching clamshell box housing an original bronze sculpture by Dean Bowen
Ref: 1000
Traces - Australia-Korea view full entry
Reference: Traces : Australia-Korea – Korea-Australia : a book of paintings, prints and calligraphies. [’An extraordinary artistic collaboration between the Sydney-based and Korean artists. Sydney Ball is one of the masters of Australian abstraction, and Kyu-Il (whose work is represented in the Art Gallery of New South Wales) a significant Korean contemporary artist.’]

Publishing details: Townsville: Lyre Bird Press and Melbourne : Zimmer Editions, 2001. Quarto, blindstamped folding clamshell box containing three folios in gilt-lettered hand made paper wrappers; the first being an introduction to the project and the artists; the second containing two original signed paintings by Sydney Ball; the third containing two original signed woodcuts and a caligraphic piece by Kyu-Il, also contained within the box is an original marble seal-stone hand carved by Kyu-Il, signed and inscribed verso and set within a large steel mounting plate by master jeweller Robert Baines.  Published in an edition of only 20 copies signed by the artists.
Ref: 1000
Ball Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Traces : Australia-Korea – Korea-Australia : a book of paintings, prints and calligraphies. [’An extraordinary artistic collaboration between the Sydney-based and Korean artists. Sydney Ball is one of the masters of Australian abstraction, and Kyu-Il (whose work is represented in the Art Gallery of New South Wales) a significant Korean contemporary artist.’]

Publishing details: Townsville: Lyre Bird Press and Melbourne : Zimmer Editions, 2001. Quarto, blindstamped folding clamshell box containing three folios in gilt-lettered hand made paper wrappers; the first being an introduction to the project and the artists; the second containing two original signed paintings by Sydney Ball; the third containing two original signed woodcuts and a caligraphic piece by Kyu-Il, also contained within the box is an original marble seal-stone hand carved by Kyu-Il, signed and inscribed verso and set within a large steel mounting plate by master jeweller Robert Baines.  Published in an edition of only 20 copies signed by the artists.
Kyu-Ilview full entry
Reference: see Traces : Australia-Korea – Korea-Australia : a book of paintings, prints and calligraphies. [’An extraordinary artistic collaboration between the Sydney-based and Korean artists. Sydney Ball is one of the masters of Australian abstraction, and Kyu-Il (whose work is represented in the Art Gallery of New South Wales) a significant Korean contemporary artist.’]

Publishing details: Townsville: Lyre Bird Press and Melbourne : Zimmer Editions, 2001. Quarto, blindstamped folding clamshell box containing three folios in gilt-lettered hand made paper wrappers; the first being an introduction to the project and the artists; the second containing two original signed paintings by Sydney Ball; the third containing two original signed woodcuts and a caligraphic piece by Kyu-Il, also contained within the box is an original marble seal-stone hand carved by Kyu-Il, signed and inscribed verso and set within a large steel mounting plate by master jeweller Robert Baines.  Published in an edition of only 20 copies signed by the artists.
Gibbs Mayview full entry
Reference: Little Obelia and Further adventures of Ragged Blossom Snugglepot and Cuddlepie.
Publishing details: Sydney : Angus & Robertson, n.d. [1921]. First edition. Quarto.
Ref: 1000
Zimmer Klausview full entry
Reference: A series of occasional drawings by Klaus Rudolf Zimmer (deluxe edition).
Publishing details: Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing and Zimmer Editions, 2021. Quarto, cloth with title label, pp. 184, illustrated. The deluxe edition, limited to 20 copies signed by Jenny Zimmer, housed in a bespoke foding clamshell box, containing an additional portfolio housing an original signed drawing by Klaus Zimmer.
Ref: 1000
Nan Kivell Rex collection view full entry
Reference: Catalogue of an exhibition of Australian and Pacific material from the Nan Kivell Collection in the National Library of Australia. Arranged by the Libraries Board of South Australia for the Second Adelaide Festival of Arts, March 17 – 31, 1962. foreword by Prime Minister Menzies, lengthy catalogue, illustrations. A major exhibition of rare Australian books, watercolours and ephemera. [to be indexed?]
Publishing details: Quarto, illustrated wrappers, unpaginated,
Ref: 2
Durack Elizabethview full entry
Reference: An attempt to eat the moon and other stories recounted from the Aborigines. illustrations by Elizabeth Durack
Publishing details: Melbourne : Georgian House, 1958. Quarto, publisher’s cloth boards in illustrated dust jacket, pp. 52,
Ref: 1000
Riccardo Geoffreyview full entry
Reference: Colour aquatint of a woman
Melbourne : Centre for the Development of Artist’s Books and Limited Editions, 1993. Colour aquatint, 145 x 115 mm, unsigned as issued, printed on a sheet with poems by Miroslav Holub. A proof printing of an etching included in the artists’ book folio Traversare 2. (copy with Douglas Stewart Fine Books, 2021)
Tyndall Peterview full entry
Reference: Photos from the Courier, collected by Peter Tyndall. Artist’s statement relating to an exhibition he staged in 1993 in Ballarat and then Melbourne of photographs appropriated from images published in The Courier (Ballarat).
Publishing details: Centre for Contemporary Photography, 205 Johnston Street, Fitzroy 3065, 18 June – 18 July 1993. Folio, pp. 4, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Strasser Rolandview full entry
Reference: STRASSER, Roland (1895 - 1974)
Roland Strasser catalogue of 23 works, prices in guineas.
Publishing details: Sydney : Macquarie Galleries, 1949. Exhibition catalogue, folded sheet,
Ref: 1000
Eichler Gwenview full entry
Reference: Gwen Eichler. Paintings, drawings - catalogue of 29 works, prices in guineas. Exhibition opened by Roland Wakelin.
Publishing details: Sydney : Macquarie Galleries, 1959. Exhibition catalogue, folded sheet,
Ref: 1000
Bennett Georgeview full entry
Reference: Wanderings in New South Wales, Batavia, Pedir Coast, Singapore, and China, being the journal of a naturalist during 1832, 1833, and 1834, by George Bennett, inc. sketches by George Bennett, 2 vol.
Publishing details: London : Richard Bentley, 1834 
2 volumes (xv, 440 p; vii, 428p) : fronts.
Ref: 1000
Black Dorrit linocut c1928view full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, , lot 14:
DORRIT BLACK (1891-1951)
The Castle, Taormina c.1928-29
colour linocut on cream wove paper, printed from five blocks in yellow ochre, blue, green, red brown, ed. 5/50
initialled lower right in pencil upon image
editioned and inscribed with title beneath image: Sicily, The Castle, Taormina 5/50
20 x 26cm

PROVENANCE:
Sotheby's, Sydney, 17 November 1988, lot 142
The Collection of Colin Lanceley
Leonard Joel, The Estate of Colin Lanceley, Sydney, 16 November 2015, lot 202
Private collection, Sydney

EXHIBITIONS:
First Exhibition of Linocuts, The Redfern Gallery, London 1929, cat. no. 41 (another example)
A Group of Seven, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney 1930, cat. no. 26 (another example)
Drawing, Print and Watercolour, Contemporary Artist's Society, Adelaide 1952, cat. no. 9 (another example)
A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900-1950, Deutscher Galleries, 13 April - 5 May, 1978, cat. no 124 (another example)
Dorrit Black Collection, Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney 1999, cat. no. 3 (another example)
Out of the Darkness: Prints and Drawings from the University of Western Australia Art Collection, Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, Perth 2010 (another example)
Dorrit Black: Retrospective Exhibition, Royal South Australian Society of Arts, Adelaide 2011, cat. no. 15 (another example)
Dorrit Black: Unseen Forces, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 14 June - 7 September 2014 (another example)

LITERATURE:
Lock, T., Dorrit Black Unseen Forces, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2017, p. 50, 152, 200 (illustrated, another example)
Butler, R. & Deutscher, C., A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900-1950, Deutscher Galleries, Melbourne, 1978, p. 93 (illustrated, another example)

OTHER NOTES:
Dorrit Black was at the forefront of the modernist movement, and a key participant in bringing these ideas to Australia from Europe in the 1920s.
Leaving Adelaide for England in 1927, Dorrit Black attended the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London to study under the infamous Claude Flight three days a week. Flight took great interest in Black's rhythmic use of colour and suggested using a multi lino-block to refine the build-up of colour within each print, a technique executed by only his most advanced students.
Having forged a great relationship, Flight and Black kept in close contact even after Black had departed London to travel around Europe. The pair would write to eachother about their learnings and exchange concepts, with Flight even displaying her works amongst his own and that of other students.
Joining her Australian comrades, Grace Crowley and Anne Dangar, Black enrolled in the Academie Lhote on Rue d'Odessa in Montparnasse. Intrigued by the aims and methods of the Cubist Modernist Movement, Black was eager to work with teacher Andre Lhote, one of the original Cubist artists. In the late 1920s, Black travelled through Europe, spending three weeks in Taormina, Sicily. This is where Black would produce some of her most prolific works blending the modern printmaking teachings of Flight with the Cubist perspectives of Lhote.
"The Castle, Taormina" demonstrates volume and solidity through the advanced overlaying of colour and the dramatic vertical forms and shadows. Rather than the use of thick black outline, Dorrit expertly balances her use of block colour and integrates shadowing and depth through segmented line to depict the angled surface of the landscape. Dorrit succesfully represents the towering heights of the Sicilian mountains and the dramatic formations of cloud in the sky, dissecting her subject into a balanced and striking modernist composition. Her geometric depiction and patterning of the landscape is a great example of her experimentation with modern methods and her complete adherence to the principles she had recently learnt.
In 1929, Claude Flight held the First Exhibition of British Linocuts at Redfern Gallery, London. Five linocuts by Black had been selected, including "The Castle, Taormina". Flight wrote to Black: "let me congratulate you on your prints they are wholly delightful & the ones I like especially are 'music' (wings), and the landscape (The Castle, Taormina). The landscape is the best lino landscape I have seen yet - I wish I had done it myself".

Hannah Ryan, Art Specialist

RELATED WORK:
The Castle, Taormina, 1928, oil on canvasboard, 54 x 37cm, University Art Collection, The University of Sydney, Sydney.
Dimensions
20 x 26cm
Artist or Maker
DORRIT BLACK (1891-1951)
Medium
colour linocut on cream wove paper, printed from five blocks in yellow ochre, blue, green, red brown, ed. 5/50
Condition Report
The artwork has been sighted outside of its current frame (photos provided upon request). The original sheet has been laid onto a secondary sheet. This has not occurred recently, and was likely done to stabilise the sheet. Some minor abbrasions are visible only upon very close inspection and there is some minor discolouration apparent as with age. Overall framed size 47 x 51cm.

Exhibited
First Exhibition of Linocuts, The Redfern Gallery, London 1929, cat. no. 41 (another example)
A Group of Seven, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney 1930, cat. no. 26 (another example)
Drawing, Print and Watercolour, Contemporary Artist's Society, Adelaide 1952, cat. no. 9 (another example)
A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900-1950, Deutscher Galleries, 13 April - 5 May, 1978, cat. no 124 (another example)
Dorrit Black Collection, Josef Lebovic Gallery, Sydney 1999, cat. no. 3 (another example)
Out of the Darkness: Prints and Drawings from the University of Western Australia Art Collection, Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, Perth 2010 (another example)
Dorrit Black: Retrospective Exhibition, Royal South Australian Society of Arts, Adelaide 2011, cat. no. 15 (another example)
Dorrit Black: Unseen Forces, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 14 June - 7 September 2014 (another example)
Literature
Lock, T., Dorrit Black Unseen Forces, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2017, p. 50, 152, 200 (illustrated, another example)
Butler, R. & Deutscher, C., A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900-1950, Deutscher Galleries, Melbourne, 1978, p. 93 (illustrated, another example)
Provenance
Sotheby's, Sydney, 17 November 1988, lot 142
The Collection of Colin Lanceley
Leonard Joel, The Estate of Colin Lanceley, Sydney, 16 November 2015, lot 202
Private collection, Sydney
Notes
Dorrit Black was at the forefront of the modernist movement, and a key participant in bringing these ideas to Australia from Europe in the 1920s.
Leaving Adelaide for England in 1927, Dorrit Black attended the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London to study under the infamous Claude Flight three days a week. Flight took great interest in Black's rhythmic use of colour and suggested using a multi lino-block to refine the build-up of colour within each print, a technique executed by only his most advanced students.
Having forged a great relationship, Flight and Black kept in close contact even after Black had departed London to travel around Europe. The pair would write to eachother about their learnings and exchange concepts, with Flight even displaying her works amongst his own and that of other students.
Joining her Australian comrades, Grace Crowley and Anne Dangar, Black enrolled in the Academie Lhote on Rue d'Odessa in Montparnasse. Intrigued by the aims and methods of the Cubist Modernist Movement, Black was eager to work with teacher Andre Lhote, one of the original Cubist artists. In the late 1920s, Black travelled through Europe, spending three weeks in Taormina, Sicily. This is where Black would produce some of her most prolific works blending the modern printmaking teachings of Flight with the Cubist perspectives of Lhote.
"The Castle, Taormina" demonstrates volume and solidity through the advanced overlaying of colour and the dramatic vertical forms and shadows. Rather than the use of thick black outline, Dorrit expertly balances her use of block colour and integrates shadowing and depth through segmented line to depict the angled surface of the landscape. Dorrit succesfully represents the towering heights of the Sicilian mountains and the dramatic formations of cloud in the sky, dissecting her subject into a balanced and striking modernist composition. Her geometric depiction and patterning of the landscape is a great example of her experimentation with modern methods and her complete adherence to the principles she had recently learnt.
In 1929, Claude Flight held the First Exhibition of British Linocuts at Redfern Gallery, London. Five linocuts by Black had been selected, including "The Castle, Taormina". Flight wrote to Black: "let me congratulate you on your prints they are wholly delightful & the ones I like especially are 'music' (wings), and the landscape (The Castle, Taormina). The landscape is the best lino landscape I have seen yet - I wish I had done it myself".

Hannah Ryan, Art Specialist

RELATED WORK:
The Castle, Taormina, 1928, oil on canvasboard, 54 x 37cm, University Art Collection, The University of Sydney, Sydney.

Edkins Cathleen Elizabeth 1922-2008view full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, , lot 3:
CATHLEEN ELIZABETH EDKINS (1922-2008)
Draught Horses 1980
oil on canvas
signed and dated lower right: C. E. Edkins 1980
75.5 x 101cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, Melbourne

OTHER NOTES:
Beginning her studies underneath Harold Septimus Power, Cathleen Edkins is often described as one of Australia's most outstanding realist painters for her interpretation of cattle and draught horses. Edkins practiced the plein air technique, sometimes using multiple locations for her paintings. Once she had decided on a particular scene, she would travel the region and paint from different scenic components that were best suited.
Dimensions
75.5 x 101cm
Artist or Maker
CATHLEEN ELIZABETH EDKINS (1922-2008)
Medium
oil on canvas
Condition Report
Work is in overall good condition, there is a brown forign matter spot see in the upper centre section of the artwork measuring 2mm. Well framed in a gilt ornate frame measuring 92 x 118cm

Provenance
Private collection, Melbourne
Notes
Beginning her studies underneath Harold Septimus Power, Cathleen Edkins is often described as one of Australia's most outstanding realist painters for her interpretation of cattle and draught horses. Edkins practiced the plein air technique, sometimes using multiple locations for her paintings. Once she had decided on a particular scene, she would travel the region and paint from different scenic components that were best suited.

Beckett Clarice 1887-1935view full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, , lot 10:
CLARICE BECKETT (1887-1935)
Winter Sunset
oil on board
30 x 25cm

PROVENANCE:
Acquired directly from Rosalind Hollinrake (Humphries), at a private exhibition in October 1978 by invitation (copy of invitation available)
The Collection of Jean Furner
Thence by descent
Private collection, New South Wales

EXHIBITIONS:
Exhibition of Clarice Beckett 1887-1935, 58 Wattle Valley Road, Canterbury, 29 October 1978, cat. no. 24

OTHER NOTES:
Clarice Beckett is one of Australia's most important interwar artists and arguably the most significant modern female artist of the 20th century. Beckett is the epitome of the underappreciated female painter who was quite literally pulled from the darkness and is finally receiving the appropriate acclaims.
In one of the most serendipitous art encounters in the history of Australian art, Dr. Rosalind Hollinrake came upon a remarkable painting bearing the signature "C. Beckett". It would take another 5 years before she learned the identity of this very talented painter who had so deeply moved her, and many years again before Hollinrake would salvage 369 of Clarice's abandoned artworks from a shed in Victoria in the 1960s. Many were beyond repair. From then on began a revitalisation of the career of one of Australia's best tonalist painters, and a shift in the Australian art canon that would trigger the long overdue recognition of many women artists.
The paintings of Clarice Beckett encapsulate the serenity and magic of the Australian landscape. In a seemingly minimalist approach, Clarice is able to draw out the atmospheric qualities of light and shade. Through shifting and dissolving sweeps of colour, she recreates the mood or feeling of a fleeting moment of nature, rather than a static pictorial representation.
Clarice stated that her artistic endeavours aim "to give a sincere and truthful representation of a portion of the beauty of Nature, and to show the charm of light and shade, which I try to give forth in correct tones so as to give as nearly as possible an exact illusion of reality."
Clarice was able to capture the mesmerising effects of shifting light at various moments from dusk until dawn. In "Winter Sunset", the sea and the sky merge in glowing sweeps of sensory colour. The bold pink tones radiate heat and warmth, blended into calm greys and purples to illustrate the serenity of the vast expanse of the coast. Clarice dissolves the boundaries between light and shade yet manages to uphold a sense of depth. Perhaps it is due to the inherent spontaneity of the moment in which Clarice painted en plein air. The sun disc itself is gone, but the vivid fluorescent qualities of the fading light remain, if only for a fleeting moment long enough for Clarice to capture it.
Clarice's paintings of sunset are not often available for public sale. In fact, this very work was acquired through a private exhibition in 1978 before the resulting public exhibition in 1979. Unsurprisingly, this painting was keenly acquired by the late Jean Furner in October 1978 and has remained in the same family collection since.
Clarice opened up the eyes and minds of so many to the wonderful world of women artists. Notable collector, Andree Harkness, stated herself that the first significant piece of art she ever purchased was a Clarice Beckett painting from the Realities Gallery exhibition in 1979. The purchase of this painting triggered a lifelong passion for, and appreciation of, women artists. In Clarice's very first exhibition in 1971, her prices ranged from $90-320. Now, she is demanding significant values that more aptly befit an artist of such skill, with new record prices being made each year.

Olivia Fuller
Head of Art
Dimensions
30 x 25cm
Artist or Maker
CLARICE BECKETT (1887-1935)
Medium
oil on board
Condition Report
The work is in very good condition. The surface is stable, with no apparent areas of concern. The work has been cleaned by a professional conservator in September 2021 and a full conservator's report is available upon request.
The frame is of the 1970s, and in good condition. Overall framed size 40 x 35cm.
Becoming Modernview full entry
Reference: Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Noonan Davidview full entry
Reference: DAVID NOONAN STAGECRAFT LIMITED EDITION. In association with the exhibition David Noonan: Stagecraft, the Art Gallery of Ballarat published a hand-bound art catalogue, which includes an essay by Curator Julie McLaren and large format reproductions of Noonan’s work.
These catalogues are strictly limited to a numbered edition of 240. Hand bound large format catalogue, 20 pages, 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2021, 20pp
Ref: 1000
Romancing the Skullview full entry
Reference: Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Ref: 1000
Gladwell Shaun view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Jinks Sam view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Green Rona view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Quilty Ben view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Hall Fiona view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Rennie Reko view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Smart Sally view full entry
Reference: see Romancing the Skull, exhibition catalogue. [’The skull has entranced and fascinated generations of artists. Romancing the skull looks at the depiction of the skull in art and examines why we continue to be so enamoured with this iconic symbol. The exhibition explores a range of themes including the skull as a reminder of our mortality, the use of the skull in addressing social and political issues, and the skull and crossbones as a symbol of piracy and rebellion.
Romancing the skull will also look at the way in which the skull has been embraced as an important symbol in Mexican Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations. Prints by Mexican artists José Guadalupe Posada (1852–1913) have become synonymous with Day of the Dead and his Calaveras (skull figures) are now firmly embedded in Mexican popular culture. More than twenty of his iconic prints will be introduced to Australian audiences for the first time.
Other highlights of the exhibition include a Nuremberg Chronicle dating from 1493 depicting one of the earliest Danse Macabre (Dance of Death) images, and Australian artist Shaun Gladwell’s Virtual Reality work Orbital Vanitas 2016, which debuted at Sundance Film Festival in 2017. It will also include works by contemporary Australian artists Sam Jinks, Rona Green and Ben Quilty and specially commissioned works by Fiona Hall, Reko Rennie and Sally Smart.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2017, 276 pages
Lincoln Kevinview full entry
Reference: The Eyes Mind. [’This exhibition surveys the career of contemporary Australian artist Kevin Lincoln, focussing on the evolution of over some twenty-five years of mature and critically acclaimed work, from around 1990 to the present. Lincoln’s work concentrates on the exploration of form, reading a path between representation and abstraction and working to transform surface appearances into something distilled and stilled. His pictorial language is nuanced, elegiac, meditative and quietly seductive. Landscapes are often shrouded in melancholy where his still-life paintings can be sharp and witty: his work evokes a mood of reflection.
The exhibition includes a diverse range of work, from the intimacy of sketchbook drawings to the commanding mystery of large often multi-panelled paintings, giving visitors the privileged opportunity to study this very distinctive artist’s engagement with the world and to discover his way of thinking and seeing and its varying manifestations on paper and canvas.
With a distinguished professional career spanning over forty years Kevin Lincoln’s paintings, prints and drawings are held in collections of Australian state and regional galleries, including the National Gallery of Australia, the National Gallery of Victoria and The Art Gallery of New South Wales.
An Art Gallery of Ballarat exhibition jointly curated by independent curator Elizabeth Cross and Gallery Director Gordon Morrison.’]
[’Kevin Lincoln’s mature work can best be understood as a dialogue between the composed and the observed. Moving easily between exquisite drawings, plein air watercolours of place, mood and weather, and canvases large and small, meditatively abstract or poetically evocative, Lincoln has built a rich repertoire that celebrates things observed, felt and understood. Qualities of stillness and silence prevail, expressed in an infinity of greys, and eliciting our reflective responses. This award winning volume includes essays on Lincoln’s evolution as an artist by Elizabeth Cross.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat Art Gallery, 2016, 180 pages, hardcover with dust jacket,
Ref: 1000
Hester Joy 1920-60 man with beardview full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, lot 22:
JOY HESTER (1920-1960)
Man with Beard 1955
ink on paper
signed and dated lower left: Joy Hester/ 1955
75.5 x 50.5cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, Melbourne
Thence by descent

OTHER NOTES:
In 1955, Joy Hester was invited by Georges and Mirka Mora to show at Mirka Cafe, 183 Exhibition Street, the French-style eatery the Moras had opened the previous year in Melbourne's theatre district. After arriving from Paris in 1951, the Moras, who lived nearby at 9 Collins Street, were transforming the culture of their new home with sophistication, conviviality and considerable Gallic charm. Hester and Gray Smith, her partner, were good friends and had babysat their young sons, Philippe and William, on a weekly basis at their home in Upwey in the Dandenong Ranges while the Moras ran the cafe.

1955 was a busy, productive year for Hester. She increased the scale of her brush and ink works and, for the first time, regularly signed and dated them, marking a new level of professionalism. The Mirka Cafe show was the second of only three solo exhibitions during Hester's lifetime. (1) As there was no catalogue, the inclusion of Man with Beard cannot be confirmed. That year Hester also contributed to two Contemporary Art Society group exhibitions and The Herald Outdoor Art Show. However, Head of a Woman in Hat (1955, National Gallery of Victoria), which was in the Mirka Cafe show, has the same dimensions.

Also for the first time, Hester won (faint) praise from the critics. Alan McCulloch described her solo show as 'striking in its originality, somewhat bizarre in general feeling and resembling in effect - if we exclude the Expressionist element - the negative print in photography'. (2) Arnold Shore noted the 'looming intensity' of the wash drawings whose 'emotional nature' was accentuated by 'an individual interpretation of character'. (3)

Though Hester was living in the township of Upwey, the impact of the Australian bush and of country people had informed her vision since moving to rural Hurstbridge in 1948. She was enamoured of the land and its people, avidly reading Australian history and poetry. Nature also provided a healing retreat as Hester recovered from Hodgkin's disease.

Who is Man with Beard? Could he be a 19th century bushranger? The few remaining photographs of Ned Kelly prove it's not him. There's a passing resemblance to Francis McCallum (1822-1857), known as Captain Melville, though he sported a moustache. Hester occasionally drew portraits and rarely concentrated on landscape. She was concerned with issues more evanescent and symbolic: the human face as repository for issues of identity where nothing is fixed, all is in transition. Man with Beard is a striking image: a strong, sensitive face with eyes that are piercing yet blank, and a sensuous mouth. He seems to look at us yet looks past us, his beard like dark water, dissolving his face. He is an apparition, a ghostly visitation from the colonial past.

Dr Janine Burke, Honorary Senior Fellow, University of Melbourne.

1. Hester's other solo exhibitions were at Melbourne Bookclub Gallery, 225 Collins Street, Melbourne, 6-17 February, 1950 and Gallery of Contemporary Art, Tavistock Place, Melbourne 9-23 April 1957.
2. Alan McCulloch, The Herald, 27 July 1955, p.20.
3. Arnold Shore, The Argus, 27 July 1955, p.8.
Dimensions
75.5 x 50.5cm
Artist or Maker
JOY HESTER (1920-1960)
Medium
ink on paper
Provenance
Private collection, Melbourne
Thence by descent

Pye Mabel linocutview full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, lot 25:
MABEL PYE (1894-1982)
Untitled (Landscape)
linocut
initialled in plate lower left: MP
13 x 17cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, South Australia

OTHER NOTES:
Working in linocuts, Pye focused on landscapes and still lifes with bold colour and lines. Studying under Bernard Hall at the Melbourne National Gallery School with fellow classmates, Napier Waller and Adelaide Perry, this is where she mastered her technique. Pye was a member of the Society of Women Artists (Melbourne) alongside fellow female artists, Esther Paterson and Sybil Craig.
Dimensions
13 x 17cm
Artist or Maker
MABEL PYE (1894-1982)
Medium
linocut
Condition Report
The blue pigment has remained vivid, however the pigment displays a chemical reaction that has occured with the paper. There are some minor fly spots and foxing spots visible. There are pin holes in all four corners. This work has not been examined out of its frame. Frame size 38 x 40cm.

Provenance
Private collection, South Australia
Syme Evelyn tram lines linocutview full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, lot 27:
EVELINE SYME (1888-1961)
Sydney Tram Line 1936
linocut ed. 10/25 from 3 blocks, printed in 1) vermillion, 2) viridian; 3) burnt umber, impression on buff oriental laid tissue, originally mounted to brown paper backing
titled, editioned and signed in pencil on reverse of impression below image
24.4 x 17.9cm

PROVENANCE:
Important Women Artists, Jim Alexander Gallery, Melbourne 1977
Private collection, Melbourne

EXHIBITIONS:
Exhibition of Pictures by the Contemporary Group of Artists, David Jones' Galleries, Sydney, July 1937, no. 93
The Printmakers, Mainly of the Thirties, Important Women Artists, Melbourne, 11 September - 30 October, 1977, cat. 25, (including this example), (as ‘Sydney Tramlines')
Project 24: Cicadas and Gumnuts: The Society of Arts and Crafts 1906-1935, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1 April - 7 May 1978, no. 118, (another example)
A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900/1950, Deutsher Galleries, Melbourne, 13 April - 5 May 1978, cat. 180 (illus. exhibition catalogue, another example)
Australian Images: Prints, Drawings and Watercolours from the Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 22 December 1979 - 28 January 1980, (no catalogue number), (another example)
Colour linocuts from the Grosvenor School, The Ward Gallery, Sydney, March 1980, no. 50, (another example)
Melbourne Woodcuts and Linocuts of the 1920's and 1930's, Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat and touring University Art Museum, Queensland, Newcastle Regional
Gallery, Newcastle, McClelland Gallery, Frankston, Victorian College of the Arts, Melbourne, 1981, (another impression)
Project 39: Women's Imprint, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1-31 October 1982 (another example)
Out of the Book and on the Wall: the Relief Print - Linocuts: Claude Flight and His Circle, Australian National Gallery, Canberra, 20 February - 13 May 1984 (another example)
Harbour Hymns, City Songs: Visions of Sydney from the Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 13 January - 11 March 1990, no. 83 (another example)
Claude Flight and His Followers: The Linocut Movement between the Wars, Australian National Gallery, Canberra, 18 April - 12 July 1992; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 14 October – 29 November 1992; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 16 December 1992 - 1 March 1993; National Art Gallery, Wellington, 19 March- 16 May 1993 and Auckland City Art Gallery, Auckland, 3 June - 18 July 1993, cat. 100 (another example)
Australian Prints from the Gallery's Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 6 November 1998 - 7 February 1999, cat. 58 (another example)
Modern Australian Women: Paintings and Prints 1925-1945, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 24 November 2000 - 25 February 2001, and touring, (another example)
Shooting Through: Sydney by Tram, Museum of Sydney, Sydney, 4 April - 18 October 2009 (another example)
Sydney Moderns: Art for a New World, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 6 July - 7 Oct 2013 (another example)
Modern impressions: Australian Prints from the Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2 Sepember 2016 - January 2017 (another example)
Becoming Modern: Australian Women Artists 1920-1950, Art Gallery of Ballarat, Ballarat, 18 May - 4 August 2019 (another example)
Spowers & Syme, A National Gallery of Australia, Canberra travelling exhibition, Canberra Museum and Art Gallery, Canberra, 13 August – 6 October 2021; and touring Brisbane, Dubbo and Victoria until 2022 (illus. exhibition catalogue, another example)

LITERATURE:
Butler, R., and Deutsher, C., A Survey of Australian Relief Prints 1900/1950, Deutsher Galleries, Melbourne, 1978, pp. 91, 118, cat. 180 (illus. another example)
Project 24: Cicadas and Gumnuts: The Society of Arts and Crafts 1906-1935, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1978, cat. 118 (another example)
De Teliga, J., Australian Images: Prints, Drawings and Watercolours from the Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1979, p. 10 (another example)
Butler, R., Melbourne Woodcuts and Linocuts of the 1920's and 1930's, Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat, 1981, unpaginated, pp. 13 (illus. another example), 51 (illus. another example)
Waldman, A., Project 39: Women's Imprint, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1982, no catalogue numbers; not paginated
Coppel, S., ‘Claude Flight and his Australian Pupils', Print Quarterly, Print Quarterly Publications in assoc. J. Paul Getty Trust, London, vol. 2, no. 4, December 1985, pp. 278, 281 (illus. fig. 157, another example)
Vernon, K., Harbour Hymns, City Songs: Visions of Sydney from the Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1990, cat. 83 (another example)
Coppel, S., Claude Flight and His Followers; The Colour Linocut Movement between the Wars, Australian National Gallery, Canberra, , 1992, p. 22 (another example)
Coppel, S., Linocuts of the Machine Age: Claude Flight and the Grosvenor School, Scolar Press, Aldershot, England, in association with the National Gallery of Australia, 1995, pp. 47 (illus. plate 43, another example), 66, 184-185 (illus. another example), cat. ESy 20
Topliss, H., Modernism and Feminism: Australian Women Artists 1900-1940, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1996, pp. 149 (illus. no. 79, another example), 152
Kolenberg, H. and Ryan, A., Australian Prints from the Gallery's Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1998, p. 69, cat. 58 (illus. another example)
Hylton, J., Modern Australian Women: Paintings & Prints 1925-1945, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2000, pp. 57, 81 (illus., another example), 126
Johnson, H., 'We Cannot Cage the Minute: Art Deco Art' in Ferson, M. and Nilsson, M. (eds.), Art Deco in Australia: Sunrise Over the Pacific, Fine Art Publishing, Sydney, 2001, pp. 101, 102 (illus. pl. 117, another example)
Slater, J., Through Artists' Eyes: Australian Suburbs and their Cities 1919-1945, Miegunyah Press, Melbourne, 2004, pp. xi, 25 (illus. no. 13, another example)
Butler, R., Printed: Images by Australian Artists 1885-1955, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 2007, p. 200 (illus. another example)
Hull, R. (ed.), Butler-Bowdon, C. and Campbell, A., Shooting Through: Sydney by Tram, Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, Sydney, 2009, pp. 78, 79 (illus. another example)
Look, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, September 2012, p. 39 (illus. another example)
Edwards, D., Mimmocchi, D., Sydney Moderns: Art for a New World, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Sydney, 2013, pp. 71 (illus. another example), 316
Smith, S., 'Women's work: their diverse and significant contribution to the modernist art scene', Look, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, August 2013, p. 13 (illus. another example)
McLaren, J. and Tegart, L., Becoming Modern: Australian Women Artists 1920-1950, Art Gallery of Ballarat, Ballarat, 2019, pp. 131, 134, 137 (illus. another example), 174
Stuart, C. and Finucane, P., Odd Roads to be Walking: 156 Women Who Shaped Australian Art, Red Barn, Skibbereen, 2019, p. 138 (illus., another example)
Pryor, S., Making the Cut: Art World's Dynamic Duo, Canberra Times, Australian Community Media, Canberra, 24 July 2021, p. Panorama 6 (illus. another example)
A pair of Melbourne artists from the 1930s are finally getting the recognition they deserve' published 24 July 2021 (accessed 25 July 2021) https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7349484/making-the-cut-art-worlds-dynamic-duo/

OTHER NOTES:
This print is in the permanent collections of Art Gallery of Ballarat, Ballarat; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; and National Gallery of Australia, Canberra.

RELATED WORK:
Eveline Syme, The Tram Line 1932, watercolour, Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum, Castlemaine

We would like to thank John Keats for his kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

Eveline Syme was one of the most significant artists associated with the Grosvenor School. The movement, founded by Claude Flight in 1925, was largely based on the idealisation of speed, dynamism and the rejection of the past. It embraced modern life, especially the city and its means of transport and industrialisation. This type of subject matter had barely been touched by women until now. Syme was born in England to Australian parents, grew up in Melbourne where she studied locally at Melbourne University and abroad. Attending the Grosvenor school in 1929, she went on to become one of the most established artists in this medium and biggest advocates of modern art in Australia during the 1930 and 40s.
Dimensions
24.4 x 17.9cm
Artist or Maker
EVELINE SYME (1888-1961)
Medium
linocut ed. 10/25 from 3 blocks, printed in 1) vermillion, 2) viridian; 3) burnt umber, impression on buff oriental laid tissue, originally mounted to brown paper backing
Condition Report
Overall very good condition. The tissue does not appear to be discoloured and the pigment remains vivid. The inherent texture of the tissue is visible, suggesting that the work has not been laid down. Well framed measuring 42 x 33cm.
Edkins Cathleen Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Leonard Joel auction, October 19, 2021, lot 56:
CATHLEEN ELIZABETH EDKINS (1922-2008)
Grazing Cattle
oil on canvas
signed lower right: C. E. Edkins
49 x 59cm

PROVENANCE:
Private collection, Melbourne

OTHER NOTES:
Combining her love of art and the land, Cathleen Edkins paintings revolved around her homeland on Coola Station. Born in 1922 at Mount Gambier, South Australia, Edkins quickly became a handy stockwoman, assisting on the homestead, competing in equestrienne and attending race meetings on behalf of her family. Studying art under the renowned Harold Septimus Power, she was encouraged to focus on the landscape and livestock. Described by many as the 'horsewoman artist', Edkins' drawing techniques reflects the realist style. Rarely producing studies prior to her paintings she painted en plein air when she could, using photos scarcely when the horses were galloping: "My eye is not quick enough to see how the muscles move, particularly when they are pulling hard or galloping, that is where a camera does help."
Dimensions
49 x 59cm
Artist or Maker
CATHLEEN ELIZABETH EDKINS (1922-2008)
Medium
oil on canvas
Condition Report
Work is in very good condition with no apparent faults to report. Framed size 62 x 72cm.

Provenance
Private collection, Melbourne
Ballarat Art Galleryview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017,
513 pages, illustrations, index.
Australian Camera Club Digestview full entry
Reference: Australan Camera Club Digest 1960 onwards.Monthly [to 1963?] [to be indexed]
Publishing details: George A. Reed, 1960s, eahissue 8pp
Ref: 1000
photographyview full entry
Reference: Australan Camera Club Digest 1960 onwards.Monthly [to 1963?] [to be indexed]
Publishing details: George A. Reed, 1960s, eahissue 8pp
Ferrero Jean-Paul view full entry
Reference: A remarkable eye : the Australian photographs of Jean-Paul Ferrero

Publishing details: Viking, 2001 
x, 132 p. : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
Creating Australia - 200 years of Art 1788-1988view full entry
Reference: Creating Australia - 200 years of Art 1788-1988, by Daniel Thomas. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: International Cultural Corporation of Australia & The Art Gallery Board of South Australia 1988, pb
Keeler-Milne Jenniferview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article on artist’s choices in the Art Gallery of NSW.
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
Hester Joy Lovers 1948-9view full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article by Denise Mimmocchi on Hester’s ‘Lovers’
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
White Robinview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article p40-47
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article re exhibition ‘Australia’ at Whiteley Studio, p48-9
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
Inkamala Judithview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article p60-61
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
Nicholas Hilda Rixview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article on artist relating to launch of book on her by Richard Travers.
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
Spain Georgiaview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine October - November, 2021, article on artist p66-71.
Publishing details: Look, Art Gallery Society of NSW, 2021
Tuck Marieview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 69th Meeting, 2 September 2021, online meeting notes:
Spring Garden (Mt. Torrens), undated oil on board, Marie Tuck. 27 x 37 cm. This fresh and colourful impressionistic scene is inscribed on the back in pencil:
“Dear Myrtle – did I hear that you were tired of your pictures, if so, will this Spring garden (Mt. Torrens) be a little change? Love & best wishes to you [illegible] M T”
Mount Torrens landscape, undated oil on board, Marie Tuck. 24 x 32 cm.
Much loved and prolific as an artist, Marie Anne Tuck (1866-1947) had been born at Mount Torrens, near Lobethal in the Adelaide hills. With the aim of studying art in Paris, for ten years from 1886 she attended James Ashton’s art school at Norwood while working as a florist by day, studying botany at Adelaide University and exhibiting her work. In 1896 Tuck
9
moved to Perth where she opened her Perth Art School, influenced a rising generation of young women artists, and was acclaimed for her landscapes and flower paintings. This important period was recently elucidated in Dorothy Erickson’s series Angels in the Studio (Australiana, May 2021, vol 43, no 2).
In 1906 Tuck at last left for Paris, where she paid for her lessons under Rupert Bunny by doing domestic chores for him, and spending summers painting in Brittany. While exhibiting at the salon in Paris she also sent work back to Adelaide, where the National Gallery of SA bought the major work The Fish Market. After the onset of World War I Tuck returned to Adelaide, taught at the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts, and built a small home and studio at Frewville. Regarded as a “dedicated and inspiring teacher”, she was loved by her students and influenced amongst others John Dowie and Ivor Hele. A stroke in 1940 severely hampered her work, and she died in 1947. At her 1971 retrospective Dowie was to say that “...she taught us what an artist should be”. A brief and sensitive biography by Ruth Tuck is in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, vol. 12, and online.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/69%20SAASG%20Sep%202021.pdf
Angas George Frenchview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 69th Meeting, 2 September 2021, online meeting notes:
Forest Scene on the Illawarra Mountains, New South Wales.
Lion’s Head Mountain, Near Capetown, Cape of Good Hope.
Two woodcut engravings on paper, signed in the block, ANGAS. Illustrated London News, Feb. 22, 1868, p.185. Each image 23 x 16cms, printed on one sheet measuring 27.5 x 40.5 cm.
English-born naturalist and travel artist George French Angas (1822-86) made hundreds of drawings and watercolours on his travels in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and South America. Many were rendered as lithographs, and collated into lavishly presented albums.
11
Other versions of his imagery also appeared in woodcut form in the illustrated newspaper press of the day, as shown in the examples presented here.
Although dated 1868, these two images stem from drawings made more than twenty years earlier. Angas visited Dapto, located in the Illawarra district of New South Wales in 1845, where he spent a number of days making studies of the cabbage trees and bangalow palms that abounded in the vicinity of Mr. Jessett’s farm, situated in the lee of the Illawarra escarpment. Another view of similar New Zealand forest scenery featured as a lithograph in Angas’ Savage Life and Scenes in Australia and New Zealand: being an artist’s impressions of countries and people at the antipodes, published in two volumes by Smith, Elder, and Co., London in 1847.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/69%20SAASG%20Sep%202021.pdf
Keain Maurice view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 69th Meeting, 2 September 2021, online meeting notes:
The Keain Medal, annual award for a South Australian Historical Publication, created for The Historical Society of South Australia Inc. by Maurice Keain.
AE antique 51mm, dies by George Friml, struck at the Hafner Mint, Melbourne. Mintage 106 (6 for personal use, 100 for use by the Society).
Maurice Bernard Keain (10 April 1938–25 July 2021) was born and raised in Spalding and for his early years lived there with his parents Bernard and Margaret and his two brothers Arthur and Kevin. Maurice developed an interest in the township of Spalding and in 1976 published a book on its history: From where the Broughton flows: a history of the Spalding district. He was able to acquire a good number of properties in the area and at least one of the houses he owned there he is known to have filled up with his vast collection of books, his so- called library away from his later home at Marble Hill in the Adelaide Hills.
Keain’s lifelong interest in history resulted in his active involvement in a number of learned societies. On the numismatic side he became an active member of the Numismatic Society of South Australia (NSSA) and later a foundation member and president of the Numismatic Association of Australia. As well as numismatics he had a lifelong interest in family history and actively involved himself in the Genealogy and Heraldry Society of South Australia. He joined the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia, and the Historical Society of South Australia of which he was a foundation member and vice president. He sponsored the Keain Medal (illustrated above), an annual award for a non-fiction publication on South Australian History, first presented in 2015. Maurice was a respected researcher and writer and was always actively involved in the administration of the organizations he belonged to. He acquired all publications of the Melbourne based Hawthorn Press and compiled a list of their publications. The founder of this press was John Gartner, who in 1964 published the Australian Coin Review, the predecessor of the current The Australasian Coin and Banknote Magazine.
Maurice kept himself physically active by playing tennis and was a long standing member of the SA Lawn Tennis Association, first as a player, then as an umpire. Always the collector, he acquired a good selection of early tennis racquets and built up a substantial library of books on tennis.
From 1957 until his retirement he worked for the South Australian branch of the Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA), eventually becoming Secretary.
During his membership of the Numismatic Society of South Australia Maurice served as president, vice-president, hon. secretary, councilor and became associate editor of its periodical publication, the Australian Numismatic Journal.
In 1964 Maurice was instrumental in designing the NSSA membership badge.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/69%20SAASG%20Sep%202021.pdf
Hafner Mintview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 69th Meeting, 2 September 2021, online meeting notes:
The Keain Medal, annual award for a South Australian Historical Publication, created for The Historical Society of South Australia Inc. by Maurice Keain.
AE antique 51mm, dies by George Friml, struck at the Hafner Mint, Melbourne. Mintage 106 (6 for personal use, 100 for use by the Society).
Maurice Bernard Keain (10 April 1938–25 July 2021) was born and raised in Spalding and for his early years lived there with his parents Bernard and Margaret and his two brothers Arthur and Kevin. Maurice developed an interest in the township of Spalding and in 1976 published a book on its history: From where the Broughton flows: a history of the Spalding district. He was able to acquire a good number of properties in the area and at least one of the houses he owned there he is known to have filled up with his vast collection of books, his so- called library away from his later home at Marble Hill in the Adelaide Hills.
Keain’s lifelong interest in history resulted in his active involvement in a number of learned societies. On the numismatic side he became an active member of the Numismatic Society of South Australia (NSSA) and later a foundation member and president of the Numismatic Association of Australia. As well as numismatics he had a lifelong interest in family history and actively involved himself in the Genealogy and Heraldry Society of South Australia. He joined the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia, and the Historical Society of South Australia of which he was a foundation member and vice president. He sponsored the Keain Medal (illustrated above), an annual award for a non-fiction publication on South Australian History, first presented in 2015. Maurice was a respected researcher and writer and was always actively involved in the administration of the organizations he belonged to. He acquired all publications of the Melbourne based Hawthorn Press and compiled a list of their publications. The founder of this press was John Gartner, who in 1964 published the Australian Coin Review, the predecessor of the current The Australasian Coin and Banknote Magazine.
Maurice kept himself physically active by playing tennis and was a long standing member of the SA Lawn Tennis Association, first as a player, then as an umpire. Always the collector, he acquired a good selection of early tennis racquets and built up a substantial library of books on tennis.
From 1957 until his retirement he worked for the South Australian branch of the Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA), eventually becoming Secretary.
During his membership of the Numismatic Society of South Australia Maurice served as president, vice-president, hon. secretary, councilor and became associate editor of its periodical publication, the Australian Numismatic Journal.
In 1964 Maurice was instrumental in designing the NSSA membership badge.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/69%20SAASG%20Sep%202021.pdf
Wadham W Jview full entry
Reference: The British Colonial Gallery paintings from India, Australia, New Zealand and the Rocky Mountains of Canada by W.J. Wadham and A. Sinclair at Roberts' Art Gallery, 79 King Street West, Wednesday afternoon, November 9th, at 2.30 P.M. Wm. Dickson, auctioneer (1898)

Publishing details: Wm. Dickson Co. (Toronto, Ont.) 1898
Ref: 1000
Sinclair Aview full entry
Reference: see The British Colonial Gallery paintings from India, Australia, New Zealand and the Rocky Mountains of Canada by W.J. Wadham and A. Sinclair at Roberts' Art Gallery, 79 King Street West, Wednesday afternoon, November 9th, at 2.30 P.M. Wm. Dickson, auctioneer (1898)

Publishing details: Wm. Dickson Co. (Toronto, Ont.) 1898
Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855.view full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
colonial art Tasmaniaview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Fogg Miss S A view full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.] 12 watercolour paintings of indigenous flowers by Miss S A Foog of Launceston. Flowers named.
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Stieglitz F L Mr of Killymoon, Fingal VDLview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.] A pair of Aboriginal portraits, a man and a woman. And a rug.
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Duterrau Benjamin?view full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.] number 41 on page 46 is a painting - view of Hobart with the description suggesting it may be by Duterrau. It has been submitted ‘not as a work of art’ which may suggest it was amateurish in style, as opposed to being of the professional standard of say Glover. Alexander McNaughtan who owned Duterrau’s National Picture, and William Gore Ellistion who held Duterrau’s estate auction in 1851, both lent items to this exhibition.
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Hood R V number 182 wood sampleview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Hood R L picture frames etcview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Gardner W A rugview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Henslowe F Hview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Henslowe F Hview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Allport Mrs table with paintings of flowersview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Abbot John printed sheet musicview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Burgess Mrs needleworkview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Clifford Samuel writing deskview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Crook William writing deskview full entry
Reference: Tasmanian contributions to the Universal Exhibition of Industry at Paris, 1855. [Some art and craft included with remarks on each item. With index.]
Publishing details: [Hobart Town, H. & C. Best, Daily Courier Office, Collins Street, Hobart. [1855]. [This copy a leather-bound facsimile published 2021]
Mackay Donald view full entry
Reference: see A Series of Photographs, article ‘Inland Australia’ by Randolph Bedford [photographs by & Dr H Basedow
Publishing details: Art in Australia, 1928 [ex libris AFTRS]
1923 Exhibition of Australian Art in London
view full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of Australian Art in London, 1923, A Record of the Exhibition held at the Royal Academy and Organised by the Society of Artists Sydney [for prices of some works see British Empire Exhibition, Catalogue of the Palace of Arts, 1924]

Publishing details: Art in Australia Limited, 1923, hc, edition limited to 1000 copies of which this is no. 323
1923 Exhibition of Australian Art Official Catalogueview full entry
Reference: see Catalogue of an exhibition of the works of Australian Artists 1923 - held under the auspices of Society of Artists, Sydney, New South Wales in Australian Galleries, Burlington House, Piccadilly. 213 exhibits listed. Lists patrons in both Australia and England. Foreword by Sydney Ure Smith. Introduction by Lionel Lindsay. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Society of Artists, 1923, pb,
Williams Fred - view full entry
Reference: Fred Williams in the You Yangs catalogue [’Fred Williams in the You Yangs brought together the ground-breaking paintings, drawings and etchings that represent the turning point in Fred Williams’s art.

Williams started working in the You Yangs in 1962. It is his work of this period that defined what is commonly considered his ‘classic’ interpretation of the Australian landscape. This exhibition revealed Williams’s enduring fascination with the You Yangs as a recurring subject (among others) for his painting throughout the 1960s to the late 1970s, and surveyed in marvellous depth the artist’s working method.’]
Publishing details: Geelong, Vic. : Geelong Gallery, 2017, 107 pages : chiefly colour illustrations, facsimiles, portraits
Ref: 1000
McCubbin Frederickview full entry
Reference: Fredrick McCubbin - Whisperings in the wattle boughs. [’The Frederick McCubbin—Whispering in the wattle bough catalogue accompanies two Geelong Gallery curated exhibitions Frederick McCubbin—Whispering in the wattle boughs and Exhume the grave—McCubbin and contemporary art.
The 125 anniversary catalogue includes a foreword by Geelong Gallery Director & CEO Jason Smith and essays by Senior Curator, Lisa Sullivan. The catalogue provides fresh insight into McCubbin’s engagement with the Australian bush and explores the work of six contemporary artists in Exhume the grave—McCubbin and contemporary art and their reflections and re-interpretation of the themes presented in McCubbin’s oeuvre. Designed by Pidgeon Ward’]
Publishing details: Geelong Art Gallery, 2021, 88pp.
Ref: 1009
Bulletin Thw view full entry
Reference: The Bulletin : exhibition on black & white drawings from the Bulletin 1895-1956, Art Gallery of Western Australia, 11 November - 4 December 1957
Publishing details: AGWA, 1957] 
1 v. : ill.
Ref: 1000
Complete Potter Hand Built Ceramics Theview full entry
Reference: The Complete Potter Hand Built Ceramics, Jane Waller
Publishing details: Kangaroo Press. Sydney. 1990 (Ist Edition) Ob4to, XIII, 92pp. Hardcover, pict bds
Ref: 1000
potteryview full entry
Reference: see The Complete Potter Hand Built Ceramics, Jane Waller
Publishing details: Kangaroo Press. Sydney. 1990 (Ist Edition) Ob4to, XIII, 92pp. Hardcover, pict bds
Jobson Sandraview full entry
Reference: Sandra Jobson , b. 1942
Author and Illustrator, Sandra Jobson, was born in 1942 and was brought up on the Sydney waterfront. Her anaesthetist father introduced her to the rock pools of Long Reef and taught her to look under rocks “to find the most amazing things” (Alomes, 1999, p.201). Jobson attended the Julian Ashton Art School, Sydney, and subsequently studied history at the University of Sydney. After graduating with a Bachelor of Arts, Jobson became a journalist. In an era when female journalists were beginning to be recognised and released from their traditional roles of reporting on the prescriptive “women’s pages” in newspapers in Australia, Jobson was the first woman to work on general news at the Sydney Morning Herald, moving to the UK in the 1960s, to work in their London office. 
Returning to Sydney in the late 1960s, with her husband Robert Darroch, in the 1970s and 1980s Sandra Jobson Darroch contributed to numerous Australian magazines and newspapers, including articles for the Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian Consolidated Press, and later, The Australian, published in Melbourne. Jobson writes in the genres of Australian Studies, biography, journalism and literary criticism.
Jobson has published nine books, mostly on local history. As a writer she is best known as Sandra Jobson Darroch for her recently revised and republished biography of Lady Ottoline Morrell. Once Upon a Vase is her only book for children. 
Alomes, Stephen, When London Calls: The Expatriation of Australian Creative Artists, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 201- 206. 
Darroch, Sandra Jobson, Garsington Revisited, The Legend of Lady Ottoline Morrell, brought up to date, 2017, Indiana University Press, Indiana.

Bio prepared by Margaret Bromley, mbromle5@une.edu.au,  brom_ken@bigpond.net.au
Publishing details: http://www.omc.obta.al.uw.edu.pl/myth-survey/creator/700
Jobson Sandraview full entry
Reference: Once Upon a Vase. Greek legends retold and illustrated in the style of a Greek vase.
Publishing details: Macmillan. Melbourne. 1970 (Ist Edition) Ob 4to. In d/w
Ref: 1000
Grave Look at History view full entry
Reference: A Grave Look at History - Glimpses of a Vanishing Form of Folk Art. ‘Covers the fascination and usefulness of monuments for the historian, sociologist and biographer’. Illustrated.
Publishing details: John Ferguson. Sydney. 1980 (Ist Edition) Sm 4to, VIII, 143pp. Hardcover, d/w
Ref: 1000
monumentsview full entry
Reference: see A Grave Look at History - Glimpses of a Vanishing Form of Folk Art. ‘Covers the fascination and usefulness of monuments for the historian, sociologist and biographer’. Illustrated.
Publishing details: John Ferguson. Sydney. 1980 (Ist Edition) Sm 4to, VIII, 143pp. Hardcover, d/w
gravestonesview full entry
Reference: see A Grave Look at History - Glimpses of a Vanishing Form of Folk Art. ‘Covers the fascination and usefulness of monuments for the historian, sociologist and biographer’. Illustrated.
Publishing details: John Ferguson. Sydney. 1980 (Ist Edition) Sm 4to, VIII, 143pp. Hardcover, d/w
History of Australia in Wood Carvingsview full entry
Reference: see History of Australia in Wood Carvings, by Mabel Daveney Lemaire. Glimpses of Australia's history and culture illustrated by wood carvings.
Publishing details: Published by the author. Sydney. ND (c1970) 4to, 86pp. In pict bds,
Wood Carvingsview full entry
Reference: see History of Australia in Wood Carvings, by Mabel Daveney Lemaire. Glimpses of Australia's history and culture illustrated by wood carvings.
Publishing details: Published by the author. Sydney. ND (c1970) 4to, 86pp. In pict bds,
Carvingsview full entry
Reference: see History of Australia in Wood Carvings, by Mabel Daveney Lemaire. Glimpses of Australia's history and culture illustrated by wood carvings.
Publishing details: Published by the author. Sydney. ND (c1970) 4to, 86pp. In pict bds,
Lemaire Mabel Daveney view full entry
Reference: History of Australia in Wood Carvings, by Mabel Daveney Lemaire. Glimpses of Australia's history and culture illustrated by wood carvings.
Publishing details: Published by the author. Sydney. ND (c1970) 4to, 86pp. In pict bds,
Ref: 1000
Horse and Rider in Australian legendview full entry
Reference: Horse and Rider in Australian legend, by Nanette Mantle.
Explores the myth of the stockworker, boundary rider, bushranger and sportsman and their relationships with the horse in 19thC literature and art.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press. Melbourne. 2004 (Ist Edition) 8vo, IX, 251pp. Hardcover.
Ref: 1000
Horses in artview full entry
Reference: see Horse and Rider in Australian legend, by Nanette Mantle.
Explores the myth of the stockworker, boundary rider, bushranger and sportsman and their relationships with the horse in 19thC literature and art.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press. Melbourne. 2004 (Ist Edition) 8vo, IX, 251pp. Hardcover.
bushrangers in artview full entry
Reference: see Horse and Rider in Australian legend, by Nanette Mantle.
Explores the myth of the stockworker, boundary rider, bushranger and sportsman and their relationships with the horse in 19thC literature and art.
Publishing details: The Miegunyah Press. Melbourne. 2004 (Ist Edition) 8vo, IX, 251pp. Hardcover.
Newcastle artview full entry
Reference: see The Nobby's Collection, by Brown, Kevin & Jurisich, Mark.Catalogue of paintings focusing on the single theme of the headland at the entrance to the Hunter River at Newcastle NSW.
Publishing details: Published by the Authors. 1993. Ob 4to, 64pp. Stiffened wraps, flaps, ex cond.
Newcastle artview full entry
Reference: see The Nobbys Collection, Kevin Brown, Mark Juisich. A collection of artworks spanning 200 years and which focus on Nobbys Head in Newcastle. Numerous illustrations of prints, drawings and paintings. With biographical details on artists.
Publishing details: Kevin Brown, Mark Juisich, 1993, pb, 64pp. signed by both authors
Zero Tolerance Street Artists view full entry
Reference: Zero Tolerance Street Artists of the Blue Mountains. By Wheatley, Jarrod Linkston & Adams, Peter.Examines attitudes and impacts of graffitti.
Publishing details:
Lettuce Spray Productions. Katoomba. 2011. 4to, 157pp. Lam bds,
Ref: 1000
Street Artists view full entry
Reference: see Zero Tolerance Street Artists of the Blue Mountains. By Wheatley, Jarrod Linkston & Adams, Peter.Examines attitudes and impacts of graffitti.
Publishing details:
Lettuce Spray Productions. Katoomba. 2011. 4to, 157pp. Lam bds,
graffittiview full entry
Reference: see Zero Tolerance Street Artists of the Blue Mountains. By Wheatley, Jarrod Linkston & Adams, Peter.Examines attitudes and impacts of graffitti.
Publishing details: Lettuce Spray Productions. Katoomba. 2011. 4to, 157pp. Lam bds,
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: Tales From the Heptameron of Marguerite of Navarre. Illustrated by Norman Lindsay. Introduction by A.D. Hope, 28 drawings by Lindsay,
Publishing details: M.U.P. Melbourne. 1976 (Ist Edition) Roy 4to, 153pp. d/w, in original posting box. Limited edition of 1000
Ref: 1000
Leak Billview full entry
Reference: Die Laughing: The Biography of Bill Leak, by Fred Pawle. [’How does a young man who learns jazz and classical piano, scours Europe’s great art galleries for artistic enlightenment and falls in love with women from all over the world go on to become reviled as a bigot?
The answer has less to do with him than it does with his critics. As cartoonist Bill Leak discovered, all it takes is to express an opinion that differs from today’s neo-authoritarian narrative.
When Leak, late in life, provoked the wrath of politically correct mobs and institutions, he didn’t flinch, adhering to what he knew to be the truth and ridiculing his detractors with his brilliant caricatures and savage intellect.
These battles were significant and symbolic, but should not define Leak’s life and work. Fred Pawle has spent three years researching and interviewing dozens of Leak’s friends and colleagues to create this intimate and honest biography.
Now, for the first time, here is the whole beautiful but occasionally troubled story behind an extraordinarily gifted Australian artist, cartoonist, writer and raconteur.’]
Publishing details: (Institute of Public Affairs), Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2021,
Ref: 1000
Sydney Harbour Bridgeview full entry
Reference: Sydney Bridge Celebrations 1932
Smith, Sydney Ure & Gellert, Leon (editors),
many advertisements in colour and b&w. Includes the programme of the official opening and celebrations. Lots of information about the bridge and Sydney. With reproductions of artworks by leading Australian artists. Photographs include many by E. O. Hoppe.
Publishing details: Art in Australia Limited, Sydney, 1932, green and silver covers. 80pp plus advertisements. Ex Libris [Leys Institute Public Library copy with minor staps inside each cover.
Harbour Bridgeview full entry
Reference: Sydney Bridge Celebrations 1932
Smith, Sydney Ure & Gellert, Leon (editors),
many advertisements in colour and b&w. Includes the programme of the official opening and celebrations. Lots of information about the bridge and Sydney. With reproductions of artworks by leading Australian artists. Photographs include many by E. O. Hoppe.
Publishing details: Art in Australia Limited, Sydney, 1932, green and silver covers. 80pp plus advertisements. Ex Libris [Leys Institute Public Library copy with minor staps inside each cover.
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: SYDNEY HARBOUR AUSTRALIA (POSTER).
Australian National Travel Association, c. 1935. Travel poster illustrated by Sydney Harbour, centered on the harbour, with a ferry and sailboats, with the Sydney Harbour Bridge in the top right background. A color lithograph, 20 x 24.75" (50.8 x 62.25 cm. Further text; "Painting by Will Ashton R.0.I. W.T. Baker & Co Ltd. Engravers and printers. Australian National Travel Association."
Baker W T & Co Ltd Engravers and printersview full entry
Reference: SYDNEY HARBOUR AUSTRALIA (POSTER).
Australian National Travel Association, c. 1935. Travel poster illustrated by Sydney Harbour, centered on the harbour, with a ferry and sailboats, with the Sydney Harbour Bridge in the top right background. A color lithograph, 20 x 24.75" (50.8 x 62.25 cm. Further text; "Painting by Will Ashton R.0.I. W.T. Baker & Co Ltd. Engravers and printers. Australian National Travel Association."
Henry Victorview full entry
Reference: [Sydney; Real Estate Development; Victor Henry, del.
THE BEAUTIFUL "RIVIERA"
Sydney: Simmons Ltd., nd, (1929). Maps. A large pictorial map map of the development north of Sydney on the shoreline of Ku-ring-Gai Chase with Pittwater, Broken Bay and Hawkesbury River, with the hand bill advertising the sale of lots.

"The distance from Sydney is some 3 miles less than Palm Beach which is on the opposite side of Pittwater where thousands of people flock each week... The opportunities of making The Beautiful "Riviera" the most wonderful Elite week end Holiday Resort in in sic) New South Wales is here for a very small fraction of the amount to be realised. S. W. Stokes"

with the hand bill: The Beautiful Riviera Estate [Proposed Development Of West Head Area, Ku-Ring-Gai Chase, Sydney]. From the text: "This property consisting of 639 acres is the most picturesque in the County of Cumberland… £1,000,000 to be made out of The Riviera by correct handling.… The completion of the North Shore Bridge [Sydney Harbour Bridge] in two years’ time (1931) will materially improve the opportunities…"
From the Dictionary of Sydney: "The area which now forms the northern portion of Ku-Ring-Gai Chase National Park, passed through the hands of various owners. During the 1920s-30s several attempts were made to subdivide and develop the area, before it was resumed by the NSW Government just before WWII, and incorporated into the National Park." 4to, 4 pp. Single fold leaflet with text and printed photos on the outer fold and color map on the inside.

The Powerhouse Museum holds a copy of the lithograph and the brochure. (maas.museum:126192, 92/198). Color lithograph, image 27 1/2 x 37 1/2" with 1 1/4" border on all sides with the 4pp brochure. [with Antipodean Books, October, 2021].
Westbrook Eric 1915-2005view full entry
Reference: see
see Gibsons Australian & International Art
October 24, 2021 lot 40: ERIC WESTBROOK (1915-2005)
Bush 1988
watercolour and ink on paper
monogramed lower right
47 x 65cm

PROVENANCE
The Dr George and Mrs Ann Geroe Collection, Castlemaine
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: Norman Lindsay - Master craftsman etcher Rose Lindsay Master etching printmaker.
Publishing details: Bloomfield Galleries, 1974, large folf-out catalogue, edition of 55
Ref: 1000
Lanser Edithview full entry
Reference: Caroline Listens [childrens book], by Edith Lanser, illustrated by the author
Publishing details: Australasian Pub. Co., 1948,
Ref: 1000
Lahey Vida 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot 6:
VIDA LAHEY
(1882 - 1968)
(CARTS IN EAGLE STREET), c.1913
oil on board
39.5 x 49.5 cm
signed lower right: F. V LAHEY
PROVENANCE
Possibly: James Herbert Forrest, Charters Towers, Queensland
Thence by descent
The estate of Michael Forrest, Melbourne
E. J. Ainger Pty Ltd, Melbourne, 1 August 2021, lot 242 (as ‘European Street Scene with Horses’)
Company collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
probably: Exhibition of Paintings, Empire Chambers, Brisbane, 13 – 18 October 1924, cat. 6 (as ‘The banyan trees, Eagle street’)
RELATED WORKS
The Carter's Rest, Eagle Street, 1913, watercolour on paper, 33.0 x 42.0 cm, Exhibition of Paintings, Empire Chambers, Brisbane, 13 – 18 October 1924, cat. 12, in the collection of the Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
The carter’s resting place, oil on board, 20.5 x 20.5 cm, Oil and Watercolours by Vida Lahey, Athenaeum Hall, Melbourne, 29 September – 10 October 1925, cat. 31, Private collection
CATALOGUE TEXT
At the junction of Creek and Eagle streets in Brisbane, a group of horse-drawn carts take shelter from the heat of the Queensland sun. Despite the suggested tranquility, this urban island, captured by Vida Lahey in (Carts in Eagle Street), c.1913, was only fifty metres from the bustling commercial hub of wharves and warehouses located on the banks of the Brisbane River. Here, ‘draymen and cabmen ... waited at the reserve for hire (as did) waterside workers who waited at ‘The Triangle’ each morning to be hired as day-labourers.’1 Visible at the centre of the composition are wooden sheds containing public urinals for the men’s convenience (later removed in the 1970s) and to the right, just out of view, was a water fountain set up for the horses and workers which survived at the site until the Second World War. At the rear is the ‘old’ Dalgetty Building (1883 – 84), and presiding over the whole scene is a majestic Banyan fig tree and two figs planted in the 1870s by Walter Hill, superintendent of the nearby City Botanic Gardens. Due to their prominence, it is possible that this work is actually The banyan trees, Eagle Street, exhibited in the artist’s solo exhibition in 1924.

Eagle Street was once Brisbane’s ‘most romantic street’, full of picturesque maritime personalities who populated the ‘shabby, friendly quays and lanes that debouch on the river.’2 In (Carts in Eagle Street), Vida Lahey set up her easel on The Triangle’s third boundary of Elizabeth Street, from which she also painted The carter’s rest, Eagle Street, 1913, now in the collection of the Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art.3 Initially trained at the Brisbane Central Technical College under Godfrey Rivers, Lahey moved to Melbourne in 1905 to study at the National Gallery Art School under Frederick McCubbin and Bernard Hall. She attracted public notice two years later when she was awarded first prize for still life in the landmark First Australian Exhibition of Women’s Work held at the Royal Exhibition Building in 1907. She subsequently returned to Brisbane and by the time she painted (Carts in Eagle Street), Lahey was already noted for her empathetic portrayal of workers, both domestic and commercial, through such works as Monday morning, 1912, a powerful portrait of two women laboring in her family’s laundry. Gifted that same year to the Queensland Art Gallery, this life-size painting quickly became one of the most popular works in the collection. However, little of Lahey’s output prior to these years survives due to a fire which burnt her studio down in 1912 with all her paintings.4

As such, (Carts in Eagle Street) marks a renewal of practice for the artist. During the Great War, she based herself in London, and studied further in England and France. On her return, Lahey was peripatetic for some years with periods in Hobart, Melbourne and Sydney before finally re-settling in Brisbane in 1929. She would return to painting images of the rapidly changing city, particularly for a solo exhibition in 1932 (see lot. 7), but the number of surviving pre-war works that have survived is few. Inevitably, the drowsy ambience of this scene is long gone, overtaken by the increasing use of motor-driven transport which eventually supplanted the ranks of horse-drawn carts. Today, only the heritage-listed Banyan tree and its White Fig companions remain.

1. East, J. W., ‘The lost heritage of Eagle Street: a case study of the commercial architecture of Brisbane 1860-1930, 2019, p.16 at www.espace.library.uq.edu.au/data/UQ_733239 (viewed 17.09.21)
2. ‘Growing City. Romance and Adventure: Street of Adventure’, Courier-Mail, Brisbane, 26 September 1933, p.12
3. The carter’s rest, Eagle Street is incorrectly described on the Queensland Art Gallery’s website as being on the corner of Eagle and Queen’s streets, which is approximately 100 metres further north and features the Moonie Memorial fountain (extant).
4. See Lloyd Rees, 1988, cited in MacAulay, B, Songs of Colour: The art of Vida Lahey, exhibition catalogue, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, 1989, p.38

ANDREW GAYNOR

lot 7:
VIDA LAHEY
(1882 - 1968)
EARLY MORNING, BRISBANE RIVER, 1932
oil on canvas on board
51.5 x 76.5 cm
signed and dated lower right: V. LAHEY 32
PROVENANCE
The Canberra Gallery, Brisbane
Dr Thomas Montagu Mansfield, Brisbane                                                                              
Thence by descent
Sally, Lady Croft, Armidale, New South Wales
Thence by descent
Private collection, New South Wales
EXHIBITED
Exhibition of Paintings by Vida Lahey, Fine Art Society’s Gallery, Melbourne, 19 – 31 October 1932, cat. 2
Vida Lahey: Exhibition of Paintings of Brisbane and of Other Things, Union Trustee Chambers, Brisbane, 20 May – 3 June 1936, cat. 16 (as ‘Early Morning’)
Vida Lahey: Exhibition of Paintings, The Canberra Gallery, Brisbane, 9 – 25 November 1944, cat. 16 
LITERATURE
Young, B., ‘Great colourist: the art of Miss Vida Lahey’, The Herald, Melbourne, 18 October
1932, p. 1
Herbert, H., ‘A Brisbane Artist’, The Age, Melbourne, 19 October 1932, p. 11
‘Vida Lahey’s Art’, The Brisbane Courier, Brisbane, 22 October 1932, p. 14
‘Vida Lahey’s Art’, The Telegraph, Brisbane, 20 May 1936, p. 7
‘Fine Work in 1-Woman Show’, The Telegraph, Brisbane, 8 November 1944, p. 8
MacAulay, B., Supplement to Songs of Colour. The Art of Vida Lahey, Works Located to 1989, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, 1989, pp. 9, 34, 37, 40
We are grateful to Joanna Bosse, Curator and her colleagues at Bayside Gallery for their assistance with this catalogue entry.
CATALOGUE TEXT
Vida Lahey’s exhibition at the Fine Arts Society’s Gallery in Melbourne in 1932 featured seventeen oil paintings, the second largest of which was Early morning, Brisbane River, 1932. It was an immediate hit with the critics. Harold Herbert, writing for The Age, considered the painting to be an oil of ‘high order ... an admirably painted stretch of land and blue water, spacey in conception, and simple yet convincing in treatment.’1 Blamire Young, in his review for The Herald, described Lahey as a ‘great colourist’, and that her evocation of the early morning riverscape was marked by its ‘pure light and the hush of dawn.’2 Arthur Streeton was also an admirer of the ‘fine qualities of light and air’ in her work,3as was George Bell who considered her to be ‘an artist of consummate taste, an exquisite sense of colour, and a fine sense of composition.’4

210679 VIDA LAHEY.JPG

Vida Lahey profiled (centre front)
‘Women who are prominent in Brisbane’s Art World’,
The Telegraph, 8 July 1934.
John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane
Lahey was not only a celebrated artist; she was also a noted author, educator and arts advocate, conferred a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1958 for her services to culture and the arts in Queensland. An early talent, she was awarded first prize for landscape by the Australian Natives’ Association, Brisbane in 1903, before she moved to Melbourne to commence formal studies at the National Gallery Art School in 1905. Two years later, whilst still a student, she won first prize for still life in the landmark First Australian Exhibition of Women’s Work held at the Exhibition Building. However, it was the painting Monday morning, 1912, which really launched her career, a powerful study of two young women labouring in the Lahey family’s household laundry. It entered the collection of the Queensland Art Gallery that same year. The outbreak of war saw her travel to London and at its conclusion, she took classes in Paris in 1919, first at the Académie Calorossi, then with Ethel Carrick Fox; and in St. Ives the following year with New Zealand artist Frances Hodgkins. The 1920s saw further travels through Europe before Lahey settled permanently in Queensland in 1929. 
 
In Early morning, Brisbane River, 1932, the artist captures a sparkling image of an urban river landscape in its heyday. To the right can be seen the old Naval Stores which still stand on the site of a former quarry, the scars of which are evident in the adjacent cliffs. Across the water lies a glimpse of the Brisbane City Botanic Gardens buttressing the former Eagle Street wharves, one of the city’s busiest locations in the 1930s. Characterised by its ‘picturesque personality of salt seas and sailor men’,5 Eagle Street’s row of low sheds marked the locations of Raff’s Wharf, Newton’s Wharf and Barkers Wharf. Presiding over these was a streetscape of multi-storey warehouses once described as being ‘probably, as a group, the best in Brisbane.’6 These architectural symbols of trade and prosperity included Harpers Building (1889); the Mutual Life Association of Australasia (1888); and Parbury’s (1912); with the tallest and newest being the Orient Steam Navigation Company headquarters (1930). Sadly, all were swept away by building booms in the 1960s and early 1980s.  

1. Herbert, H., ‘A Brisbane artist: The art of Vida Lahey’, The Age, 19 October 1932, p. 112.
2.Young, B., ‘Great colourist: the art of Miss Vida Lahey’, The Herald, Melbourne, 18 October 1932, p. 13.
3.Streeton, A., ‘Miss Vida Lahey’s art: oils and watercolours. Distinguished flower painting’, Argus, Melbourne, 19 October 1932, p. 54.
4.George Bell. Quoted on catalogue for: Vida Lahey: Exhibition of Paintings of Brisbane and of Other Things, Union Trustee Chambers, Brisbane, 19365.
5.‘Growing City. Romance and Adventure: Street of Adventure’, Courier-Mail, Brisbane, 26 September 1933, p. 126.
6.‘Real Estate. Queensland Trustees: Building extensions’, The Daily Mail, Brisbane, 14 October 1924, p. 14 
ANDREW GAYNOR

Beckett Clariceview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
8 and 9
Catalogue includes extensive catalogue entry:
CLARICE BECKETT
(1887 - 1935)
THE TAN, SOUTH YARRA, c.1925
oil on board
34.5 x 45.5 cm
signed lower right: C. Beckett

CLARICE BECKETT
(1887 - 1935)
VIEW ACROSS THE YARRA TOWARDS GOVERNMENT HOUSE, c.1931
oil on board
25.5 x 35.5 cm
signed lower left: C. Beckett
framer's label attached verso: John Thallon, Melbourne
Davidson Bessieview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot 10
BESSIE DAVIDSON
(1879 - 1965)
LECTURE AU JARDIN, c.1935
oil on plywood
94.0 x 114.0 cm
signed lower right: Bessie Davidson
PROVENANCE
Private collection, Normandy, France
Ornes Enchères, Alençon, France, 31 May 2014, lot 11 (as ‘La lecture au jardin’)
Private collection, United Kingdom
Daguerre Auctions, Paris, 27 May 2015, lot 252 (as ‘Femme à la chaise longue’)
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne
Justin Miller Art, Sydney
Private collection, New South Wales
EXHIBITED
Collectors’ Exhibition, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 6 August – 29 October 2016, (illus. in exhibition catalogue, pp. 46 – 7)
Bessie Davidson & Sally Smart – Two artists and the Parisian avant–garde, Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 20 March – 26 July 2020
LITERATURE
Curtin, P., (ed.), Bessie Davidson: An Australian Impressionist in Paris, Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 2020, illus. front cover, pp. 45, 64 and illus. front cover
CATALOGUE TEXT

210688 BESSIE DAVIDSON IN HER MONTPARNASSE STUDIO.JPG


Bessie Davidson in her
Montparnasse studio, 1913
photographer unknown
Bessie Davidson’s paintings have an engaging French accent, Gallic in mood and sophistication. Her still lifes, such as Autumn Table at Villeneuve, c.1938 (private collection), express the pleasures of food and wine, of seasonal tables abundant with fruits and flowers. Interiors are feminine and domestic, intimately reflective of those who live in them, while figures are elegantly at ease, attired in light colours of lively of texture. In her recent essay on Davidson, Tansy Curtin wrote: ‘Davidson’s depictions of women at leisure are perhaps the most intriguing and revealing of all her works. These women appear passive, not actively engaged with the viewer’.1
 
Davidson was born in Adelaide and studied under Margaret Preston (then Rose McPherson), first visiting Paris with her in 1904. Attending the Académie de la Grande, she exhibited in the Salon de la Société des Artistes Français and the Societe des Beaux-Arts. Although returning to Adelaide in 1906, four years later she finally settled in Paris. Her apartment on the Rue Boissonade, Montparnasse became her home and studio. Like Rupert Bunny, her countryman, she exhibited regularly in Paris, gaining much critical recognition.
 
With ever-deepening French connections, Davidson’s life-long love is reflected in her numerous activities, associations and awards. Working as a nurse during World War I, in 1931 she was made a Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur for art and humanity. The first Australian woman so honoured, she was also the first to be elected to the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts. A foundation member of the Salon des Tuileries and the Société Nationale des Indépendants, in 1930 she became Vice-President of the Société Nationale de Femmes Artistes Modernes. Although she loved France, like Bunny, she never gave up her Australian citizenship.
 
The profiling of figures, seated indoors or in quiet, sunlit gardens, interested Davidson throughout her life in paintings characterised by the interplay of textured surfaces and pictorial illusions of depth. Fine examples include A French Interior, 1911 and Mother and Child, 1914, both in the collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Together with Lecture au Jardin, (Reading in the Garden), c.1935, each shares eye-catching figures and their gentle curves of relaxation.
 
Recording the visual pleasures of the everyday with the light-filled verve of French Impressionism, Davidson later developed a more prominent sense of form and compositional structure allied to Paul Cézanne and Post Impressionism. It is this ‘Cézannesque’ style, which Davidson’s biographer, Penelope Little, describes as characterising ‘her most confident and productive years’.2 Celebrated in Lecture au Jardin, its brushwork is full of variety, with both vertical and horizontal strokes creating a fascinating picture surface. Images morph into the formal elements of painting - composition, colour, form and texture. Bathed in entrancing light, colours of subtle combination and harmonies of powerful diagonals beguile as one is drawn through the trees into the landscape beyond. Growing in self-assurance, Davidson moved more towards the semi-abstract from the 1920s onwards. A ready illustration of this transition is provided by comparing Femme au Canapé Rayé, 1919 (private collection)3 with the work on offer, and the closely related sundrenched, La Robe Jaune (The Yellow Dress), 1931 (private collection, Sydney).
 
Acquired by the prestigious Musée d’Art Moderne, Musée d’Orsay and the Musée du Petit Palais, in Paris, in 1999 the Australian Embassy, Paris, presented the exhibition, Bessie Davidson: Une Australienne en France, 1880-1965. And last year, the Bendigo Art Gallery staged Bessie Davidson & Sally Smart – Two artists and the Parisian avant-garde, which included Lecture au Jardin.
 
Many years ago, a correspondent wrote from London that Bessie Davidson holds: ‘a distinguished position in the art world, perhaps the most gifted of Australian women painters’.4 

1. Curtin, T., ‘Bessie Davidson: Painter of domestic avant-garde’, in Bessie Davidson: An Australian Impressionist in Paris, Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 2020, p. 13
2. Little, P., A Studio in Montparnasse; Bessie Davidson: An Australian in Paris, Craftsman House, Melbourne 2003, p. 87
3. Ibid., p. 179 (illus.)
4. ‘Letter from London: Miss Davidson succeeds’, News, Adelaide, 12 March 1929, p. 6. cited in Curtin, op.cit., p. 11

DAVID THOMAS

Nicholas Hilda Rixview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot 11:
PROVENANCE
Private collection, France
Sotheby’s, Melbourne, 21 December 1999, lot 122 (as ‘A Woman Cleaning’)
Private collection, Melbourne
CATALOGUE TEXT
In the years before World War One, a great number of Australian artists travelled to Europe to study, a large contingent of whom were women. All were determined to expand their creative possibilities beyond that provided by their home country; and Hilda Rix Nicholas was one of their most successful. By 1913, the local press hailed her as ‘one of the most brilliant hopes of our younger contemporary school ... (with) the right idea of movement and character.’1 Accepted into the 1911 and 1913 Paris Salon, her entries had been hung ‘on the line’, with the result that she was invited to join the membership of the Société des Peintres Orientalistes Français, also known as the Orientalists. This was an incredible achievement for a young Australian woman, as was the purchase of her work for the French Government; and La Récureuse, c.1914, dates from this remarkable phase of the artist’s early career.

Rix Nicholas was disciplined, talented and hard-working. She studied first at the National Gallery School in Melbourne between 1902 and 1905 with Frederick McCubbin as Drawing Master.2 In 1906, Hilda, her mother Elizabeth and older sister Elsie, mounted their own shared exhibition in Melbourne and the following year, all three departed for Europe with the express intention of Hilda gaining further tuition with a variety of teachers in London and Paris. Even though these were radical days for modernism’s avant-garde, Rix Nicholas aspired instead ‘to traditional values. Her dream was to be hung in the exhibitions of the conservative institutions.’3

Between 1910 and 1914, Rix Nicholas spent significant time each year in Étaples in north-west France, and La Récureuse was most likely created there using a local model. It is also likely that Iso Rae, a gallery school colleague of Elizabeth Rix, invited them to this town where she had lived for nearly twenty years (other Australian artists had also painted there previously, including Rupert Bunny and Arthur Streeton). The Rix studio was one of four built in the gardens of the Monthuys-Pannier family and Hilda was delighted to discover one of the others was occupied by the venerable and highly respected Jules Adler, an artist she considered ‘one of the greatest genre painters of France’.4 Adler was celebrated for his images which focussed on the daily lives of ordinary people, particularly workers, and Rix Nicholas benefited from his camaraderie and ‘invaluable criticisms’, as had Iso Rae before her.5 In 1912, Rix Nicholas travelled to Morocco and the local market stall-holders were impressed by the sketches she made of them, plus – importantly – by her interest in them as people, not just aesthetic tropes. This empathetic compassion extends to La Récureuse. Seated in three-quarter pose at yet another laborious chore, the young récureuse (‘she who scours’) wears a traditional starched cloth hat, work-clothes and wooden-soled slippers.6 Mostly subdued in palette, flourishes such as the violet hues in the shadows of the headwear give increased warmth to the composition. Three other paintings by Rix Nicholas of similarly dressed women can also be dated to 1914: Grandmère (Art Gallery of New South Wales); In Picardy (National Gallery of Victoria); and A mother of France Australian War Memorial). When viewed alongside, La Récureuse adds further depths of understanding to this powerful trio of women’s portraits.

1. Quote from Notre Gazette, Paris, c.1912 re-reprinted in Hilda Rix Nicholas 1884-1961: Retrospective exhibition of paintings and drawings, exhibition catalogue, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 1971
2. Elizabeth Rix had also studied at the Gallery School between 1880 and 1883, with McCubbin as a fellow student. Other students included Arthur Streeton, Rupert Bunny and Iso Rae.
3. Travers, R., Hilda: the life of Hilda Rix Nicholas, Thames and Hudson, Melbourne, 2021, p.38
4. Ibid., p.47
5. Ibid., p.48
6. The author thanks Lucie Reeves-Smith for this translation

ANDREW GAYNOR
HILDA RIX NICHOLAS
(1884 - 1961)
LA RÉCUREUSE (THE SCULLERY MAID), c.1914
oil on canvas
59.0 x 46.0 cm
signed lower right: E H Rix
Admans Josephine Muntzview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot

12
JOSEPHINE MUNTZ ADAMS
(1862 - 1949)
SELF PORTRAIT, c.1896
oil on canvas
31.0 x 19.0 cm
PROVENANCE
Emil Aldor, Melbourne
Deutscher Fine Art, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above February 1980
Thence by descent
Private collection, Victoria
LITERATURE
Self Portrait with Palette, c. 1920s, oil on canvas on board, 31.0 x 24.0 cm, private collection
CATALOGUE TEXT
Josephine Muntz Adams is an artist who deserves to be better known. At the height of her career, her works commanded ‘several hundred pounds a year’ and she charged (the high price of) ‘150 pounds for a portrait.’1 In particular, Muntz Adams was acclaimed for her ‘touch of genius’ in the ability to capture the personality of her sitters through the expression in their eyes.2 She initially studied at the National Gallery Art School during the 1880s alongside Aby Altson, David Davies and Arthur Streeton, and was a peer to Clara Southern and Jane Price. At the age of twenty-eight, Muntz Adams travelled to Europe for further training and due to her youthful appearance, it is plausible that this vital self portrait was painted during this overseas sojourn, which lasted until 1896 when the artist was thirty-four.
 
Self Portrait shows Muntz Adams as she wanted to be seen – active, industrious, and above all, creative. A gifted pianist and the eldest of seven children, she was born in Kyneton before the family moved to Prahran, where her father was subsequently elected Mayor. Her mother was a supporter of the suffragette movement, and her younger sister became one of the earliest female science graduates of the University of Melbourne. Muntz Adams began her art training at the age of fourteen at the Prahran School of Design before enrolling at the Gallery School in 1882 under George Folingsby. Her major student painting, Care, 1887, was so acclaimed that it was purchased by the Queensland National Art Gallery, Brisbane - therebybecoming the first painting by an Australian artist to enter that collection.3 In Europe, she studied initially at the Académie Colarossi in Paris, which encouraged a greater freedom of expression than the more popular Académie Julien; and in 1892, Muntz Adams achieved the notable distinction of having a portrait ‘hung on the line’ at the Paris Salon. She then chose to study under renowned portraitist Hubert von Herkomer in the English artists’ colony of Bushey ‘where between 200 and 300 painters have settled partly out of respect for the great portrait painter and partly because Bushey has a certain fascination of colour.’4 Muntz Adams returned to Melbourne in 1896, married two years later and moved to Brisbane. However, she continued to exhibit overseas and in 1899, was awarded a gold medal for portraiture in the Greater Britain Exhibition in London.
 
Following her husband’s sudden death in 1903, Muntz Adams returned to Melbourne and served on the Victorian Artists’ Society council for many years. Her house in Malvern had an attic studio occupying the top floor which ‘resembled an oriental bazaar with velvet hangings, Persian carpets, couches draped with silken shawls and Muntz Adams’ paintings, which covered the walls and were stacked against them.’5 A major retrospective, held in 1943 at the Athenaeum Gallery when the artist was eighty years old, was opened by Sir Keith Murdoch. In his speech, Murdoch rightfully claimed that ‘the history of Australian art ... should be more familiar with the work of Josephine Muntz Adams. [She] has every right to a permanent position in Australian painting.’6
 
1. Moore, W., ‘Careers for Australian Girls’, The New Idea: a women’s home journal for Australia, Melbourne, 6 December 1907
2. ‘Art and Artists’, Table Talk, Melbourne, 2 October 1896, p. 6
3. Subsequently re-named the Queensland Art Gallery
4. ‘Art and Artists’, op. cit.,
5. Hammond, V. and Peers, J., Completing the picture: women artists and the Heidelberg era, Heide Park and Art Gallery, Melbourne, 1992, p. 58
6. Sir Keith Murdoch, 1943, see ibid.
 
ANDREW GAYNOR
Audette Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot 15:
YVONNE AUDETTE
born 1930
LINES ON THE GREY WALL, 1967
oil on plywood
121.0 x 86.0 cm
signed and dated lower right: 1967 Y Audette
signed, dated and inscribed with title verso: 1967 / Audette / Lines on the grey wall
PROVENANCE
Private collection, Melbourne
LITERATURE
Heathcote, C., Adams, B., Vaughan, G., & Grant, K., Yvonne Audette: Paintings and Drawings 1949 – 2003, Macmillan, Melbourne, 2003, pl. 119, p. 188 (illus.)
CATALOGUE TEXT

210652.JPG

Yvonne Audette, Vaucluse, Sydney, 1968
(printed 2000)
Photographer: David Moore
gelatin silver photograph on paper
National Portrait Gallery, Canberra
© Lisa, Michael, Matthew and Joshua Moore
After fourteen years overseas, Yvonne Audette returned to Australia in 1966, bringing with her Lines on the Grey Wall, 1967 - one of many paintings which had been started in Italy, but was not yet finished. Complex, multi-layered abstractions, Audette’s works evolve over time, ‘each painting… the product of months, sometimes years, spent deliberating over how the next stage should be approached and resolved.’1 As Christopher Heathcote has outlined, her studio process is slow and considered, ‘mixing paint and applying a few strokes, then stepping back to assess the results, sometimes wiping off marks just added and attempting an alternative solution.’2

Audette’s experience in New York during the early 1950s had brought her face to face with Abstract Expressionism, as well as various alternative approaches to contemporary abstraction, and her sketchbooks from the time document these influences: ‘Architectural structure of de Kooning. Let go of all figuration – Calligraphic gesture of Kline – Today I saw Tomlin’s work – it has the structure I am seeking – Calligraphic work with free gesture has endless possibilities.’3 It was later, in 1958 – by which time Audette had established herself as part of a community of professional artists in Florence – that she met the American artist Cy Twombly, whose unique visual language would be similarly influential. Both artists shared a fascination with the random marks found on walls in ancient Italian streets and for Audette, this accumulated graffiti represented a form of ‘direct visual poetry’ which spoke to the deep history of the place and its people, and soon became a trademark of her painterly repertoire.4

Begun in the early 1960s, Lines on the Grey Wall is typical of the compositions Audette produced around this time. Delicate yet dense, the image is built up through accretions of form and colour, intuitive lines, shapes and scribbles painted with the brush, alongside passages applied with a palette knife. While some marks are decisive, those seen through the broad patches of pale-coloured paint reveal the importance of layering and erasure within Audette’s technique. The influence of Asian art and calligraphy is also apparent. In addition to undertaking classes with a Zen painting teacher in New York, Audette was exposed to the work of numerous artists who incorporated calligraphic brushwork into their take on abstraction (Franz Kline, Mark Tobey and Pierre Alechinsky, for example), and she in turn did the same. The closely related (and similarly titled) painting, The Grey Wall with Lines, 1957 (Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art) was included in the Guggenheim Museum publication, The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989, as an example of this influence and the significance of New York ‘as an international center for the forging and disseminating of Asian conceptions of abstraction.’5

Audette’s long-term expatriate status meant that her work was rarely seen in Australia during the 1950s and 60s, however it was exhibited in numerous solo shows in Florence, Milan, Paris, Rome and London. A rare female member of the generation of artists born in Australia between the wars, she established a successful career and has since been recognised for her singular contribution, being awarded a Member of the Order of Australia in 2020 for significant service to the visual arts as an abstract painter. Acquisitions by major public galleries were followed by a series of institutional exhibitions – Queensland Art Gallery (1999), Heide Museum of Modern Art (2000), National Gallery of Victoria (2008), Ian Potter Museum of Art (2009) and the Art Gallery of Ballarat (2016) – and the publication of a major monograph in 2003.

1. Heathcote, C., ‘Yvonne Audette: The Early Years’ in Heathcote, C., et. al., Yvonne Audette: Paintings and Drawings 1949-2003, Macmillan, Melbourne, 2003, p. 33
2. Ibid.
3. The artist quoted in Grant, K., Yvonne Audette: Different Directions 1954-1966, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2008, n.p.
4. Artist’s notes, ‘Grey Wall with Lines’, undated, quoted ibid.
5. See Munroe, A., The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989, exhibition catalogue, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2009. The Grey Wall with Lines was requested for loan for the exhibition but excluded on a technicality as she had given up her American citizenship soon after returning to Australia.

KIRSTY GRANT
Hester Joyview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
16
JOY HESTER
(1920 - 1960)
LOVERS WITH ROSE, c.1950
watercolour, pastel, brush and Chinese ink on paper on card
54.0 x 36.5 cm
signed with estate stamp lower left
PROVENANCE
Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne (label attached verso)
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above in 1976
EXHIBITED
Joy Hester, Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, 6 – 25 October 1976, cat. 91 (as ‘Lovers, c.1950’)
Joy Hester: Remember Me, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 28 November 2020 – 14 February 2021, cat. 111 (as 'Lovers with Rose, c.1950', illus. in exhibition catalogue)
LITERATURE
Morgan, K and Petherbridge, D., Joy Hester: Remember Me, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 2020, p. 155 (illus.)
RELATED WORKS
(The Embrace) from the Love Series I, c. 1949, chalk, ink and wash on paper on board, 38.0 x 27.0 cm, in the collection of The University of Western Australia Art, Perth
CATALOGUE TEXT

190398 JOY HESTER.JPG

Peace: Joy Hester Holding Sweeney, 1945
Photographer: Albert Tucker
gelatin silver photograph
40.1 x 30.6 cm
Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne
Gift of Barbara Tucker, 2001
Although Joy Hester’s art was neither strictly diaristic or autobiographical, the story of her life is so complex and familiar that connections are inevitably made between what we know (or imagine we know) of her experiences and feelings, and the images she created. This is especially so of images which focus, in Hester’s characteristically direct and psychologically charged style, on the depiction of human relationships and the expression of emotion. The theme of love is persistent in much of her work, but especially from 1947, a year which marked the beginning of a particularly turbulent period in Hester’s life. Diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Disease, her marriage to Albert Tucker ended and two years later her son, Sweeney, was formally adopted by John and Sunday Reed. It was a new relationship with the poet/painter, Gray Smith (also begun in 1947) which would sustain her emotionally and artistically until the end of her life, providing the backdrop to the well-known images of lovers produced during the late 1940s and 1950s.
 
The head and torso of a naked male figure fills the sheet in Lovers with Rose, c.1950, his striking blue eyes staring directly out at the viewer. Slightly askew, they are the only facial features depicted, compelling and with an intensity that recalls the piercing eyes in contemporary paintings by Sidney Nolan – Hester’s friend and one of the avant-garde artists who gathered around John and Sunday Reed at Heide. His lover is out of view, but her long hair trails over his left shoulder, and opposite, her arm hangs languidly across his chest, delicate fingers seemingly pointing to the pale pink rose. Itself a symbol of love, the rose in this work is said to relate to a floral motif that Hester later designed for Sunday Reed, which was etched into the glass panels either side of the front door at Heide and remain today. In the renovation of the Reed’s farmhouse undertaken during the early 1950s, the rose also featured in the decorative wallpaper Sunday chose for the master bedroom and in Nolan’s painting¸ Rosa Mutabilis, 1945 (Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne) – a memento of her love affair with the young artist – which she displayed there,1 as well as various living specimens that grew in the garden.
 
Unlike her male peers, who produced their major works in oil paint, Hester worked predominantly in ink and watercolour, and the lower status of these media in the fine art hierarchy is one of the reasons why her work was so little known and appreciated during her lifetime. Although Hester’s work was unrepresented in any public collection at the time of her premature death in 1960, it is now widely collected, with major holdings in the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra and Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne. This work was included in the recent major exhibition, Joy Hester: Remember Me, shown at Heide during 2020.2 Hester’s distinctive way of depicting the human figure, combined with the immediacy of her chosen medium, results in a remarkable sense of intimacy that seems to transcend the inevitable distance between the artist, the artwork and the viewer. For Hester, art was a means of self-expression and communication – ‘[she] drew the way other people speak: it was as natural and as simple as that’.3
 
1. See Harding, L. & Morgan, K., Modern Love: The Lives of John & Sunday Reed, The Miegunyah Press, Melbourne, 2015, pp. 241 – 242
2. See Morgan. K. & Petherbridge, D., Joy Hester: Remember Me, exhibition catalogue, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 2020, cat. 111, p. 155 (illus.)
3. Barrett Reid quoted in Gellatly, K., Leave no space for yearning: The Art of Joy Hester, exhibition catalogue, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 2001, p. 14
 
KIRSTY GRANT
Mora Mirkaview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
17
MIRKA MORA
(1928 - 2018)
SELF PORTRAITS, 1960
enamel and oil on composition board
61.0 x 137.0 cm
signed and dated centre right: MiRKA 60
Oliver Bronwynview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
27
BRONWYN OLIVER
(1959 - 2006)
LUNAR, 2001
copper on a wooden plinth
28.5 cm height
inscribed with title, date and artist's name at base: ‘Lunar’ 2001 / Bronwyn Oliver
King Ingeview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
28
INGE KING
(1915 - 2016)
PEGASUS, 1991
polychrome steel
124.0 cm height
signed at base: Inge King
Ellis Horace Payneview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
29
HORACE PAYNE ELLIS
(1808 - 1890)
WOOLLOOMOOLOO BAY, c.1838
oil on cedar panel
30.0 x 40.5 cm
housed in its original ornate, gilt timber frame bearing a plaque “Wooloomooloo Bay [sic.] / 1838 / by H.P. Ellis / HEICS”
PROVENANCE
Possibly the Rev. Thomas Hassall (1794-1866)
of ‘Denbigh’, Cobbitty, NSW
Possibly Charles McIntosh (1805-1875) who leased
and then purchased ‘Denbigh’, Cobbitty, NSW
Possibly Charles McIntosh Jnr (1845-1938), ‘Denbigh’, Cobbitty, NSW
Estate of Mrs Lorna Mary Inglis (née McIntosh,
widow of Mr Richard Reginald Inglis),
formerly of properties ‘Applewood’, Cobbitty, NSW and
‘Denbigh’, Cobbitty, NSW (the latter built by
Charles Hook in 1822, purchased by the Reverend Thomas
Hassall in 1827 and purchased by Charles McIntosh in 1867)
Raffan Kelaher & Thomas, Sydney, 12 April 2021, lot 11
Company collection, Sydney
CATALOGUE TEXT
The recent discovery of Woolloomooloo Bay, 1838 has brought to light an entirely forgotten but highly significant Australian colonial artist - Horace Payne Ellis.
 
Very few works by Ellis appear to have survived. Two watercolours of Sydney are in the State Library of New South Wales. A lithograph of Sydney was published in the New South Wales Magazine in 1843.1 Two other lithographs, Port Jackson from Vaucluse and Fort Macquarie from the Harbour, were published separately, probably as a pair, in the same year.2 The Sydney newspaper, The Australasian Chronical, under the heading ‘News and rumours of the day’, praised both lithographs, the writer adding: ‘We hope the artist will meet sufficient encouragement to enable him to continue his Views, and thus cultivate a taste for the fine arts amidst our colonial youth.’3 Unfortunately, no other ‘views’ by Ellis appear to have been printed.
 
The scarcity, both of art works by Ellis and information about him, may well be due to the fact that, by mid-life, mental difficulties had brought about long-term incarceration and truncated his career. He died at the Parramatta Hospital for the Insane in 1890.
 
Horace Payne Ellis, the eldest child of Horace Ellis (1782 – 1830) and Mrs Philly Ellis, nee Payne, was born4 and christened in Horsham, Sussex, in 1808.5 Ellis was born into a family of successful solicitors. His father Horace ran a legal practice in Horsham, Sussex and his grandfather William Ellis (1745 – 1809) had been an attorney of His Majesty’s Court of King’s Bench at Westminster.6
 
Little is known of Horace Payne Ellis’ early years or education in England, though his level of skill is clearly indicative of some sort of formal art training. Certainly, he claimed to have been occupied as an artist and portrait painter in his youth. For reasons that remain mysterious, Ellis joined the Honourable East India Company’s Madras Artillery Service at an entry rank of Acting Corporal in Westminster on 10 April 1829. On his attestation papers he described his former occupation as artist. He sailed from England to British India aboard the ship Minerva, arriving in Madras on 13 August 1829.7
 
If a military career was in fact his family’s idea of a corrective measure to address early signs of behavioural problems, then the measure backfired. There is much to suggest that the military career of Ellis was an abject failure. By 1836, his rank had slipped to that of gunner in the 2nd Artillery Battalion. In September of that year, he faced his first East India Company court-martial at St Thomas Mount, Madras, for the alleged crime of ‘refusing to attend divine service’. Found guilty, Ellis was sentenced to twelve months’ solitary confinement.8 In mid-October 1837, he faced a second court-martial, this time for ‘disobedience and mutinous conduct’. The military court at St Thomas Mount again found him guilty, but this time he was sentenced to be executed by gunshot. His death sentence was later commuted to seven years’ transportation.9
 
Ellis was one of eighteen ‘European prisoners of the Crown’ transported from Madras aboard Captain Thomas Symers’ ship Caledonia on 20 August 1838. The Caledonia arrived into Port Jackson, or Sydney, on 17 December 1838. The ship’s records recorded that Ellis was thirty years-old, Protestant, single, a labourer and a soldier in the horse artillery, and that he had received multiple prison terms and hundreds of lashes as punishment during the course of his career with the Honourable East India Company.10 The ship’s records also documented his prior occupation as ‘portrait painter’ and included a judgment by his military employer of his general character as ‘bad’.11
 
It is not known to which master Ellis was assigned during the first years of his sentence in New South Wales. However, the fact that it was the Parramatta Bench that granted him his first Ticket of Leave Passport on 9 June 1842 and that an 1843 newspaper list of unclaimed letters gives his address as Parramatta, suggests that he had been located in or in the vicinity of Parramatta for some time.12
 
His first Ticket of Leave permitted Ellis to ‘travel between Sydney and Parramatta for 12 months’.13 Ellis likely made use of his earliest opportunity to travel to Sydney to make contacts in Sydney’s artistic circles. When he married freewoman Maria Sophia Ballantyne Bailey at the Scots Church in Sydney on 28 January 1843,14 his witness was Mr Raphael Clint (1797 – 1849), a surveyor, lithographer, printer and engraver of controversial reputation. At that time, Clint maintained premises in Hunter Street, Sydney.15 The exact nature of the association between Ellis and Clint is uncertain. Nevertheless, their connection indicates that Ellis intended to return to his youthful occupation as an artist.
 
By the time a second Ticket of Leave Passport was granted to Ellis on 10 June 1843, he had clearly expressed his professional intentions to authorities, with the result that the Parramatta magistrate formally permitted him to ‘travel though the counties of Cumberland, Camden, Cook and Bathurst following the profession of an artist for 12 months.’’16 His third and final Ticket of Leave Passport, granted by the Parramatta Bench in June 1844, intriguingly permitted him to ‘travel through the counties of Camden, Cook Bathurst and Cumberland but not through the Sydney District, following his profession of an artist for 12 months’. Why Ellis was barred from practising as an artist in Sydney at that time is not known, but perhaps behavioural issues had once again emerged as a limiting factor in his life.17
 
The years of the mid-1840s appear to have been artistically productive for Ellis. He shipped a case of paintings home to England in December 1845, though sadly the ultimate destination of those paintings remains unknown.18 In 1847, his painting Rocky Scenery was hung at the Australian Library in Bent Street, Sydney in the Exhibition of the Society for the Promotion of Fine Arts, the first exhibition of its kind to be held in the colony.19 Two years later, in 1849, two Ellis paintings, North Rocks20 and Landscape21 were hung in a second Exhibition of the Society for the Promotion of Fine Arts, an exhibition to which Raphael Clint also contributed with two classical intaglios of the heads of Lord Byron and von Weber.22 Other exhibitors in these exhibitions included Conrad Martens, John Skinner Prout, George Edwards Peacock, Joseph Fowles and William Nicholas.

ELLIS PORT JACKSON FROM VAUCLUSE.JPG

Port Jackson. From Vaucluse. No. 1,
c.1843, 1846–1849, drawn by I. Ellis, printed by T. Liley
Courtesy: Mitchell Library,
State Library of New South Wales
The 1840s was, however, a time of economic depression in the colony. Raphael Clint was one of its many casualties. His engraving business was declared insolvent in 1847.23 By 1850, the pressure on Ellis to make a living from his painting must have been intense and difficult and all the more necessary because by then he and his wife Maria had three small children to feed.24
 
There is evidence that by 1851 all was not well with Ellis. On 23 October 1851 he was arrested and imprisoned in Darlinghurst Gaol for an undocumented offence, before being discharged on bail two weeks later.25 Then on 3 January 1852 from an address in Crown Street, Surry Hills, Ellis placed a newspaper advertisement, declaring ‘The person I have married having threatened to borrow money, I hereby caution everyone against trusting her, as I will not be answerable for anything she may do.’26 Two weeks later he placed another advertisement in the Sydney Morning Herald that read ‘I hereby caution all persons against harbouring or concealing either of my children, and shipmasters, owners etc., against taking them away from the colony without my consent.’27 On January 31, 1852 Ellis was again arrested and imprisoned in Darlinghurst Gaol, but this time, no discharge on bail was made available to him. He was examined and found to be suffering from ‘mania and delusions’ and on 16 February 1852 he was transferred from Darlinghurst Gaol to Tarban Creek Lunatic Asylum.28
 
Horace Payne Ellis died at the Parramatta Hospital for the Insane on 29 June 1890 and was buried at the Church of England Cemetery in Rookwood.29 His widow, Maria Ellis died in Leichhardt seven years later on 7 April 1897. Incredibly, given the disaster that was her husband’s military career, her death notice in the Sydney Morning Herald described her as the ‘relict of the late Horace Payne Ellis, HEICS’. His family evidently continued to maintain a pride in their father’s association with the Honourable East India Company Service.30

ELLIS PORT MACQUARIE FROM THE HARBOUR.JPG


Fort Macquarie. From the Harbour. No. 2,
c.1843, 1846–1849, drawn by I. Ellis, printed by T. Liley
Courtesy: Mitchell Library,
State Library of New South Wales
Horace Payne Ellis lived in an age when neither behavioural therapy nor pharmacological treatment was available to address what ailed him. His mental illness ultimately deprived him of his family, his career as an artist and his humanity. On his death certificate, the informants at the Parramatta Hospital for the Insane did not even bother to verify basic details such as the names of his parents, where he had married or how long he had been in the colony. Horace Payne Ellis, the man, had been well and truly consigned to the scrapheap.
 
But despite all that he had suffered, the artistic talent of Horace Payne Ellis cannot be denied. In Woolloomooloo Bay, 1838, Ellis has provided a unique vision of Sydney at the time. Woolloomooloo Bay was one of the areas where Aboriginal people continued to live, despite dispossession, dispersal and decimation from disease. Keith Vincent Smith in The Dictionary of Sydney has written: ‘Remnants of different clans banded together in mixed groups, ignoring old enmities and origins. With official encouragement, they could obtain some of the benefits of 'civilisation', such as blankets, clothing, iron hatchets and fishhooks, and bread, flour, sugar, tea, tobacco and alcohol, to which they quickly became accustomed. Their resulting lifestyle was a mixture of tradition and adaptation… [T]hese family groups searched for campsites close to the shore and near a creek or other source of fresh water [and with] access to harbour fishing… Around their fires, they could still sit naked, collect bush foods, fish and swim, tell stories and sing songs as before. When they went into the settlements to barter fish or seek supplies, they were required to put on European clothing.’31
 
It is interesting to speculate who the people depicted in the painting might be. The family of Bungaree (who had died in 1830) stayed in the Woolloomooloo Bay area, as did people from the Shoalhaven and other areas. The central figure bears a similarity to the Shoalhaven woman Morirang, as she is depicted in Charles Rodius’ 1834 lithograph that was made when Morirang was visiting friends in the Woolloomooloo Bay area.
 
Whoever Ellis has depicted in the painting, he has painted them with respect. He has also posed the group in such a formal manner that he may have been more interested in making a classical allusion rather than in documenting individuals.
 
Ellis’s only other known oil painting, a large copy of Nicolas Poussin’s The Triumph of Flora,32 clearly indicates Ellis’ classical training and outlook. He was no doubt wanting to paint works that would appeal to aspirational free settlers and emancipists in Sydney in the 1840s. At the Society of Fine Arts exhibitions in Sydney in the 1840s, works by local artists (including Ellis) were hung alongside works ascribed to Poussin himself, and to other old masters, from Rembrandt to Rubens. These were almost certainly imported copies but were, nevertheless, designed to reflect the sophistication and status of their owners.
 
In Horace Payne Ellis’s Woolloomooloo, 1838, the artist manages to capture the two, oppositional, societal views in Sydney at the time, making it a remarkable and important Australian painting that enhances our knowledge of colonial history.
 
 1. New South Wales Magazine, Sydney, James Reading, 1843. A copy of this lithograph by Ellis is in the National Gallery of Australia.
2. A copy of each lithograph is in ‘Portraits of the Aborigines of New South Wales Sydney’, 1843, a volume compiled with the intention of publication and presented to Sir Thomas Michell – No. 6. Port Jackson. Form Vaucluse. No.1/drawn by I. Ellis, printed by T. Liley. Lithograph & No. 12. Fort Macquarie. From the Harbour. No. 2/drawn by I. Ellis, printed by T. Liley, the volume bequeathed by D.D. Mitchell, 1907, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales. NB: The lithographs have ‘I’ or ‘J’ Ellis printed beneath the images. The Mitchell Library refers to I. Ellis and to J. Ellis in relation to the lithographs. Ellis preferred to be known as John and regularly interchanged John or J. Ellis with Horace Payne or H.P. Ellis. A variety of documentation confirms that these were the names of the one artist.
3. Australasian Chronical, (Sydney), 18 April 1843, p. 2 (under heading ‘News and rumours of the day’.
4. Horace Ellis (1782 – 1830) and Philly Payne (1787 – 1854) were married at the Church of St John the Baptist in Lewes, Sussex in 1807. Source: England, Select Marriages, 1538 – 1973, Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., published 2014, Provo, UT, USA
5. Ancestry.com. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: England, Births and Christenings, 1538 – 1975. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013
6. The National Archives of the UK (TNA); Kew, Surrey, England; Court of King's Bench: Plea Side: Affidavits of Due Execution of Articles of Clerkship, Series I; Class: KB 105; Piece: 6, UK, Articles of Clerkship, 1756 – 1874, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operation, Inc. 2012, Provo UT, USA
7. Families in British India Society (FIBIS) Database, Embarkation Lists of EIC Recruits to India, transcribed from IOR ref: L/MIL/9/100
8. Families in British India Society (FIBIS) Database, General Orders by Commander-in-Chief Transcription of Court Martial Proceedings, IOR reference L/MIL/17/417 page 273
9. Families in British India Society (FIBIS) Database, General Orders by Commander-in-Chief Transcription of Court Martial Proceedings, IOR reference L/MIL/17/3/417, page 298
10. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12189; item [X641]; Microfiche:735, New South Wales, Australia, Convict Indents, 1788-1842, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., published 2011, Provo, UT, USA
11. New South Wales, Australia Convict Ship Muster Rolls and Related Records, 1790-1849, Ancestry.com, Ancestry.com Operations Inc., published 2008, Provo, UT, USA
12. Trove, New South Wales Government Gazette, Sydney, NSW: 1832-1900/Friday 12 May 1843 (Issue No. 40), page 651, List of Unclaimed letters for the month of April, 1843
13. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12204, New South Wales, Australia, Tickets of Leave, 1810-1869, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, Provo, UT, USA
14. Early Church Records Marriages held at NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages, Number 3716 V74B
15. Design & Art Australia Online database and e-research tool for art and design researchers, daao.org.au, Raphael Clint Biography
16. State Archives NSW; Series: NRS 12204, New South Wales, Australia, Tickets of Leave, 1810-1869, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, Provo, UT, USA
17. Ibid.
18. The Australian Journal, December 9, 1845
19. Exhibition of the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia, 1847, held at The Australian Library, Bent Street, catalogue printed by Kemp and Fairfax, 1847, (24pp.): Exhibit 330. Rocky Scenery, the property of Mr T.S. Mort (at SLNSW1847-1857 MRB/706/S , 706/S , FM4/9612)
20. Exhibition of the Society for the promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia. Sydney, 1849, catalogue printed by Kemp and Fairfax: Exhibit 227. North Rocks, the property of Captain McLean (at SLNSW 1847-1857 MRB/706/S , 706/S , FM4/9612)
21. Exhibition of the Society for the promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia. Sydney, 1849, catalogue printed by Kemp and Fairfax: Exhibit 381. ‘Landscape’ became the property of Mr O’Keefe (at SLNSW 1847-1857 MRB/706/S , 706/S , FM4/9612)
22. Australian Jewellery -19th and Early 20th Century by Anne Schofield and Kevin Fahy, published by Antique Collectors Club Ltd, 1992, page 166: Clint, Raphael (1797-1849)
23. Australian Dictionary of Biography: adb.anu.edu.au/biography/clint-raphael-1904
24. Amelia Ellis (1845-1920), Alfred Livesay Ellis (1848-1916) and Horace Payne Ellis (1850-1917)
25. State Archives NSW; Kingswood, New South Wales; Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930; Series: 2523; Item 4/6304; Roll: 858, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2012
26. Trove - The People’s Advocate and New South Wales Vindicator (Sydney, NS: 1848-1856), Monday 5 Jan 1852, page 15, Advertising
27. Trove – The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW: 1842 – 1954), Monday 26 January 1852, page 3, Advertising
28. State Archives NSW; Kingswood, New South Wales; Gaol Description and Entrance Books, 1818-1930; Item:1891; Roll:265, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2012 & The State Records Authority of New South Wales; Kingswood, New South Wales, Australia; Returns and Reports 1845-55, 1857, 1859-1861; Series Number: 906; Reel: 746, New South wales, Australia, Hospital & Asylum Records, 1840 – 1913, Ancestry.com, published by Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. 2014, Provo, UT, USA. NB: Tarban Creek Lunatic Asylum later became known as The Gladesville Mental Hospital.
29. England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1995 for Horace Payne Ellis, 1893 & Death Transcription from NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages: Horace Payne Ellis
30. Trove, Sydney Morning Herald, Feb 25-Jul 6, 1897, Deaths. NB: Ellis’ marriage certificate of 1843 refers to him as John Ellis, as do his military records and convict records. However, his death certificate, probate records and his wife’s death notice leave no doubt that John Ellis who married Maria Sophia Ballantyne Bailey was the same man as artist Horace Payne Ellis.
31. ‘Aboriginal life around Port Jackson after 1822’, by Keith Vincent Smith in The Dictionary of Sydney, https://dictionaryofsydney.org
32. Ellis’ recently discovered copy of Nicolas Poussin’s The Triumph of Flora (oil on canvas, 60.4 x 88.8 cm, signed ‘H P. Ellis’ lower left) has the same provenance as Woolloomooloo Bay, 1838. It is now in a private collection.
 
SARAH STAVELEY AND STEPHEN SCHEDING 
Downs Jarinyanu David view full entry
Reference: 'You Listen Me!' - An Angry Love Writings In honour of Jainyanu David Downs on the occasion of Southern Explorations An exhibition of his Paintings. Opened by John von Sturmer Curated by Duncan Kentish
Publishing details: Adelaide Central gallery Norwood. 6-31 October 1995. 20 pages plus illustrated card covers
Ref: 1000
Cayley Nevilleview full entry
Reference: The Tale of Bluey Wren by Neville W Cayley.
Publishing details: Published in Sydney by Lonsdale. No date 1940s (?). Wrappers 16 pages
Ref: 1000
Cayley Nevilleview full entry
Reference: Feathered Minstrels of Australia by A H Chisholm & N Cayley.
Publishing details: published in Sydney by Simmons 1940s (?) 16 page pamphlet.
Ref: 1000
Conder Charles THE THREE COWS, 1889view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot 30
CHARLES CONDER
(1868 - 1909)
THE THREE COWS, 1889
oil on cedar panel
23.0 x 10.5 cm (irreg.)
signed and inscribed with title lower left: RIDDLE’S CREEK [sic] / Chas Conder
PROVENANCE
Auction of paintings by Conder, Roberts, Streeton and Others, Shevill and Co., Melbourne, 24 October 1889
Dr Douglas Stewart, Melbourne
Fine Private Collection of Water–Colour Drawings and Oil Paintings by Well–Known Artists, Gemmell, Tuckett and Co., Melbourne, 30 April 1920, lot 91
Dr U. Harper Bell, Melbourne, by 1938
Sir Reginald Marcus Clark, Sydney
James R. Lawson, Sydney, 15 June 1954, cat. 29 (as ‘Riddle’s Creek’)
Mrs Agnes Buchanan, Sydney
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
The 9 by 5 Impressionism Exhibition, Buxton’s Rooms, Melbourne, 17 August 1889, cat. 146 (as ‘The Three Cows’)
Australian Impressionism, The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia at Federation Square, Melbourne, 31 March – 8 July 2008, cat. 9.14
LITERATURE
Osmond, S., Table Talk, Melbourne, Friday 2 August 1889, p. 7
Gibson, F., Charles Conder: His Life and Work, John Lane, The Bodley Head, London, 1914, p. 94 (as ‘The Three Cows’)
Rothstein, J., The Life and Death of Conder, Dent, London, 1938, pp. 29, 285 (as ‘Riddle’s Creek’, coll. of U. Harper Bell)
Hoff, U., Charles Conder. His Australian Years, National Gallery Society of Victoria, Melbourne, 1960, cat. 35, pp. 22 – 23 (as ‘Riddle’s Creek’)
Hoff, U., "Charles Conder", Art and Australia, Ure Smith, Sydney, vol. 2, no. 1, May 1964, pp. 34, 36 (illus., as ‘Riddles Creek’)
Hoff, U., Charles Conder, Lansdowne, Melbourne, 1972, cat. C49, no. 10, pp. 11, 32, 37 (illus., as ‘Riddle’s Creek’), 101
Lane, T., Australian Impressionism, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2007, cat. 9.14, pp. 166 (illus., as ‘The Three Cows’), 329
RELATED WORKS
Riddells Creek, 1889, oil on wood panel on paper on two layers of cardboard, 24.4 x 11.2 cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
CATALOGUE TEXT

NOVL21 CAT PROOF 7_10_2021 B (2) (002).JPG

Charles Conder
Riddells Creek, 1889
oil on wood panel on paper on two
layers of cardboard
24.4 x 11.2 cm
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
Purchased 1972
The 9 by 5 Impression Exhibition, held in August 1889 at Buxton’s Rooms on Melbourne’s busy Swanston Street, is one of the most celebrated in this country’s history. Surviving works show it was full of artistic gems. Directed by Tom Roberts, Arthur Streeton and Charles Conder, the event was well staged. A publicity agent, Sophie Osmond of Melbourne’s Table Talk, was engaged to set the scene with a series of articles, as the exhibition itself provocatively promoted Impressionism and Aestheticism to challenge the conservative tastes of the time.1 In the catalogue announcement ‘To The Public’ the artists stated:
 
‘An effect is only momentary: so an impressionist tries to find his place. Two half-hours are never alike, and he who tries to paint a sunset on two successive evenings, must be more or less painting from memory. So, in these works, it has been the object of the artists to render faithfully, and thus obtain first records of effects widely differing, and often of very fleeting character.’2
 
Conder designed the catalogue cover in bold, beguiling line. The perplexed figure of art, bound by the bands of convention, is being stripped free. And Buxton’s gallery was specially decorated in Liberty silks and dry flowers of Aesthetic inclination. Special musical recitals were held on Wednesday afternoons. The desired publicity, or notoriety, was achieved through the stinging attack launched by James Smith, the highly influential art critic for The Argus. His hostile review included the words: ‘…something like four-fifths are a pain to the eye’.3 Controversy raged. Smith did, nevertheless, select some artists and their works for favourable comment: ‘These and a few others afford something agreeable for the eye to rest upon…’. Conder’s Myosotis (whereabouts unknown) was one of them.
 
Of the 182 small-scaled works exhibited, 60 were by Roberts, 41 by Streeton, 46 by Conder and four by Frederick McCubbin, including one titled ‘Still Glides the Stream’ (whereabouts unknown).4 A select number are now among the treasured holdings of our national, state and regional art galleries. Twelve are by Conder. They include Impressionists’ Camp, 1889; Herrick’s Blossoms, c.1888; and Riddells Creek, 1889 (all in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra); Sketch Portrait, c.1889 (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne); An Impressionist (portrait of Tom Roberts), 1889, (Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney); How We Lost Poor Flossie, 1889 and Dandenong from Heidelberg, 1889 (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide); and Dusk, 1889 (Art Gallery of Ballarat). Of these, the most interesting from the point of view of our painting, is the companion piece, Riddells Creek in the National Gallery of Australia. For many years both were in the collection of Dr Douglas Stuart, having been purchased by him from the Auction of paintings by Conder, Roberts, Streeton and Others at Shevill and Co., Melbourne, on 24 October 1889. They are illustrated side by side in Ursula Hoff’s article on Conder in Art and Australia in May 1964, misleadingly carrying the same title of ‘Riddles Creek’.5 This confusion is no doubt due to both paintings having been inscribed ‘RIDDLES CREEK’ by Conder.
 
The township of Riddells Creek, in the southern foothills of the Macedon Ranges, is about an hour’s drive northwest of Melbourne. Conder visited there not long before the opening of The 9 by 5 Impression Exhibition. Journalist Sophie Osmond noted in Table Talk of 2 August 1889 that Conder had visited Riddells Creek, ‘to study the scenery of the district’.6 This is supported by Conder’s letter to his cousin Maggie, in which he wrote: ‘I have been staying at Riddels [sic.] Creek for a few days with Mrs Caffyn’.7 (During his Melbourne years, Conder had a close friendship with the novelist Kathleen Caffyn, who became his muse and his model. She, in turn, based one of the characters in her novel, A Yellow Aster, on Conder.8)
210675 CHARLES-EDWARD-CONDER.JPG

Charles Edward Conder, 1902 – 1904
Photographer: Frederick Henry Evans
National Portrait Gallery, London
 
While our painting and the one in the National Gallery of Australia are inscribed ‘RIDDLES [sic] CREEK’, when exhibited in The 9 by 5 Impression Exhibition, the National Gallery’s painting was given the title ‘Riddell’s [sic.] Creek’ and our painting, ‘The Three Cows’. As noted by Mary Eagle in her book on Conder’s works in the National Gallery, both paintings have three cows, although they are more prominent in the latter. She also suggests that they ‘may have been painted on the same day’.9 If so, The Three Cows would have been first, as indicated by the light and other signs of the times of day. The absence of shadows suggests noontide and the cows graze happily in ordered line. The mood of pastoral peace continues through other images of settlement. Bright sunlight shines from the white-roofed, pink-walled homestead and dissipates the rain-bearing touches of grey on the cumulus clouds. Capturing the transient in paint, joy is characteristically touched by melancholy as sensuous pinks cohabit with fields of pale greens, all enlivened by the engaging movements of the brush and general upward movement. The fence line, reinforced by the distant hills of the horizon, divides the composition in two, almost equal, parts. All is balanced as quietude reigns in this vision of the poetic dreamer. The foreground is largely devoid of imagery, filled instead by subtle colour harmonies and the play of brushstrokes that speak of the visual pleasures found in abstract art.
 
The National Gallery of Australia’s Riddell Creek, 1889, almost identical in size and likewise vertical in format, provides an aerial view of a different direction. Looking into the now dimmed light as the cows rest from eating, Conder confirms the Impressionist credo – ‘Two half-hours are never alike’.10 A special cluster of colourful twists of paint translated into spring blossoms adds Oriental asymmetry, heightening the imaginative interpretation of the landscape so characteristic of Conder. Flatness is balanced by depth.
 
In the decorative use of colour, both paintings share directness, sophisticated simplicity, and a striking open-air feeling, blended with the lyricism for which Conder’s Australian works are so admired. As Ursula Hoff pointed out: ‘In most of these works, however, the strongly decorative trend inherent in Conder’s nature holds his realism in balance. He uses his arrangement and colour to create harmony, to express feeling’.11 Some paintings, especially those which are felt as much as seen, are engagingly ephemeral, enveloped in a poetic atmosphere. Others are permeated with an aqueous feel, the remarkable fluidity of his oil paint showing a likeness to watercolour technique. In her study of Conder’s paintings in the National Gallery of Australia, Mary Eagle commented on his ‘watercolour style of applying oil paint’ and its ‘transparency’. Referring to Bronte Beach, 1888, she also observed that Conder ‘pioneered various other stylish conceits such as the Japanese style twigs on the lower left of Bronte Beach’.12 A similar such touch of plants is provided in the very forefront of The Three Cows. Other Japanese-inspired elements include its narrow format, flatness, individuality of design and exact placement of objects.
 
210675 9 X 5 EXHIBITION CATALOGUE.JPG

Catalogue cover of ‘The 9 by 5 Impression Exhibition’, 1889
Designer: Charles Conder
Printer: Fergusson and Mitchell, Melbourne
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
A number of influences contributed to the development of Conder’s style. In Sydney, he drew freelance for the Illustrated Sydney News, attended the outdoor art classes conducted by A.J. Daplyn and, in 1888, joined Julian Ashton’s evening sketch club. That same year saw a concentration of activities and achievements. At Easter, he painted at Coogee with Tom Roberts – their sunny paintings, Coogee Bay, 1888 by Conder, and   Holiday Sketch at Coogee, 1888 by Tom Roberts, are now in the collections of the National Gallery of Victoria and the Art Gallery of New South Wales respectively. In July – August, Conder joined Ashton, A.H. Fullwood and others, sketching at Griffith’s Farm, Richmond, in New South Wales. Several classics followed – Herrick’s Blossoms, 1888, now in the National Gallery of Australia, and Springtime, 1888 in the National Gallery of Victoria, through the Felton Bequest in 1941. His triumph of the year was the Departure of the Orient – Circular Quay, 1888, which was snapped up by the Trustees of the Art Gallery of New South Wales from the Annual Exhibition of the Art Society of New South Wales. Embracing plein air painting and Impressionist verve, its wet effects reveal Conder’s recent debt to Girolamo Nerli, who had arrived in Sydney the year before. In May of 1888, Conder and Nerli painted together at Bronte Beach. Conder’s Bronte Beach, 1888 (National Gallery of Australia) is imbued with his characteristic inventive approach to plein airism. In October, Conder left Sydney for Melbourne, painting Holiday at Mentone, 1888 (Art Gallery of South Australia), soon after. It was his second Australian masterpiece within the year. Later works showed the growing influence of Streeton. But it is in his sketch portrait of Tom Roberts, An Impressionist, 1889 (Art Gallery of New South Wales), shown in The 9 by 5 Impression Exhibition, that Conder pays special tribute to Roberts, acknowledging him and the leading role he played in his art.
 
In The Three Cows and paintings of the peopled Australian landscape, Conder enlivened the staid realism of plein air painting with invention, imaginative composition, sensuous colour and handling.
 

1. McDonald, J., Art of Australia: Exploration to Federation, vol. I, Pan Macmillan, Sydney 2008, p. 470
2. The 9 By 5 Impression Exhibition, Buxton’s Rooms, Melbourne, 1889
3. Smith, J., ‘An Impressionist Exhibition’, The Argus, 17 August 1889, p. 10
4. The 9 By 5 Impression Exhibition, Buxton’s Rooms, Melbourne, 1889, cat. 177
5. Hoff, U., ‘Charles Conder’, Art and Australia, Ure Smith, Sydney, vol. 2, 1 May 1964, p. 36
6. Osmond, S., Table Talk, Melbourne, 2 August 1889, p. 7
7. Conder to Maggie Conder [August 1889], Mitchell Library AC134, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, quoted in Eagle, op. cit., p. 46
8. A Yellow Aster was published in London in 1894 under the pseudonym ‘Iota’.
9. Eagle, M., The Oil Paintings of Charles Conder in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1997, p. 46
10. The 9 By 5 Impression Exhibition, Buxton’s Rooms, Melbourne, 1889
11. Hoff, U., Charles Conder: His Australian Years, National Gallery Society of Victoria, Melbourne, 1960, p. 14
12. Eagle, op. cit., p. 20
 
DAVID THOMAS 
Roberts Tom Jeune Fille à l’ombrelleview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
31
TOM ROBERTS
(1856 - 1931)
A MODERN ANDROMEDA, 1892
oil on wood panel
45.0 x 10.8 cm
signed and dated lower left: Tom Roberts . / 1892
Henry W Callan, Sydney, framers label attached verso 
PROVENANCE
Henri Kowalski (1841 – 1916), Sydney and Plouër-sur-Rance, France
Thence by descent
Louise Kowalski (née Éloy, AKA Louise Ferraris, 1844 – 1922, m.1869), Château du Chêne-Vert, Plouër-sur-Rance, France
Thence by descent
Madame Lemonnier, niece of the above, Château du Chêne-Vert, Plouër-sur-Rance, France
Mr Roland Brouard, France, 1924, along with purchase of the Château du Chêne-Vert, Plouër-sur-Rance, France
Thence by descent
Louise Brouard (née Louët), France, wife of the above, in 1934
Thence by descent
Marie-Thérèse Rouxel (née Brouard), Nantes, daughter of the above, in 1969
Jack-Philippe Ruellan S.A.R.L., Vannes, France, 27 February 2021, lot 99 (as ‘Jeune Fille à l’ombrelle, assise sur un rocher’)
Private collection, Sydney 
EXHIBITED
Spring Exhibition, Art Society of New South Wales, Sydney, 1892, cat. 50
LITERATURE
Eagle, M., The Oil Paintings of Tom Roberts in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1997, p. 61 n. 6
CATALOGUE TEXT

NOVL21 CAT PROOF 7_10_2021 B (2) (002).JPG


Lena Brasch, c.1901
Photographer: H. Walter Barnett
signed and inscribed by Lena Brasch: To Smike
gelatin silver photograph
printed image 19.2 x 10.5 cm
sheet 19.2 x 10.5 cm
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra. Purchased 1993
VIEW FLIPBOOK CATALOGUE

Recently rediscovered and repatriated from a private collection in France, Tom Roberts’ A Modern Andromeda, 1892 is, although modest in scale, a painting of considerable art historical significance. Not only is it a fine example of the artist’s simultaneously crisp and fluent Naturalist style, completed at a high point in his career1, but it also carries a rich freight of associations and information – revealing much about the life (and loves?) of the artist; painting in Melbourne and Sydney at the time; and the close links between various branches of the arts in the late 19th century.
 
In ‘Marvellous Melbourne’, financial capital of the Australian colonies, a collapse in property prices in 1889 and associated building society failures the following year created wider economic anxieties. The market for contemporary art had never been particularly secure, and Victoria’s painters had long contested the National Gallery of Victoria’s acquisition policies, which did not favour local artists. These factors, together with a desire to explore landscapes and pastoral industry ‘national subjects’ further afield, took Tom Roberts away from the city. In 1890 – 91, he was only sporadically to be found at his Melbourne studio, having gone ‘on the wallaby’ to Tasmania, East Gippsland and the Central Highlands, as well as back to Corowa on the Murray, where he had begun painting Shearing the Rams in 1889. Eventually – possibly in immediate pursuit of the prospect of a £75 acquisition from a competition for ‘water-colour drawings illustrating what is most picturesque in the scenery of New South Wales, especially in the remoter districts of the colony,’2 – Roberts and his friend and Heidelberg School colleague, Arthur Streeton (together with Streeton’s mother), took ship for Sydney in the Massilia in early September.
 
Roberts went straight to Curlew Camp, a cheap-rent single men’s tent village on the North Shore at Little Sirius Cove, Mosman Bay. Apart from a brief visit to the Hunter River in pursuit of a watercolour subject (one of his entries in the National Gallery’s watercolour exhibition in 1891 was Coaling at Newcastle), he would remain there throughout the spring and summer, until he returned to Melbourne for a month in February 1892.3
 
The camp was an initiative of Reuben Brasch, Sydney clothing manufacturer and retailer and an acquaintance of the artist.4 Just as Roberts’ good friend and fellow Box Hill plein-airiste, Louis Abrahams, had provided the cedar cigar box lids used for many of Roberts’, Streeton’s and Conder’s ‘9 by 5 Impressions’, it appears that so did Reuben Brasch supply the long, narrow ‘drapers’ panel’ supports that became a feature of the Australian Naturalists’ (and particularly Streeton’s) images of Sydney Harbour. A Modern Andromeda would appear to be the first work to employ this striking format, pre-dating both Streeton’s horizontal Harbours of 1893 and his vertical Sirius Cove ‘keyholes’ of 1895.
 
Reuben Brasch’s sister Golda had married Louis Abrahams in March 1888, and Roberts was a witness at the wedding, held in the Brasch family home in Sydney. It was probably on that occasion that Roberts first met Reuben and Golda’s little sister, the teenage Selena Venus. When he returned to Sydney and settled at Curlew camp, Roberts renewed his connection with the young woman, almost immediately enlisting her to pose in the coastal landscape. The rocks on which the figure in the present work is sitting look very much like the tumble of sandstone boulders on the eastern side of Sirius Cove, while the wattle blossom at the top of the composition clearly implies a springtime sitting.
NOVL21 CAT PROOF 7_10_2021 B (2) (002).JPG

The Sydney Art Society’s Exhibition –
“Varnishing Day”
artist unknown
Published in: ‘The Art Society’s
Exhibition’, Sydney News,
3 September 1892, p. 4
 
This latter assumption is reinforced by correspondence from Streeton, who visited the camp probably late September, before heading up to Glenbrook to paint Fire’s On, 1891 (Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney). In letters written from Melbourne the following January, Streeton inquires 'How also dear Mossmans + your pretty sitter with abundant hair fanned by the afternoon breeze at the point,’5 and also specifically references a small painting of ‘Miss_____ on the rocks,’ advising Roberts not to let the work sell cheaply: ‘it is so charming – keep it as a memento of the place.’6 Is Streeton’s discretion with regard to the sitter’s identity a bit of a tease, a suggestion that Roberts may have harboured some amorous intent in relation to the young Miss Brasch? There is something admiring, even worshipful in the low da sotto in sù viewpoint, with the blue dress seen against the blue Sydney sky making the figure of the girl somehow ethereal, heavenly. The limpid cerulean of the subtropical sky seems to have been just what Roberts craved after a grey winter down south; we see that colour again in the extravagant bows of another of his entries in the 1892 Art Society exhibition, The Paris Hat, 1892 (New England Regional Art Museum, Armidale). In the present picture there is even a tiny shard of summer, a triangle of blue sky, visible through the rocks.
 
In any event, Roberts was certainly very taken with Lena as a model; she appears in no fewer than half a dozen pictures over the ensuing decade.7 The interest is perfectly understandable. Lena Brasch was an attractive, vivacious, talented young woman, who would later make something of a name for herself on the London stage. Not surprisingly, given her family’s piano-importing business background, she was also ‘a pianiste of no mean ability,’8 and Roberts is known to have been particularly fond of music.9
 
This musical connection also explains the present work’s ‘disappearance’ for more than a century. Before its recent return to Australia, the painting passed by descent and estate purchase from the family of pianist, composer and teacher Henri Kowalski. Of Polish heritage but Breton-born and Paris-trained, Kowalski performed in Brussels, London, the United States and Canada before coming to Australia both as a judge for the Fine Arts section of the 1880 Melbourne International Exhibition, and to give concert performances. During this visit he enthusiastically embraced the local culture; he collaborated with Victorian novelist and poet Marcus Clarke on a comic opera, Queen Venus, and even composed a waltz entitled The Belles of Melbourne. Returning to Australia in 1885, Kowalski lived and worked in Sydney for twelve years, during which time he ‘conducted choirs, orchestras and operas, set up music societies, and had an extensive private teaching practice and a major public profile as a performer. He also set up a public examination board and worked as a music critic.’10

HWALTERBARNETT-HENRIKOWAL-DE103150.JPG


Henri Kowalski, pianist and composer, 1893
Photographer: H. Walter Barnett
gelatin silver photograph
20.4 × 15.3 cm (image and sheet)
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Gift of Mrs Rex Duckett, 1973
Kowalski was definitely known to Tom Roberts; a portrait was included in the artist’s extensive and wide-ranging 1900 exhibition and sale.11 Given Sydney’s relatively small musical community, he is also likely to have been familiar with the piano-retailing Brasch family, including young Lena: she may have been one of the 45 pupils who signed an illuminated address presented to him by the Mayor of Sydney in October 1892, while a couple of years later an advertisement for her first published composition, The Olga Waltz, includes a personal testimonial from the maestro.12 What is beyond doubt is that Kowalski was familiar with the present painting; he and his violinist compatriot Horace Poussard performed a duet at a conversazione held in association with the 1892 Art Society exhibition at which the work was first shown.13
 
But what is the meaning of the curious title? In ancient Greek mythology, Andromeda was the daughter of Cepheus, king of Aethiopia. Andromeda’s mother, Cassiopeia, boasted that her daughter was more beautiful than the Nereids, sea-sprite companions of the ocean god Poseidon, and in revenge for this hubristic affront, Poseidon sent a tidal wave and the sea-monster Cetus to ravage the Aethiopian coast. Having been told by an oracle that in order to placate the god he must sacrifice his daughter, King Cepheus had Andromeda chained to a rock at the edge of the sea to await her doom. Happily, the hero Perseus, flying home after having slain the Gorgon, saw the girl, killed the monster and (naturally) claimed Andromeda in marriage.
 
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the image of the naked, constrained and vulnerable Andromeda appealed to patriarchal sensibilities, with Andromeda in chains becoming a familiar trope through the writings of the Greek playwrights Sophocles and Euripides and the Roman poet Ovid, and accordingly, a persistent focus of the male gaze in European art: from Pompeiian wall painting to the Renaissance Piero di Cosimo, from Titian and Vasari to Rubens and Rembrandt.14 The popularity of the subject persisted through the 19th century and into Roberts’ time, as can be seen in works by (inter alia) Eugène Delacroix, Gustave Doré and Gustave Moreau.15 In the British tradition with which Roberts was most familiar, the Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne-Jones developed (though never completed) a full cycle of Perseus pictures for the Music Room of young Conservative politician Arthur Balfour’s house in Carlton Gardens, London;  a preparatory painting for this series depicting the Andromeda episode is now held by the Art Gallery of South Australia.16 

FREDERIC LEIGHTON PERSEUS_AND_ANDROMEDA.JPG

Frederic Leighton
Perseus and Andromeda, 1891
oil on canvas
235.0 x 129.2 cm
Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK
In relation to the present picture, however, there is a more concrete and plausible link to a specific work by Sir Frederic (later Lord) Leighton. A member of the Royal Academy since 1868, its President since 1878, created a baronet in 1886, an officer of the Légion d’honneur and a member of the Institut de France, in 1891 Leighton’s reputation was at its height, even as far from London as the Australian colonies. That year the Victorian National Gallery purchased his The Garden of the Hesperides, and its Sydney counterpart a photograph of The Bath of Psyche, while in an article on the New South Wales collection written for the Melbourne Argus, Roberts specifically mentioned both Leighton’s classical-domestic fantasy Wedded (purchased 1882), and watercolours for the Arts of industry… frescoes at the South Kensington Museum (now the Victoria and Albert).17 In 1891, Leighton painted his version of the Andromeda myth, with the sea-monster depicted more as a dragon than as a whale or crocodile. Perseus and Andromeda was shown in the RA’s summer exhibition, and was reproduced in the London Art Journal for June. 
The present work may be considered an oblique, comic homage to the master’s work. Most obviously, the dragon bat-wings that overshadow the princess in Leighton’s picture have a marked formal resemblance to the spread-ribbed parasol above Roberts’ sitter. There might also be a further visual pun in the golden wattle in painting’s top left corner: an antipodean answer to the glowing aureole that surrounds Leighton’s flying Perseus-on-Pegasus. Whether or not such a direct reference to Leighton is intended, characterising a girl in a frock on a rock as Andromeda is sufficient to indicate both Roberts’ literacy in classical iconography and his droll humour, the fruitful tension between his strong RA-instilled feeling for history and tradition and his keen awareness of and participation in bourgeois-industrial colonial modernity.
 
Dr Hansen is most grateful to Dr Leigh Astbury and to Dr Keren Hammerschlag, Lecturer in Art History and Art Theory, Australian National University, for their assistance in preparing this catalogue essay
 
DR DAVID HANSEN
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR, CENTRE FOR ART HISTORY & ART THEORY,
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY
 
1. 1891-2 was something of an annus mirabilis for Tom Roberts. He completed the large, ambitious A Break Away! 1891 (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide), while the Art Society of New South Wales show in which the present work was first shown included the formal triptych of ‘Church, State and the Law’ portraits (Cardinal Moran, Sir Henry Parkes and Sir William Windeyer); the sensitive Eileen, 1892 and the powerful Aboriginal Head - Charlie Turner, 1892 (both Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney). 1892 was also the year he travelled north to Queensland and the Torres Strait, a journey that generated some memorable images, particularly of First Nations Australians.
2. The Sydney Morning Herald, 18 February 1891, p. 7
3. Curlew Camp would remain the artist’s main residence until his marriage to Lillie Williamson in April 1896.
4. Marcus Brasch and his brother Wolfe were Prussian Jews who had migrated to London in 1848, then to Melbourne in 1866; Wolfe and his extensive family later moved to Sydney. The family music store (employing the persuasive slogan ‘A home is not a home without a piano’) eventually expanded to become (with the Germanic ‘c’ dropped during the Great War) the national music and electronics chain Brashs.
5. Letter, Arthur Streeton to Tom Roberts, 17 January 1892, Roberts Papers, ML A2428, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney
6. Letter, Arthur Streeton to Tom Roberts, 16 January 1892, Roberts Papers, ML A2478, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney. Mary Eagle, formerly Senior Curator of Australian Art at the National Gallery of Australia, first proposed that the work to which Streeton is referring in this letter is A Modern Andromeda (then untraced). See Mary Eagle, The oil paintings of Tom Roberts in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1997, p. 61 n. 6
7. (profile portrait sketch of Lena Brasch) c. 1892, private collection; sold Christie’s Australia November 1992); (unfinished portrait study) 1893, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; An eastern princess 1893, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Plink a plong 1893, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide; and possibly the later A study of Jephthah’s daughter 1899, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney. The profile sketch also has a press cutting pasted on the reverse (‘Australians in England’, Sydney Morning Herald, 28 January 1905, p. 5) which mentions another, still later portrait of Lena, from 1904. By this time Lena was evidently sufficiently intimate with the Heidelberg School artists to have known and used their nicknames. A 1901 portrait photograph by Walter Barnett that she gave to Streeton (National Gallery of Australia, Canberra) is inscribed ’To Smike.’
8. ‘The theatre: musical and dramatic notes’, The Star (Christchurch), 26 September 1904, p.4
9. The painter’s devotion to the Euterpean muse is amply attested not only in letters, records of attendance at concerts, and the various musical activities of the clubs and societies with which he was associated, but also in his personal relationships: with Prof. G.W.L. Marshall-Hall, Melbourne’s musical colossus of the 1890s and early 1900s, with life-long friend S.W. Pring, an amateur flautist, and with Duncan Anderson of ‘Newstead’ station, a keen cornetist. Roberts’ oeuvre includes numerous musical subjects: portraits of musicians Nellie Billings (1900), Alice Bryant (1899), Daddy Hallawell (late 1890s), Alfred Hill (1897), Johann Kruse (1895), Marshall-Hall, of course, and Nellie Melba (c.1902), as well as subject pictures such as The violin lesson, c. 1889 (National Gallery of Victoria); Andante, 1889 (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide); The troubadour of Scott’s, c.1889 (Westpac Corporate Art Collection, Sydney); and Adagio, c.1893 (Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney). See Kertesz, E., ‘Music and the Australian Impressionists’, in Gray, A. and Hesson, A. (eds), She-Oak and Sunlight: Australian Impressionism, Thames & Hudson, in association with the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne p. 229). Kertesz believes the violinist in this last to be ‘probably Lena Brasch’; it is here suggested that the subject is more likely to be Bessie Doyle, one of whose signature performance pieces was the Adagio from Spohr’s 9th concerto in D minor. Miss Doyle performed extensively in Sydney and country New South Wales between June and November 1892, and she and Henri Kowalski headlined a concert in Sydney on 5 November (The Daily Telegraph, 2 November 1892, p. 2).
10. Murphy, K., ‘Henri Kowalski (1841-1916): a French musician in colonial Australia’, Australian Historical Studies, vol. 48 no. 3, August 2017, pp. 358 – 9
11.‘Sale of Mr Roberts’s paintings’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 14 November 1900, p. 5
12. ‘The Olga Waltz by Lena V. Brasch’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 23 June 1894, p. 2. Kowalski’s encomium reads: ‘I like the Strauss character of the Olga Waltz, and the first musical steps of Miss Lena V. Brasch deserve good commendation from both dilettanti and choreograph [sic]’ The waltz, written for piano, was named in honour of the actress Olga Nethersole.
13. ‘Art Society’, The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser, 10 September 1892, p. 581
14. Unknown artist, Perseus freeing Andromeda, c. 50-75 BCE, Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, Naples; Piero di Cosimo, Andromeda freed by Perseus, c. 1510-15, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence; Tiziano Vecelli, Perseus and Andromeda, 1553-59, Wallace Collection, London; Giorgio Vasari, Perseus and Andromeda, 1570-72, Palazzo Vecchio, Florence; Peter Paul Rubens, Perseus and Andromeda, c. 1622, Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg; Rembrandt van Rijn, Andromeda chained to the rocks, c.1630, Mauritshuis, The Hague
15. Eugène Delacroix, Perseus and Andromeda, c. 1853, Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart; Gustave Doré, Andromeda, 1869, private collection; Gustave Moreau, Perseus and Andromeda, 1870, Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery.
16. Edward Burne-Jones, Perseus and Andromeda (‘The rock of doom’ and ‘The doom fulfilled’) 1876, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide.
17. ‘Art’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 31 December 1891, p. 4; Tom Roberts, ‘The National Art Gallery of New South Wales’, The Argus, 31 October 1891, p. 4.
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
32
CHARLES CONDER
(1868 - 1909)
DOROTHY - DAUGHTER OF JOHN STEVENS ESQ, 1890
oil on canvas
35.5 x 18.5 cm
signed and dated lower right: Chas. Conder / 1890
PROVENANCE
John Stevens, Melbourne, commissioned from the artist in 1890
Dorothy Purbrick (née Stevens), Victoria, by descent from the above
Eric Stevens Purbrick, Victoria, by descent from the above
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 20 February 1970, lot 30 (as 'Portrait of a Young Girl, Dorothy Stevens')
Max Carter, Adelaide
Thirty Victoria Street, Sydney
Private collection, Sydney
Private collection, New South Wales
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
Private View: Pictures by Mr. Arthur Streeton, Mr. C. Douglas Richardson, Mr. Charles Conder, Gordon Chambers, Melbourne, 13 – 15 March 1890 (as 'Miss. Dorothy Stevens’)
Winter Exhibition, Victorian Artists' Society, Melbourne, 29 March 1890, cat. 103
LITERATURE
Table Talk, Melbourne, 7 March 1890, p. 6
‘The Victorian Artists' Society Annual Exhibition', The Age, Melbourne, 29 March 1890, p. 15
‘Victorian Artists' Society. Winter Exhibition. Final Notice', The Argus, Melbourne, 5 April 1890, p. 6
Punch, Melbourne, 10 April 1890, p. 224
Hoff, U., Charles Conder: His Australian Years, National Gallery Society of Victoria, Melbourne, 1960, cat. 52, p. 24 (as 'Portrait of Dorothy Stevens')
Hoff, U., Charles Conder, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, 1972, cat. C70, p. 102
CATALOGUE TEXT
The visual wit of Charles Conder’s painting is unique in Australian art. From brilliant colour to figuration and composition, it ranges from the subtle to the blatant, couched in terms of aesthetic delight. Red plays a major role in a number of works of the time, especially in That Fatal Colour, 1888 (private collection, Sydney) where the red parasol of the lady dressed in white attracts the unwelcome attention of a cow - or perhaps bull. In A Holiday at Mentone, 1888 (Art Gallery of South Australia), red continues to attract attention – hats, an upturned parasol and the red page of a newspaper, while the two, suited male figures, supine and erect, harmonise with the horizontals and verticals of the pier, shadows included. Rickett’s Point, 1890 (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne) again shows Conder’s delight in the red parasol as a focal point - here rolled, in keeping with the painting’s narrow format, it reflects the length and breadth of the beach. Each painting shows the striking individuality of Conder’s art during this golden period. Moreover, his portraits, especially those painted in Australia, have a particular appeal, fascinating both for the likenesses they preserve and their aesthetic appeal. Two classic examples are Sketch Portrait, c.1889, (National Gallery of Victoria) and An Impressionist (Tom Roberts), 1889, (Art Gallery of New South Wales) – both of which were featured in The 9 By 5 Impression Exhibition, Melbourne of 1889.
 
The following year, Conder showed six works in the Victorian Artists’ Society’s Winter Exhibition. They included Dorothy – Daughter of John Stevens Esq., 1890, and two major landscapes, the aforementioned Ricketts Point, 1890 and The Yarra, Heidelberg, 1890 (National Gallery of Australia, Canberra). The exhibition is also memorable for major works by others too, especially Arthur Streeton’s ‘Still glides the stream, and shall for ever glide’, 1890 (Art Gallery of New South Wales) and Frederick McCubbin’s A Bush Burial, 1890 (Geelong Gallery). In early March, prior to the Victorian Artists’ Society show, Conder, together with C. D. Richardson and Arthur Streeton, held a private view in their studios at Gordon Chambers, Flinders Lane. Reviewed by Melbourne’s Table Talk, it was noted that:
 
‘Mr. Conder has painted a small portrait (a commission) of Miss Dorothy Stevens, daughter of Mr. John Stevens, and is commencing work on a second commission – a panel portrait of Miss Janet Achurch (Mrs. Chas. Carrington). The first-mentioned evidences Mr. Conder’s fine sense of colour – a characteristic that is perceptible in a number of smaller studies’.1
 
The portrait’s colour continued to receive the critics’ approval later in the month when featured in the Society’s exhibition. The Argus observed ‘Mr. Charles Conder contributes a harmony in red’,2 while Melbourne’s Punch described the work as ‘A charming little study, quite Japanese in its decorative effect of red and blue background. The frame blends with the colour scheme.’3 The influence of Japanese art, especially colour, composition and format, on Conder’s work at this time was pronounced. The narrowness found in some Japanese colour prints, for example, is repeated in the bold vertically of our portrait, seen famously in Conder’s How We Lost Poor Flossie, 1889 (Art Gallery of South Australia) and horizontally in Rickett’s Point, 1890 (National Gallery of Victoria).4

English-born, Dorothy was to marry Reginald Purbrick, the Purbrick family being of Chateau Tahbilk winery fame established on the Goulburn River, Victoria in 1860.
 
1. ‘Art and Artists: Mr. Charles Conder’, Table Talk, Melbourne, 7 March 1890, p. 6
2. ‘Victorian Artists’ Society, Winter Exhibition. Final Notice’, The Argus, Melbourne, 5 April 1890, p. 6
3. Punch, Melbourne, 10 April 1890, p. 224
4. Hoff, U., Charles Conder: His Australian Years, National Gallery Society of Victoria, Melbourne, 1960, p. 15
 
DAVID THOMAS

Bunny Rupert ARTIST'S SISTER ANNETTE, 1890view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
34
RUPERT BUNNY
(1864 - 1947)
THE ARTIST'S SISTER ANNETTE, 1890
oil on panel
25.0 x 16.0 cm
signed and dated lower left: RUPERT BUNNY / 90
PROVENANCE
Private collection, United Kingdom
Christie’s, London, 29 May 1984, lot 142 (as ‘A Young Lady Reading at a Table’)
Tom Silver Fine Art, Sydney
Gould Galleries, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above in 1999
69 John Street, Sydney
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
Collectors Exhibition: Important Australian Artists 1830 – 1940, Tom Silver Fine Art, Melbourne, 31 March – 21 April 1985, cat. 35 (illus., as ‘Portrait of a Young Woman Reading’)
Traditional, Modern and Contemporary Fine Art, 69 John St, Sydney, 11 April – 2 May 2014, cat. 5 (illus. in exhibition catalogue, as ‘The Artist's Sister Hilda Reading’, label attached verso)
LITERATURE
Thomas, D., The Life and Art of Rupert Bunny, A Catalogue Raisonné in Two Volumes, Thames & Hudson, Melbourne, 2017, Volume 1: p.16, Volume 2: cat. O25, pp. 52 (illus.), 53, 286
CATALOGUE TEXT
Annette Bunny (1862-1949), known as ‘Nettie’, was Rupert Bunny’s closest sister and a favourite model during his early years. Possibly his first portrait, Portrait of a Lady, c.1885 (private collection, Sydney) is of Annette. Others followed, including those of her daughters Ethel and Hilda. His finest group portrait, Portrait of Mrs Herbert Jones and Her Daughters, c.1904 (private collection, Sydney) was painted at her home, ‘The Priory’, Huntington, England, where Bunny was a frequent visitor. The Artist’s Sister Annette, 1890 is also thought to have been painted there during a visit from Paris. The occasion was important. Joined by their mother, Marie Bunny and youngest sister Hilda, they were visiting from Australia following the tragically early death of Annette’s husband Walter Coote. Significantly, it is one of a very few paintings Bunny dated, most having family connections.
 
Of the seven Bunny sons and daughters, Annette was born on 26 January 1862 and Rupert on 29 September 1864. Their Australian home was ‘Eckerberg’ in the Melbourne suburb of St. Kilda until Annette married the Englishman Walter Coote in1881 and settled in England. Later, when Rupert travelled to Europe with his father, Brice Bunny, and stayed on in England to study art, the Cootes kept a friendly family watch, giving Rupert much support. A joint Annette-Rupert sketchbook of c.1884-6 bears witness to their mutual interest, sketching together outdoors as they did in those years.1
 
Coote gained international fame through his travels, having twice ventured around the world and exploring in particular, Melanesia. His subsequent books were highly acclaimed, for example, The Western Pacific: Being Descriptive of the Groups of Islands of the North and East of the Australian Continent, published in London in 1883 and illustrated with engravings from the author’s sketches. A member of the Royal Geographical Society, Coote eventually gave his collection of native weapons and ornaments to the British Museum.2
 
Support for Bunny continued throughout Annette’s second marriage to the wealthy brewer Herbert Jones in August 1892. His wedding present was Bunny’s painting, Les Roses de Sainte-Dorothée, 1892 (Bunny’s mother’s third name was ‘Dorothea’). Jones took an active role in the political life of the county; and when mayor of Huntington in 1901, he commissioned Bunny to paint a portrait of Edward George Henry, 8th Earl of Sandwich, which he presented to the Corporation of Huntington. A keen sportsman, Jones was a regular follower of the Fitzwilliam Hounds, Annette being a fearless huntswoman who relished the thrill of the jump.3
 
The Artist’s Sister Annette, 1890 presents a striking image of Nettie profiled against heavy, dark curtains. Emphasis is given to what she is doing through the highlighting of hands and document. What she is reading is tantalisingly unknown. Strong in character, the composition shows Bunny’s early mastery of the play of light across dress and figure. Within a year he painted another dated work of Annette, the bust Portrait of Mrs Walter Coote, 1891 (private collection, London). Profiled in the Italian Quattrocento tradition, her face line is even more effectively rendered set against the plainest of backgrounds. And again, a lively Mrs Herbert Jones in Sketch was probably painted in 1892, the year of her second marriage. Bunny, warmly acknowledged in the academies and salons of London, Paris, Budapest and elsewhere, became one of Australia’s most internationally distinguished artists of his age. His brilliant portraits of the great and gifted include Madame Melba, c.1902 (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne) and Percy Grainger, c.1902 (Grainger Museum, The University of Melbourne).

1. Nanette Coote/Rupert Bunny Sketchbook, The University of Melbourne Art Collection (1948.36)
2. ‘Walter Coote obituary’, The Hunts County Guardian, 29 March 1890, p. 8
3. ‘H. C. Jones obituary’, The Huntingdonshire Post, 21 November 1935, p. 9

DAVID THOMAS
Lambert Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
35
GEORGE LAMBERT
(1873 - 1930)
DOÑA SOL, 1910
oil on canvas 
127.5 x 102.0 cm
signed and dated lower left: G. W. LAMBERT / 1910 
PROVENANCE
The Fine Art Society, London
Private collection
Christie’s, Melbourne, 14 March 1974, lot 435 (as ‘Portrait of a Woman with a Terrier’)
Clune Galleries, Sydney (label attached verso)
Jack Manton, Queensland
Thence by descent
Jennifer Manton, Sydney
Estate of the above, Sydney
EXHIBITED
Third Exhibition of Fair Women, ISSPG, Grafton Galleries, London, 26 May – 31 July 1910, cat. 69 
LITERATURE
Birmingham Post, 30 May 1910
Henry, P., Art News, London, 2 June 1910
Onlooker, London, 4 June 1910
P.G. Konody, Observer, London, 5 June 1910, p. 9 (as ‘Doña Sol’)
Ingram, T., A Matter of Taste, Collins, Sydney, 1976, pp. 46, 134 (illus., as ‘Portrait of a Woman with a Terrier’)
Gray, A., George Lambert 1873 – 1930, Catalogue Raisonné, Bonamy Press in association with Sotheby’s and Australian War Memorial, Canberra, 1993, cat. P116, p.36  
CATALOGUE TEXT
In London’s Edwardian age, sophisticated beauties of fashionable inclination happily indulged themselves in hats of outrageous size. Society portrait painters responded with alacrity; two exceptional three-quarter length works of this time by George Washington Lambert were Mrs Henry Dutton of South Australia (Guy Morrison Collection, London) and our painting, Doña Sol. Both were painted in 1910. Aristocratic and gracious, Emily Dutton’s low-cut black dress enhanced her beauty. The dress of the more theatrically inclined Doña Sol was likewise low cut, accompanied by blue shawl and blue ostrich feathers peeking cheekily around the edge of a black hat. Lambert silhouetted his ladies beguilingly against romantic landscapes. The ‘trepidation’ of Henry Dutton, Emily’s husband, who commissioned the portrait during a visit to London, was such that he made watchful attendance at the studio sittings.1
 
In this quintessential age of feminism, Lambert endowed these belle époque pictorial moments with poise, elegance and eye-catching gestures. For Mrs Dutton the look is direct; for Doña Sol it is haughty. The latter has sensuality in abundance, heightened by bravura. Detachment and a sense of the unobtainable adds a new edge. Andrew Motion, writing on Lambert’s portrait, Miss Thea Proctor, 1903 (Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney), observed that: ‘Its potency depends greatly on its restraint’, adding, the handling of the paint ‘is intensely sensuous’,2 a characteristic shared with Doña Sol and others. Naked flesh, liberally revealed, and underlying eroticism are celebrated in elongated neck and arms. Doña Sol is identified by Anne Gray as ‘An exhibition piece, not a commissioned portrait’3 – the dog giving a clue to the otherwise enigmatic nature of the painting.

DH2021 ART CAT (NOVEMBER) - CATALOGUE FA FLIP BOOK VERSION.JPG


George W Lambert
The artist and his wife, 1904
oil on canvas
81.2 x 81.5cm
Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
Animals appear in portraits of all kinds and for all kind of reasons. The horse ennobles the conquering emperor in Jacques-Louis David’s equestrian portrait of Napoleon (Musée du Louvre). The pugnacious nature of William Hogarth is emphasised by the presence of his pug dog in the very British self-portrait (Tate Gallery, London). And in Rupert Bunny’s pair, Portrait of the Artist’s Wife, c.1896 (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne) and Jeanne with Her Terrier, c.1896 (private collection), fidelity is enshrined in embrace. The difference between Bunny’s two paintings and Doña Sol could not be more stark. In Lambert’s painting, the relationship between woman and dog is detached and teasingly distant. Using the entire person for expression of character, as was his manner, Lambert’s Doña Sol typically draws attention to her hands – elegantly idle. Here is the quizzical coquette, acting her flirtatious part by provocatively drawing attention to herself.
When Doña Sol was exhibited in London in mid-1910, critical opinion was divided. The Birmingham Post praised its ‘admirable colour arrangement’4, while Paul Henry in Art News thought it ‘too intentionally clever’5 and P.G. Konody of The Observer stung with ‘superficial slickness’, failing to acknowledge that Lambert’s slick usages were part of his characterisation of fickleness.6 For Lambert, it was a period of great achievement through many works of outstanding merit. The exquisitely beautiful Portrait of Annie, Wife of John Proctor Esqr, Barrister at Law, 1907 was hailed by the same P.G. Konody of The Observer: ‘It is in this portrait of Mrs Proctor that Mr Lambert proves his right to be counted among the leading portrait painters’.7 When The Blue Hat, 1909 (Kerry Stokes Collection, Perth) was exhibited in the Paris New Salon, it was judged ‘The Picture of the Year’.8 The unconventional Chesham Street, 1910 (National Gallery of Australia, Canberra), provided a bold psychological approach to medical examination. And as if to crown these years of achievement, in 1910 Lambert was commissioned by London’s Imperial Colonial Club to paint a grand equestrian portrait of King Edward VII.

1. Their son Geoffrey Dutton, quoted in a letter: see Gray, A., George Lambert 1873-1930, Catalogue Raisonné, Bonamy Press in association with Sotheby’s and Australian War Memorial, Canberra, Canberra, 1993, p. 36
2. Motion, A., The Lamberts: George, Constant & Kit, Chatto & Windus, London, 1986, p. 45
3. Gray, op. cit, p. 36
4. Birmingham Post, 30 May 1910
5. Henry, P., Art News, 2 June 1910
6. Konody, P.G., Observer, 5 June 1910
7. Ibid, 9 February 1908, p. 5
8. Motion, op. cit., p. 46

DAVID THOMAS
Streeton Arthur Centre of the Empireview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
36
ARTHUR STREETON
(1867 - 1943)
THE CENTRE OF THE EMPIRE, 1902
oil on canvas
122.5 x 122.5 cm
signed and dated lower left: ArthuR STREETON / 1902
PROVENANCE
Sir Walter Baldwin Spencer, Melbourne, by 1907
The Baldwin Spencer Collection of Australian Pictures and Works of Art, Fine Art Society, Melbourne, 19 May 1919, lot 30
Acquired from the above by Mr A.T. Creswick, Melbourne, until 1939
Thence by descent
Sir Alexander Reid Creswick, Melbourne, until 1982
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
Salon de la Société des Artistes Français, Grand Palais, Paris, 1 May 1902, cat. 1527 (as ‘Gelée du matin, Londres’)
Arthur Streeton, Ryder Gallery, London, 2 May 1903, cat. 22 (as ‘Trafalgar Square’)
An Exhibition of Pictures by Arthur Streeton Prior to his Return to Europe, Upper Hibernian Hall, Melbourne, 20 April 1907, cat. 67 (illus., as ‘The Centre of the Empire’)
Sir W. Baldwin Spencer’s Collection, National Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1 December 1916, cat. 6
Loan Exhibition, Collection of Paintings and Drawings by Australian Artists executed during the last 25 to 30 Years, National Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, April 1918, cat. 13 (illus. p.7 of exhibition catalogue, as ‘Centre of the Empire’)
Arthur Streeton Memorial Exhibition, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 5 September – 7 October 1944, cat. 68 (as ‘The Heart of the Empire’, lent by Mrs Alexander Creswick)
Arthur Streeton 1867–1943, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 8 December 1995 – 3 November 1996, cat. 59
Streeton, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 7 November 2020 – 14 February 2021 (as ‘The Centre of the Empire’) 
LITERATURE
Joel, G., ‘Australian Artists in London: A reminiscence’, Art and Architecture, William Brooks and Co., Sydney, vol. 3, no. 3, May – June 1906, p.101 (as ‘the Trafalgar Square picture’)
The Lone Hand, Sydney, 1 July 1907, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 309, 310 (illus., as ‘The Centre of the Empire’)
Lindsay, L., ‘Arthur Streeton’s place in Australian Art’, Art in Australia, Angus and Robertson Ltd., Sydney, no. 2, 1917, n.p. (as ‘The Centre of the Empire’)
‘The Loan Exhibition’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 4 April 1918, p.4
‘Australian Pictures: The Spencer Collection’, The Argus, Melbourne, 3 May 1919, p.9 (as ‘The Centre of the Empire’)
Lloyd Jones, C., Stevens, B., & Smith, U., The Art of Arthur Streeton, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1919, pl. 25 (illus.)
‘Art Notes: Mr Arthur Streeton Among the Grampians’, The Age, Melbourne, 2 November 1920, p. 8 (as ‘The Centre of the Empire’)
McDonald, J.S., ‘Australian Artists. No. 6. Arthur Streeton’, The Herald, Melbourne, 12 September 1924, p. 6 (as ‘Centre of the Empire’)
Lindsay, L.,’ Arthur Streeton’, Art in Australia, Third Series, no. 40, Art in Australia Ltd., Sydney, October 1931, p. 10 (as ‘The Centre of Empire’)
Streeton, A., The Arthur Streeton Catalogue, Osboldstone & Co., Melbourne, 1935, cat. 258B (as 'Trafalgar Square' (Mr. A. T. Creswick))
Galbally, A., Arthur Streeton, Lansdowne, Melbourne, 1969, cat. 94
Wray, C., Arthur Streeton: Painter of Light, Jacaranda Wiley, Milton, 1993, pp.97, 100, 102
Eagle, M., The Oil Paintings of Arthur Streeton in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1994, p.140 (dated as c.1901)
Smith, G., Arthur Streeton 1867–1943, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 1995, cat. 59, pp.140–141 (illus.)
Tunnicliffe, W., Streeton, Art Gallery of New South Wales and Thames & Hudson, Sydney, 2020, pp.174 – 75, 183 (illus.), 197, 284 – 285, 336, 371
RELATED WORKS
Frosty Noon, 1901, oil on canvas, 122.5 x 122.5 cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
CATALOGUE TEXT

210633 ALICE MILLS, PORTRAIT OF ARTHUR STREETON.JPG

Untitled (Portrait of Arthur Streeton), 1907
Photographer: Alice Mills (Australia, 1870 – 1929)
platinotype gelatin silver photograph, 13.9 x 10 cm
Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Purchased 1983
188.1983
We are grateful to Dr Anne Gray, curator and former Head of Australian Art at the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, for her permission to reproduce the following excerpt from her essay featured in the catalogue accompanying the recent Streeton retrospective at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 7 November 2020 – 14 February 2021.

‘London & England what a mighty thing it all is ... London seems even too large & almost beyond the management of the capable men now directing it - the rate of its growth increases each day - its wealth stupendous.’1
 
Arthur Streeton wrote this in London in January 1901. Queen Victoria was ill and dying, and the city, England and the British Commonwealth were on the brink of change. London had become the largest city in Europe,2 and its energy attracted artists, musicians and writers from all over the western world. Streeton arrived in early May 1897, having departed Australia on 27 January.
In England, over more than fifteen years, Streeton began to paint differently. The reasons for this were fourfold.
 
First, what he saw was not the same: the softer English light and London fog were so different from the bright, sharp light and strong colours of Australia. Also, as he reported to Tom Roberts in June 1898, 'I feel convinced that my work hereafter will contain a larger idea & quality than before - After seeing Constable Turner Titian Watts & all the masters'.3 He saw, too, the works of a wide range of artists of the day. In 1898 he wrote that he preferred the International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers exhibition to the staid presentation of British art at the Royal Academy. The former included works by Charles Conder, James Abbott McNeill Whistler and the Scottish School (the Glasgow Boys), as well as Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Edouard Manet, Claude Monet and the French-based Norwegian artist Frits Thaulow.4
 
Fourthly, successful artists need a network of advisers and supporters, friends and challengers - even rivals. In Streeton's first years in London, he was adrift without the camaraderie of his mentor Roberts and 'sparring partner, Conder', who lived in England but frequently travelled. His loneliness, poverty and experience of bitter winter led to depression. He was in contact with the photographer H. Walter Barnett, now residing in London,5 but Barnett could not provide relevant advice. It may be that one of Streeton's mistakes was not following an Australian critic's advice to study in Paris.6 He certainly would have met fellow artists, as did Conder (Will Rothenstein and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec) and John Russell (Vincent van Gogh), and found a circle of friends to provide support and guidance.

210633 ARTHUR STREETON, FROSTY NOON, NGV.JPG

Arthur Streeton
Frosty Noon, 1901
oil on canvas
122.5 x 122.5 cm
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Streeton did meet up with Conder, who was willing to help his old friend and even share his studio with him, but Conder had established himself in France and England, and the balance of the relationship had changed. Following Conder's marriage to Stella Maris Belford in December 1901, Streeton felt more comfortable in his company, and in 1902 spent Christmas with the couple. When Roberts arrived in London in April 1903, Streeton eagerly resumed their friendship. He also encountered a number of former Australian acquaintances, such as the artists E. Phillips Fox and A. Henry Fullwood, and gradually met British artists like Philip Wilson Steer (who in January 1903 supported Streeton's nomination to become a member of the Chelsea Arts Club, where he met further British contemporaries).7
 
Importantly, by 1899 Streeton had met his future wife, the Canadian violinist Nora Clench. He reported to Roberts that she was 'wise (advises me as you often used to - to spur me into energy & better things)'.8 She was interested in the arts - in poetry and painting - as well as being a highly talented musician, with her own quartet. She had contacts, people who could offer Streeton commissions, such as Walter Russell Rea, who commissioned him in 1905 to depict shipping and dockland scenes at Southampton and Liverpool, and the Mond family, to paint landscapes in Kent in 1913.9
 
In the summer of 1898, Streeton travelled to Sussex, where he painted his first English landscape, Sussex harvest 1898. To some extent, he adopted a format he had used in Australia, in works such as 'What thou among the leaves hast never known' (also known as A bush idyll), 1896, depicting a scene framed by overarching trees; here, however, he depicted a sunny landscape rather than a poetic moonlit one. By this time, he would have had the opportunity to view John Constable's The cornfield, 1826 (National Gallery, London), which is also a view through trees towards a cornfield, under sunlit clouds. Streeton was dissatisfied with his own painting, writing to Roberts in 1902: ‘The first & only chance I've had yet at English landscape was Sussex soon after my arrival - all too new, & fresh - now - I see more clearly what I can do for myself.’10
 
It was a 'good enough' first attempt at an English pastoral scene, but he needed more time to assimilate the new landscape, the new light and the ideas of earlier artists. Nonetheless, the painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy in June 1899 and with the Society of Artists in Australia later that year.

NOVL21 CAT PROOF 7_10_2021 B (2) (002).JPG

Arthur Streeton with Nora Streeton
(née Clench), with Pat, the dog, at
their Hill Road Home, London, c.1909
Photographer: Walter Barnett
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
By 1901, Streeton had become accustomed to London's frosty, foggy winter atmosphere. He responded to the muted light in The centre of the Empire (also known as Foggy morning), one of two large square (122.5 x 122.5 cm) images of Trafalgar Square, painted in 1901-02; the other is Frosty noon, 1901 (National Gallery of Victoria). Streeton was not only using a canvas of a similar size and shape to those used by Monet,11 but also, like Monet, painting a similar scene at different times of day. Streeton was also adopting the urban subject often depicted by the French artists. (He had viewed the work of French artists in 1898 in the International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers exhibition and in the Loan collection of pictures by painters of the French school at the Guildhall. He had also spent a week in Paris in 1901. And in May 1902, he travelled to France and Belgium with E. Phillips Fox and Fox may have discussed the ideas of 'broken colour' with Streeton.)12 Streeton regarded his two images of Trafalgar Square as the finest paintings he had produced since arriving in England. He wrote to Roberts in February 1902: ‘Trafalgar Square 4 feet square - Best I've done yet in England - from top of St Martins' Church in Dec. a tough job - drawn in 1 day & painted in 4 days - I'll try it at the R. A. But I get accepted there and never hung - during past week I made a swift copy of it, & it goes tomorrow to the Salon.’13 The 'swift copy' was not so much a copy as a full-scale second version at a different time of day; nothing less would have been appropriate to send to the Société des Artistes Français. Despite Streeton's doubts, one painting was accepted by the Royal Academy and the other by the Société.

In Australia, he had painted atmospheric scenes of the modern city, seen from above, such as The railway station, Redfern, 1893, and Fireman's funeral, George Street, 1894, but this London pair are larger, more ambitious works.14 He showed the beauty of the wintry city under a veiled light, with Trafalgar Square lively and luminous, enveloped in a silvery mist. The reflections gleam on the wet street and in the pond, the line of traffic enlivens the scene, and the ephemeral buildings hover in the background. As a critic wrote in 1909, the image is full of 'tenderness, mystery and harmony of tones'.15

1. Arthur Streeton letter to Tom Roberts, 8 Jan 1901, in Galbally, A. & Gray, A., (eds), Letters from Smike: the letters of Arthur Streeton 1890-1943, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1989, p. 85
2. London at that time had a population of around 6,480, 000 - almost double that of Paris.
3. Arthur Streeton letter to Tom Roberts, 28 Jun 1898, in Galbally & Gray, op.cit., p. 78
4. Streeton later owned a work by Frits Thaulow, In Dieppe (private collection). He may have obtained it through Conder, who was a friend of Thaulow.
5. Barnett, with his wife, had travelled with Streeton to Cairo, and had lent Streeton his camera to use in Cairo.
6. Australasian Critic, 1 Jul 1891, p 240. This critic wrote that 'the one thing that is essential to his future reputation is to seek, as soon as possible, the best Parisian instruction'.
7. Streeton was formally elected to membership of the Chelsea Arts Club on 5 Jan 1903: proposed by Francis Derwent Wood; seconded by Norman Hardy; and supported by Philip Wilson Steer, AS Haynes and Alfred Hayward.
8. Arthur Streeton letter to Tom Roberts, 22 Jun 1899, in Galbally & Gray, op.cit., p. 80
9. Eagle, M., The oil paintings of Arthur Streeton in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1994, pp. 124-25, 203-04. In 1905, Streeton was commissioned to paint shipping and dockyard scenes by Walter Russell Rea, Liberal MP (1873-1943). He was heir to the firm of R. & J.H. Rea Shipowners and Merchants, which was founded in Liverpool in the 1870s, and by the early 1900s, had branches in Cardiff, Southampton, Bristol and Newcastle-on-Tyne. In 1896, Rea married Evelyn Muirhead. Nora Clench's sister had married Evelyn's brother, Findlay, in 1892, hence the connection.
10. Arthur Streeton letter to Tom Roberts, 7 Aug 1902, in Galbally & Gray, pp. 92-93
11. Streeton had first used a square canvas this size in 1896, just before he left Australia, for 'The purple noon's transparent might'. The painting was purchased by the National Gallery of Victoria that year, and Streeton may have believed that the size and scale had contributed to its success. He used it again for his two large Trafalgar Square paintings of 1901 and 1902, and in 1907 for Sydney Harbour, which was purchased by the National Gallery of Victoria in 1910, a few years after he painted it.
12. The visit to Paris in 1901 is recorded in Eagle., op.cit., p. 202, and the May 1902 trip to France and Belgium with E Phillips Fox in Eagle., op.cit, p. 203
13. Arthur Streeton letter to Tom Roberts, 14 Feb 1902, in Galbally & Gray, p. 91
14. In Mar 1906, GWL Marshall-Hall saw a number of Streeton's recent canvases at Herbert Streeton's home and directed Walter Baldwin Spencer towards Trafalgar Square, 1901. Spencer acquired the painting for £100 (and apparently convinced Streeton to call it The centre of the Empire). See Mulvaney, D.J. & Calaby, J.H., So much that is new: Baldwin Spencer 1860-1929: a biography, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 1985, pp. 338-39 and note 18
15. Irwin MacDonald, M., 'Arthur Streeton: an Australian painter who has solved the problems art in his own way', The Craftsman, vol. 16-17, no. 2, Nov 1909, p. 163

DR ANNE GRAY

Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
37
TOM ROBERTS
(1856 - 1931)
SUMMER AFTERNOON, c.1919
oil on cedar panel
20.5 x 12.0 cm
signed lower left: Tom Roberts 
PROVENANCE
Miss Emily M. Giddy, Melbourne
Thence by descent
Mrs H.W. Giddy, Melbourne
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Jack Manton, Queensland
Thence by descent
Jennifer Manton, Sydney
Estate of the above, Sydney
EXHIBITED
possibly Catalogue of Paintings (English and Australian) by Tom Roberts, Anthony Hordern & Sons Ltd, Sydney, 16 August 1920, cat. 26
Winter Exhibitions 1976, Recent Acquisitions, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 7 – 18 June 1976, cat. 19 (as ‘A lady and gentleman seated under an umbrella on the esplanade, c.1920’, illus. in exhibition catalogue) 
LITERATURE
Spate, V., ‘Tom Roberts’ Catalogue’, in Tom Roberts and Australian Impressionism, 1869 to 1903’, MA thesis, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, 1962, cat. 446 (as ‘Two Women Seated in Conversation’)
Topliss, H., Tom Roberts, 1856-1931: A Catalogue Raisonné, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1985, vol. I, p. 193, cat. 484 (as ‘Untitled. A Lady and a Gentleman Seated Under an Umbrella, c.1919’); vol. II, pl. 202 (illus.)
CATALOGUE TEXT
Summer Afternoon, c.1919, is of one of the most individual works in Tom Roberts’ oeuvre. It is also one of the most elusive. In the past, it has resisted identification. Virginia Spate, in her 1962 pioneering study of Roberts, possibly gave it the title ‘Two Women Seated in Conversation’. The model for the woman she said was Roberts’ friend Emily Giddy, sister of Sir Harold Giddy.1 In her catalogue raisonné of 1985, Helen Topliss listed it as ‘Untitled. A Lady and a Gentleman Seated Under an Umbrella’.2 Our title of ‘Summer Afternoon’ is taken from the painting of the same size Roberts exhibited in 1920 at Melbourne’s Athenaeum Hall in March and Anthony Hordern & Sons, Sydney in August.3 Further, it is known that Roberts was painting landscapes in Cornwall during the spring of 1919,4 although the painting offers no clue to its location.
 
The seasons had a special appeal for Roberts, particularly the sunny ones. This is apparent in the early paintings of the bushlands and beaches of Melbourne and Sydney. Significant early examples include A Summer Morning Tiff, 1886 (Art Gallery of Ballarat), painted at Houston’s farm, Box Hill, and the sparkling Holiday Sketch at Coogee, 1888 (Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney) painted in company with Charles Conder during an Easter visit to Coogee. Returning to England in 1903, Roberts quickly came to terms with the engaging atmospheric and cultural differences, witnessed in such works of Whistlerian subtlety as The Towpath, Putney, c.1904 (Kerry Stokes Collection, Perth) and Putney Bridge, London, c.1905 (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, M.J.M. Carter Collection). Later there are warmer days, as in Springtime in Sussex, 1921 (Art Gallery of New South Wales), described by Anne Gray, as ‘quintessentially English’.5
 
Our painting, Summer Afternoon, c.1919, is of quite a different kind, although its roots derive from that past. The enigmatic can be found in the Venetian Woman on a Balcony, 1884 (private collection), and the chic woman seated out-of-doors in Lady with a Parasol, c.1889 (sold by Deutscher and Hackett, Sydney, 30 August 2017, lot 11). To each, with the wonderful atmosphere that comes from having been painted en plein air, Roberts adds characteristic individual subtleties of light and colour.
 
Summer Afternoon has an intriguing anonymity. The two figures, seen from the side, turn their faces away from the viewer, the anonymity of the couple extended to the unidentified location. Absence of narrative heightens curiosity. At midday, when life stands still in startling clarity, Roberts evokes feelings of tantalising expectancy, the brevity of the noonday shadows countered by the imaginative shade cast by the umbrella. Bathed in the bright, white light of a summer’s day, the beach chair and its occupant are the most clearly defined features - the cast iron work nearby providing a touch of decorative invention. 
 
By translating actuality into poetic invention, Summer Afternoon, c.1919 is filled with creativity and individuality. Overflowing with enveloping atmosphere and lively brushstrokes, the restricted palette is masterfully handled.
 
1. See Topliss, H., Tom Roberts, 1856-1931: A Catalogue Raisonné, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1985, vol. 1, p. 193, and Spate, V., ‘Tom Roberts’ Catalogue’, in Tom Roberts and Australian Impressionism, 1869 to 1903’, MA thesis, University of Melbourne, 1962, cat. 446.
2. Emily Giddy also sat for Roberts’ portrait, The Elusive Louisa, c. 1910-14, (Topliss, H., ibid., cat. 427), once in the famed Jack Manton collection of Heidelberg School artists.
3. Exhibition of Paintings by Tom Roberts, Athenaeum Hall, Melbourne, 30 March – 17 April 1920, cat. 67, and Tom Roberts, Anthony Hordern & Sons, Sydney 16 August 1920, cat. 26
4. Topliss, H., op. cit., vol. 1, p. 76
5. Gray, A., Tom Roberts, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 2015, p. 291
 
DAVID THOMAS
Bunny Rupert RENCONTRE DANS LE PARC OR DANS L’ALLÉEview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
39
RUPERT BUNNY
(1864 - 1947)
RENCONTRE DANS LE PARC OR DANS L’ALLÉE, c.1912 – 13
oil on canvas 
73.0 x 60.0 cm
signed lower left: Rupert C W Bunny
inscribed with title on stretcher bar verso: Dans l’Allée
inscribed on label attached verso: 12 RENCONTRE / DANS LE PARC.
PROVENANCE
Mr F E Trigg, Sydney, acquired c.1950s
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
possibly: Exposition Rupert C. W. Bunny, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, 16 –31 March 1917, cat.15 (as ‘Dans l’Allée’)
possibly: Exhibition of Paintings by Rupert C. W. Bunny, Fine Art Society’s Gallery, Melbourne, 15 - 27 November 1922, cat. 39 (as ‘Dans l’Ailée [sic.]) 
possibly: An Exhibition of Oil Paintings and Drawings by Rupert C. W. Bunny, Anthony Hordern and Sons Ltd Galleries, Sydney, 2 – 31 May 1923, cat. 39 (as ‘Dans l’Ailée’ [sic.]) 
CATALOGUE TEXT
One of the most internationally successful Australian artists of his generation, Rupert Bunny was born in Melbourne and first trained at the National Gallery School, before settling permanently in Paris during the early 1890s where la belle époque was at its height. By 1904, he had become the first Australian artist to receive an honorable mention in the Société des Artistes Francais; was elected a sociétaire of various French exhibiting institutions; and enjoyed the prestige of being the only Antipodean artist until then to have his work acquired by the French State, with Après le bain, c.1904 bought from the New Salon for the Musée de Luxembourg (now the Musée d’Orsay).

While Bunny continued to evoke an opulent, often indolent elegance in his works produced around the fin-de-siècle and early twentieth century, by the first years of World War I his paintings were ‘…evolving slowly towards a modern notion of a busy woman’s life, as she sewed, worked in the garden or chatted to a friend.’1 As Mary Eagle elucidates, ‘Bunny modified his imagery just sufficiently to hint at the change. His women were still softly pretty… but their clothes were less hampering and their expressions slightly more alert.’2 Featuring the artist’s wife, the ravishing Jeanne Heloise Morel (on the left), chatting with two female companions in the sunshine on their promenade through one of the city’s newly-renovated public parks, Rencontre dans le Parc (Dans l’Allée) captures brilliantly the spirit and élan of Parisian society during these wartime years – and the subtle shift in Bunny’s art accordingly. Like the closely related Two Ladies in a Garden, c.1913-16 (which depicts Madame Bunny seated and similarly dressed in a loose ‘tea gown’ and shading herself with a lace parasol while conversing with the same female companion as that depicted centre here wearing a very informal kimono gown),3 the present work betrays a noticeable absence of artifice, imbued rather with the artist’s genuine love of his subject and indeed, of the art of making pictures itself. With its emphasis on Parisian outdoor leisure (‘la chasse au bonheur’) and its softly Impressionistic rendering of fleeting light and lyrical colour, Rencontre dans le Parc (Dans l’Allée) attests, moreover, to the way in which Bunny created an art appropriate to his time and the conditions of modernity – assimilating avant-garde modes into establishment practice.

Transforming the prosaic into the poetic through his mastery of figure composition and feminine charm, and his exquisitely light and airy palette, thus Bunny offered contemporary audiences a vision of the everyday exuding joie de vivre and ‘…a peaceful remoteness from the ‘sturm and drang’ of modern life’.4 As leading French art critic of the day Gustave Geffroy observed of the artist’s celebrated solo exhibition at Galerie George Petit, Paris in March 1917 (in which Rencontre dans le Parc (Dans l’Allée) and the following lot 40 were possibly included), Bunny’s paintings express ‘the luminous joy of daylight… and the pleasure of living in the shadow of trees looking out on a festival of sunshine… [He] is a realist and a visionary, an observer of truth and a poet of the world of dreams.’5

1. Eagle, M. and Jones, J., A Story of Australian Painting, Macmillan Australia, Sydney, 1994, p. 132
2. ibid.
3. The author is most grateful to Dr David Thomas for highlighting this comparable work
4. Sydney Morning Herald, 22 September 1911, p. 7
5. Geffroy, G., ‘Rupert Bunny: Introduction’, Exposition Rupert C.W. Bunny, Galeries Georges Petit, Paris, 1917, n.p.

VERONICA ANGELATOS
Bunny Rupert FEBRUARY, CAVALAIRE, c.1910view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
40
RUPERT BUNNY
(1864 - 1947)
FEBRUARY, CAVALAIRE, c.1910
oil on canvas on composition board 
50.0 x 61.0 cm
signed lower right: Rupert C W Bunny 
inscribed on label verso: February (Cavalerie [sic.])
bears inscription on frame verso: ROBERT HAINES 
PROVENANCE
Estate of the artist
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
Mr F E Trigg, Sydney, acquired c.1950s
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
Exhibition of Paintings by Rupert C. W. Bunny, Fine Art Society’s Gallery, Melbourne, 15 - 27 November 1922, cat. 34 (as ‘February Sun at Cavalaire’) 
An Exhibition of Oil Paintings and Drawings by Rupert C. W. Bunny, Anthony Hordern and Sons Ltd Galleries, Sydney, 2 – 31 May 1923, cat. 34 (as ‘February Sun at Cavalaire’)
possibly: Exhibition of Paintings by Rupert Bunny, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 3 – 22 September, cat. 26 (as ‘Cavalaire’)
An exhibition of French Landscapes and a Group of Early Paintings by Rupert Bunny, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 1 – 8 October 1945, cat. 13 (as ‘February, Cavalaire’)
LITERATURE
‘Sundry Shows’, The Bulletin, Sydney, vol. 43, no. 2232, 23 November 1922, p. 34 (as ‘February Sun at Cavalaire’) 
‘Rupert Bunny. Modern French Art’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 2 May 1923, p. 14 (as ‘February Sun at Cavalaire’)
Turnbull, C., & Buesst, T., The Art of Rupert Bunny, Ure Smith Pty Ltd, Sydney, 1948, p. 71 (as ‘February, Cavalaire’)
CATALOGUE TEXT
Painted in the South of France during the years immediately following Rupert Bunny’s triumphant return to Australia in 1911, February, Cavalaire, c.1913 encapsulates well the ‘naturalness and sunny serenity’1 that embodied his work at this time – a precious ‘golden age’ before the ravages of The Great War would forever alter the cultural, political and social landscape of his beloved France. First sojourning in the picturesque seaside resort of Cavalaire-sur-Mer in the Provence/Côte d’Azur region during the winter of 1912 – 13, Bunny here completed two or three figure paintings including February, Cavalaire, and embarked upon his Symbolist-inspired mythological series. Also known as February Sun at Cavalaire, notably the present work and another image of Cavalaire were considered ‘audacious experiments’ when first exhibited in Melbourne at the Fine Art Society’s exhibition in November 1922, with the art critic for the Sydney Morning Herald remarking in particular upon the ‘shattering extravagance of Reckitt’s Blue’2 in February Sun at Cavalaire. Such comparison most certainly alluded to the tea dress worn by Madame Bunny here which not only evokes the ultramarine colour but also, the iconic striped pattern, of the famous laundry soap packaging, while the author’s comments regarding ‘the figure of the man [which] is confused and out of drawing’3 directly reference her male companion who is less distinguishable from the sun-dappled landscape in his khaki suit. Given his profile and attire which betray striking affinities to photographs of Bunny and especially, to his celebrated Self Portrait, 1920 (National Gallery of Victoria), indeed, it may be that the work depicts the artist with his beautiful wife and model, Jeanne-Heloise, enjoying an intimate moment of ‘dolce far niente’ in the gentle sunlight.
 
With their charm and sensuous beauty, Bunny’s lyrical explorations of the poetry in the everyday were, unsurprisingly, among his most favoured works by private collectors in Melbourne and Sydney which included such prominent figures as Hugo Meyer; Dr Samuel Ewing; and the Hon. Sir James McCay. Significantly, both February, Cavalaire and the previous lot, were originally owned by Mr F.E. Trigg who was a financial adviser to John Fairfax & Sons from 1945 – 60, and as such, would have known the Chairman, Warwick Fairfax, and longtime Managing Director, Rupert Henderson – both of whom were avid art collectors and renowned afficionados of Bunny’s art.
 
1. Eagle, M., The Art of Rupert Bunny in the Australian National Gallery, Australian National Gallery, Canberra, 1991, p. 101
2. Modern French Art’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 2 May 1923, p. 14
3. ibid.
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS
McCubbin Frederickview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
44
FREDERICK McCUBBIN
(1855 - 1917)
COLLINS STREET, MELBOURNE, c.1915
oil on canvas board
25.5 x 35.5 cm
signed lower left: F McCubbin
PROVENANCE
Sir Keith Murdoch, Cruden Farm, Victoria
Thence by descent
Dame Elisabeth Murdoch, Cruden Farm, Victoria
Thence by descent
Private collection, Melbourne
RELATED WORKS
Collins Street, c.1915, oil on canvas board, 25.5 x 35.5 cm, in the collection of Geelong Gallery, Victoria
Collins Street, c.1915, oil on canvas board, 25.5 x 30.5 cm, in the collection of National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
CATALOGUE TEXT
In 2009, the National Gallery of Australia exhibition, McCubbin: Last Impressions 1907–17, showcased the work produced by Frederick McCubbin during the final eleven years of his life. Curated by Anne Gray, the exhibition featured three Collins Street sketches all painted around 1915 on 10 x 12-inch canvas board. Notably, this group of smaller Melbourne cityscapes – which included the nearby Flinders Street subjects – were the most abstract in the exhibition.
 
The following excerpts are from Anne Gray’s catalogue essays and notes accompanying the group of Collins Street, c.1915 works:
 
‘…In 1915, at the age of 60, McCubbin purchased an old Renault, and became, according to Daniel Thomas, ‘a modern motorised McCubbin’. The car was used for painting excursions into the city, and McCubbin began a new series of works of this most modern of subjects. He delighted in capturing the flickering light, and the almost dissolving, abstract forms of the city’s activity.
 
As his daughter Kathleen recalled, ‘We parked near the top end of Collins Street, facing the city. The latish afternoon sun was shining brilliantly on the tops of the buildings, and this was the ideal subject for one of father’s swift sketches. Hastily taking out his palette from the box he always carried in the car, he squeezed out blobs of paint and swiftly blended the colours together with his palette knife. Within moments the sky and the illuminated facades began to take shape on the sketching board (Mangan, 1984, p 50).’1
 
‘Long regarded as one of Melbourne’s most fashionable and cosmopolitan streets – the address of some of the city’s most exclusive retailers and clubs, as well as medical, financial and cultural institutions – Collins Street was the subject of a number of paintings from McCubbin’s later years, continuing his longstanding interest in urban vistas.
 
As one of the principal east-west thoroughfares in Robert Hoddle’s original city grid of 1837, Collins Street was at the peak of its splendour on the mid 1880s when McCubbin took up his appointment as drawing master at the National Gallery’s school. Throughout his career, he maintained an association with a number of premises and organisations located on the street (or within adjoining arcades), including Grosvenor Chambers, Athenaeum Hall, the Savage Club and the offices of the Australasian Sketcher.’2
 
Commenting on McCubbin’s painting technique for Collins Street, c. 1915 (National Gallery of Victoria) Anne Gray noted: ‘…the surface of the work is encrusted with small, jewel like dabs of paint. Other areas are painted thinly or rubbed back. McCubbin has also scraped into the paint with the handle of the brush to create highlights. The scene is highly abstracted, the people on the street mere vertical notations of paint, the facades of the buildings appearing to dissolve into pure colour and pattern, recalling Monet’s series of paintings of the façade of Rouen cathedral.‘3

1. Gray, A., McCubbin: Last Impressions 1907-17, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 2009, p. 145
2. Ibid., p.147
3. Ibid., p.145

Wilson Eric - Street in Parisview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
45
ERIC WILSON
(1911 - 1946)
A STREET IN PARIS, c.1942
oil on composition board
79.0 x 64.0 cm
signed lower right: Eric Wilson
signed and inscribed with title verso: Eric Wilson / A Street in Paris
PROVENANCE
Sir Keith Murdoch, Cruden Farm, Victoria
Thence by descent
Dame Elisabeth Murdoch, Cruden Farm, Victoria
Thence by descent
Private collection, Melbourne
RELATED WORKS
Rue de L’Hotel de Ville, Paris, 1939–42, oil on board, 53.0 x 40.0 cm, collection of D. R. Sheumack, exhibited in Eric Wilson, Newcastle Region Art Gallery, New South Wales, 29 July – 28 August 1983, cat. 31
Rue de L’Hotel de Ville, Paris, c.1942, oil on board, 56.0 x 38.0 cm, Richard and Joan Crebbin Collection, Sydney, exhibited in Eric Wilson, Newcastle Region Art Gallery, New South Wales, 29 July – 28 August 1983, cat. 32
CATALOGUE TEXT
Hailed by Douglas Dundas as ‘one of the bright stars in the firmament of Australian art during the 1940s’1, Eric Wilson is remarkable for having achieved widespread success both as an abstractionist whose still-lifes represented some of the first experiments in cubism by an Antipodean artist, and equally, as a modern realist painter of European cityscapes, impressively exemplified here by A Street in Paris, c. 1942.

Awarded the New South Wales Travelling Art Scholarship in 1937, Wilson accordingly embarked for England, studying first briefly at the Royal Academy before enrolling at the more progressive Westminster School under British modern painters, Mark Gertler and Elmslie Owen. The latter was particularly influential, encouraging the young artist to proceed in the vein of the French avant-garde ‘according to knowledge rather than mere vision’2, and recommending that Wilson pursue his cubist explorations further at Amedée Ozenfant’s Academy, Earl’s Court. In the early months of 1939, Wilson departed London for the Continent where he travelled and sketched in Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy, absorbing, among other things, that sense of rounded volumetric form so revered in the work of Italian Quattrocentro primitives such as Piero della Francesca. Above all, however, it was the city of Paris that inspired Wilson most – ‘not the large-scale vistas of the master-planned metropolis… but the more intimate curves and corners of narrow streets, and tree-lined quays of the Seine’3 – and thus, he spent hours capturing en plein air the picturesque streets and bridges in drawings which would later provide the basis for his celebrated series of Paris landscapes undertaken upon return to Australia following the outbreak of war.

Bearing unmistakable affinities with the artist’s two versions of Rue de l’Hotel de Ville, Paris, c.1942 (formerly in the collections of D. R. Sheumack and Mr and Mrs R. C. Crebbin respectively), the present work encapsulates superbly Wilson’s earlier explorations of the Paris theme which are distinguished by an underlying sense of construction and careful attention to composition and architectural form. By contrast, as Wilson’s experience of Europe grew more distant in time, his works evidenced a much looser attitude to form and a greater preoccupation with impressionistic effects of light and colour – leading one critic in 1947 to disparagingly remark upon the ‘heavy cookery’4 of his later landscapes, citing their use of thick impasto and absence of formal definition. Nevertheless, universal among all Wilson’s European cityscapes including A Street in Paris, is a pervading sense of isolation, of the artist as outsider; a feeling perhaps derived from the impending war which had precipitated his trip in the first place, and which no doubt prevented him from stepping outside the role of tourist. The invariably wet and chilly streets are disconcertingly empty as is the case here, or when peopled, such figures remain oblivious of the artist, continuing the closed activities of their daily lives. In this respect, Wilson’s perspective contrasts starkly with that of his artistic peer, William Dobell, with whom he lived and studied in London. Where Dobell found the inhabitants of a city such as Paris or London much more intriguing and typical than their surroundings, Wilson concentrates rather upon the streetscapes and buildings, discerning in the architecture the unique character he was seeking.

1. Dundas, D., ‘Eric Wilson’, Art in Australia, vol. 12, no. 1, July – September 1974, p. 48
2. Diary of the artist, 2 June 1938 cited in Sayers, A., ‘Introduction’, Eric Wilson, exhibition catalogue, Newcastle Regional Art Gallery, Newcastle, 1983, p. 9
3. Dundas, op. cit., p. 56
4. Sydney Morning Herald, 28 May 1947

VERONICA ANGELATOS
Wilson Eric YABTREE HILLS, WANTABADGERY, 1946view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
46
ERIC WILSON
(1911 - 1946)
YABTREE HILLS, WANTABADGERY, 1946
oil on canvas board
40.5 x 50.5 cm
signed and dated lower left: Eric Wilson ‘46
signed and inscribed with title verso: SKETCH / YABTREE HILLS. / Eric Wilson
PROVENANCE
Sir Keith Murdoch, Cruden Farm
Thence by descent
Dame Elisabeth Murdoch, Cruden Farm, Victoria
Thence by descent
Private collection, Melbourne
CATALOGUE TEXT
Upon his return to Australia in 1939 following the outbreak of the Second World War, Wilson first embarked upon an impressive series of European streetscapes inspired by his travels abroad (see lot 45), before once again turning his attention to capturing the rural landscape of his homeland. Although the Australian landscape posed quite different challenges to the painting of European urban scenes, his early investigations such as Bushpiece Berowra, and Burnt Trees, both dated 1945, echoed the approach employed by Wilson in the careful construction of his streetscapes, with the magnified trees, bushes and rocks of the foreground serving as architectural elements within which space is articulated. Even amidst the chaotic untidiness of the Australian bush, Wilson’s architectural interests here predominate, with an emphasis on balance and the structural logic of the composition signalling the artist’s conscious return to his earlier Ozenfant training. 
 
In December of 1945, Wilson was invited by Sir Keith Murdoch to paint at his property on the Murrumbidgee River, Wantabadgery, near Wagga in New South Wales. Fascinated by this new landscape with its lush rolling hills, contorted tree trunks and sun-bleached, golden paddocks, Wilson thus commenced what would be his last major series of paintings, splendidly encapsulated here by Yabtree Hills, Wantabadgery, 1946. While derived from his time spent exploring the property, significantly such works were not faithful reproductions of what he perceived; rather Wilson’s overriding interest lie in producing a synchronous whole in which the subject was respected only to the degree that it offered shapes, lines, colours, textures and rhythms. Accordingly, in a manner akin to both his European streetscapes and earlier Australian landscapes from the same year, the principles of abstraction which he had elaborated upon two years earlier continued to influence his vision. As Wilson mused in 1943, ‘…in whatever idiom [is] chosen for expression, plastic values are my main consideration. It is this emphasis on the architectural quality – the orchestration of the formal elements into a symphonic whole – that I find most sympathy with in the modern movement.’1
 
For indeed, despite the frequent categorisation of Wilson’s oeuvre into distinct groups of landscapes vis à vis abstracts, throughout all his myriad achievements it was this disciplined restructuring and orchestration of formal elements that would remain his singular aim - and ultimately, his legacy for Australian art and theory of the 1940s.
 
1. The artist cited in Plate, C., ‘Eric Wilson’ in Ure Smith, S., Australian Present Day Art, Waite and Bull, Sydney, 1943, p. 92
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS

Gruner Eliothview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot 47
PROVENANCE
Elioth Gruner, Sydney (Artist’s Ledger no. 371)
Dr Robert Godsall, Sydney, by 1940
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
Private collection, New South Wales
Private collection, Sydney
EXHIBITED
Elioth Gruner Memorial Loan Exhibition, National Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 17 April – 31 May 1940, cat. 159 (as ‘Landscape near Penrith’)

We are grateful to Steven Miller, Head of the Edmund and Joanna Capon Research Library and Archive, Art Gallery of New South Wales, for his assistance with this catalogue entry.

We are grateful to Deborah Clark for her assistance with this catalogue entry.
CATALOGUE TEXT
Elioth Gruner remains one of Australia’s most accomplished landscape painters. A child prodigy, he first started his art training at the age of twelve in 1894 with drawing classes run by Julian Ashton, before enrolling officially at the latter’s newly established Académie Julian two years later. A prodigious traveller, Gruner painted many remote parts of Australia, travelling by foot, train and horse-and-cart until the purchase of a car in 1928 opened up further vistas of opportunity. An extended visit to Europe from 1923 saw him introduce a mild form of modernism into his work; and Valley near Bairnsdale, 1930, is a fine example of this mature technique.
 
Gruner won the Wynne Prize for landscape a remarkable seven times, a record still unsurpassed; and his second win, Spring frost, 1919, remains one of the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ best loved pictures. What makes these early works notable is Gruner’s choice of painting into the light, leaving a diamond-like brilliance surrounding his central subjects. He travelled to Europe in 1923 and whilst there, encountered the artist Sir William Orpen who was not impressed by Gruner’s work. He nonetheless gave the Australian some salient advice that he took to heart, encouraging the use of smaller canvases and a thinner, more pastel-like application of paint. Gruner also studied paintings by Gauguin and Cézanne in London, which additionally caused him to make ‘a decisive turn towards structure and rhythm as core principles.’1 Following his return to Australia in 1925, Gruner’s landscapes became flatter and more ordered, though ‘he never shunned the iridescent nature of light, allowing its radiance to permeate and penetrate his landscapes.’2 All these elements are present in the harmonious construction of Valley near Bairnsdale, 1930 with its patchwork layout of orderly paddocks leading the eye to the low hills forming the southern extremity of the Great Dividing Range where a small fire burns at the junction of the two.
 
Bairnsdale is located in East Gippsland on a bend of the Mitchell River on lands owned traditionally by the Gunaikurnai people. Gruner visited the region in his Model A Ford in the early months of 1930 before meeting up with George Bell and Darryl Lindsay to paint in the area around Bacchus Marsh in May. Only three other known works can be positively identified as being executed on this journey: Lakes Entrance, exhibited at the Society of Artists’ Annual Exhibition in Sydney in 1930; Bairnsdale, Victoria, 1930, last seen publicly at auction in 1974; and Gippsland Lakes which was illustrated in colour in the 1933 edition of Art in Australia devoted to the artist.3 A review of the Society of Artists’ exhibition described Gruner’s entries as being ‘eloquent exhibits of the first rank of landscape painting. ... We venture to suggest that his recent work stands canvas to canvas with Streeton’s work at its very best.’4 Unfortunately, with the march of modernism, the artist’s reputation dimmed somewhat until Deborah Clark curated the magisterial Elioth Gruner: Texture of light at the Canberra Museum and Gallery in 2014, a show which served to remind visitors of the scope, skill and radiant presence of this distinctive artist’s work.
              
1. Clark, D., Elioth Gruner: Texture of light, Canberra Museum and Gallery, Canberra, 2014, p. 8
2. Wilson, N., ‘Elioth Gruner: Australia’s laureate of landscape’, (lecture), Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 11 May 2011, p. 6
3. Art in Australia, Ure Smith, Sydney, 3rd series, no. 50, 1 June 1933, p. 25 (illus.)
4. ‘An impression of the Society of Artists’ Annual Exhibition’, Art in Australia, 3rd series, no. 34, October-November 1930, p. 16
 
ANDREW GAYNOR

47
ELIOTH GRUNER
(1882 - 1939)
VALLEY NEAR BAIRNSDALE, 1930
oil on canvas on board
30.0 x 40.5 cm
signed and dated lower right: GRUNER / 1930
signed, dated and inscribed with title verso: Valley near Bairnsdale/ E Gruner 1930
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
48
ARTHUR BOYD
(1920 - 1999)
SANTA GERTRUDIS BULL, 1950
oil and tempera on composition board
83.5 x 122.0 cm
signed lower right: Arthur Boyd
extensively inscribed and partly struck through verso:
(inverted) JOHN MARTIN / 100 RUNDLE ST / ADELAIDE / AG-49 SYDNEY / ROOF
SANTA / GERTRUDIS BULL
ROBIN BOYD / 290 WALSH ST, / SOUTH YARRA / £500
ROBIN BOYD / 158 RIVERSDALE / ROAD /CAMBERWELL
DAVID JONES / ART / GALLERY / DAVID JONES / ELIZABETH ST / SYDNEY
PROVENANCE
Martin Boyd, Melbourne, a gift from the artist, early 1950s
Robin Boyd, Melbourne, acquired from the above, late 1950s
Thence by descent
Patricia Boyd, Melbourne, 1971
Estate of Patricia Davies (formerly Mrs Robin Boyd), Melbourne
Thence by descent
Private collection, Canberra
EXHIBITED
possibly: Arthur Boyd Retrospective Exhibition, David Jones Gallery, Sydney, 4 – 16 September 1950, cat. 10
Arthur Boyd, Peter Bray Gallery, Melbourne, 15 – 24 September 1953, cat. 32 (as ‘The Santa Gertrudis Bull’)
Arthur Boyd Retrospective, Whitechapel Gallery, London, June – July 1962, cat. 43, p. 25
LITERATURE
Philipp, F., Arthur Boyd, Thames and Hudson, London, 1967, cat. 5.42, p. 247 (dated ‘1950 – 51’)
Hoff, U., The Art of Arthur Boyd, Andre Deutsch, London, 1986, p. 48 
RELATED WORKS
Irrigation Lake, Wimmera, 1950, resin and tempera on composition board, 81.4 × 121.9 cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
CATALOGUE TEXT

NOVL21 CAT PROOF 7_10_2021 B (2) (002)3.JPG

Family and friends at Open Country, c.1951
photographer unknown
Left to right (back) David Boyd, Merric Boyd, Hatton Beck;
(centre) Guy Boyd, Lucy Boyd (holding a child), Mary Boyd, John
Perceval, unknown, Yvonne Boyd and son Jamie; (front) Doris
Boyd, Arthur Boyd, Joy Hester
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
‘…This type of landscape – flat fields or paddocks, the ‘motif of intimacy’ reduced to a haystack, shed or stand of dry thistles or a piece of farming equipment, a few scattered trees in the middle-ground with the closing horizontal of a low distant hill – can be encountered in most of the non-alpine interior of south-eastern Australia, though it is most typical of the plain wheat country of central western Victoria – the Wimmera… Here art met nature – the ‘formula’, the vocabulary, fully fitted the ‘content’ of this dry, semi-arid sheep and wheat country, turning yellow and sun-parched in summer, with patches of burnt off stubble or weed, the grass often eaten down to bareness where the stand of hard dry thistles acquires the accentuation of bushes.’1
 
An untiring and extremely skilful painter of landscapes, Arthur Boyd is undoubtedly one of Australia’s most revered and admired artists whose highly personalised paintings of his homeland have become iconic within the national consciousness. Among the more revelatory and widely acclaimed of his achievements, the extended sequence of luminous, sun-parched landscapes inspired by his travels to the Wimmera region in north-west Victoria and encapsulated here by the magnificent Santa Gertrudis Bull, 1950, are particularly celebrated. As Janet McKenzie elaborates, ‘…[in these paintings] Boyd created an archetypal Australian landscape. Possessing both a poetic lyricism and a down to earth quality and capturing the glorious light, these works… [offer] a sense of acceptance that many country-dwelling Australians could identify with.’2
 
Boyd first encountered the Wimmera region during the summer of 1948 – 49 when he accompanied the poet Jack Stevenson on a number of expeditions to Horsham in north-west Victoria. With its flat, semi-arid paddocks and endless horizons, the wheat-farming district presented Boyd with such a stark contrast to the verdant, undulating hills of Berwick and Harkaway (where he had recently undertaken an expansive mural series of Brughelesque idylls at his uncle’s property, The Grange) that he found himself required to develop a new visual vocabulary in order to capture this desolate landscape. Although the Wimmera could not be described as ‘uninhabitable’, it was for Boyd, his first glimpse of the vastness of Australia’s interior. As Barry Pearce notes, ‘…He discovered there a hint of something that had drawn other painters of his generation, a subject tentatively recorded by a few artists of the nineteenth century and touched on by even fewer of the twentieth: the empty spaces of the great interior. Of course, the Wimmera was wheat country and not by any means forbidding, nor forsaken. But in hot dry weather it could have, over sparse, unbroken horizons, a searing expanse of sky that elicited an acute sense of the infinite…’3
 
When initially unveiled at the David Jones Gallery in 1950, the Wimmera landscapes such as the present were greeted with universal acclaim – no doubt, as more than one author has observed, ‘because their sun-parched colours were so reminiscent of the Heidelberg school.’4 Significantly the paintings resonated not only amongst the public, but also with institutions such as the National Gallery of Victoria who purchased arguably the most famous work from the series, Irrigation Lake, Wimmera, 1950, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales who acquired Midday, The Wimmera, 1948 – 49 – thereby representing the first works by Boyd to enter a major public collection. Encouraged by the critical success of the show, Boyd thus embarked upon further trips to the region, creating between 1948 and 1951, a body of work now referred to as the ‘first’ Wimmera landscapes. Imbued with the spirit of the land, these works represented for many their first encounter with these ‘more intimate aspects of the Australian landscape’5 and thus, not only established Boyd’s reputation as ‘an interpreter of the rural Australian environment’6, but moreover, launched his career on the international stage, with Boyd subsequently awarded the honour of representing Australia at the Venice Biennale in 1958.
 
An amalgam of visual observation, artistic experience and emotional response, Santa Gertrudis Bull illustrates well the complexity of Boyd’s Wimmera paintings. Although portraying the harsh reality of this desolate, sun-scorched landscape, Boyd does not endow the scene with the drama of the desert as both Russell Drysdale and Sidney Nolan had done previously. To the contrary, by including visible scars of human presence left on the land – a horse-drawn cultivator; the compacted mounds of earth denoting irrigation channels for farming; and of course, the magnificent black bull and ubiquitous crows – Boyd here creates an image of intimacy and warmth, enhanced by the rose-hued evening sky which infuses the entire composition with a sense of joyous optimism. Indeed, the work exudes a stillness and calm acceptance comparable to the mood discernible in his Mornington Peninsula landscapes: there is no angst, no challenge, no dramatic dialogue between man and nature as may be found elsewhere in Boyd’s oeuvre. Rather, as Franz Philipp astutely observes, in such Wimmera paintings ‘…the figures are small, submerged and humble, but they are inhabitants not pioneers. They are at home… the phrase ‘landscapes of love’ comes to mind.’7

So profound was the impact of the stark simplicity and shimmering light of the Wimmera upon Boyd’s psyche that he would revisit the subject on several occasions during the late 1960s and 1970s – whether painting at his property Riversdale on the Shoalhaven river in southern New South Wales, or abroad while residing in London. Although this second, subsequent series of Wimmera landscapes offered a sophisticated reappraisal of the theme with their absolute sparseness, economy of detail and restrained palette, it is the paintings of 1948 – 51 – exemplified superbly here by the present work – which, with their gritty realism and immediacy of vision, represented an important turning point in the history of Australian landscape painting.

1. Philipp, F., Arthur Boyd, Thames and Hudson, London, 1967, p. 62
2. McKenzie, J., Arthur Boyd: art and life, Thames and Hudson, London, 1967, p. 62
3. Pearce, B., Arthur Boyd Retrospective, The Art Gallery of New South Wales and The Beagle Press, Sydney, 1993, p. 20
4. Campbell, R., ‘Arthur Boyd (1920 – )’, Australia: Paintings by Arthur Streeton and Arthur Boyd, XXIX Biennale, Venice, 1958, n.p.
5. Pearce, op. cit., p. 20
6. Philipp, op. cit., p. 67
7. Ibid., p. 64
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS
Perceval Johnview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
49
JOHN PERCEVAL
(1923 - 2000)
OAKLEIGH LANDSCAPE, 1946
oil on canvas on cardboard
65.5 x 69.0 cm
PROVENANCE
Andrew Ivanyi Galleries, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne
LITERATURE
Allen, T., John Perceval, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 1992, pp. 106 (illus.), 150
CATALOGUE TEXT
In 1946, the Melbourne suburb of Oakleigh, 15 kilometres south-east of the city, was comprised of orchards and small farms interspersed by a complex of industrial brickworks. The first of these was established as early as 1857 when it was discovered that the area contained large deposits of high quality clay.1 John Perceval himself was also reliant on clay at that time for use at the successful AMB Pottery, which he was running with his brother-in-law Arthur Boyd one kilometre away on busy Neerim Road. He was also creating a small series of paintings, his so-called ‘religious old masters’, which depicted biblical events set within the urban environment of Melbourne, and in semi-rural situations inspired by Murrumbeena and Oakleigh; and Oakleigh Landscape, 1946 is directly related to these significant images.

Perceval was the youngest member of the ‘Angry Penguins’, a group of artists which included Sidney Nolan, Albert Tucker, Joy Hester and Arthur Boyd. Whilst the geographical nucleus of the group was Heide, the farm at Heidelberg owned by the mentor-patrons John and Sunday Reed, Perceval and Boyd were more firmly centred on the latter’s family property ‘Open Country’ in Wahroonga Crescent, Murrumbeena. This shambolic, overgrown compound had been established by Boyd’s parents, Merric and Doris, in 1913 and was a suburban wonderland for generations of bare-footed children. Perceval had a troubled childhood so when he met Boyd in the army in World War II and subsequently married his sister Mary, it was as if he had discovered his own idealised family. Merric Boyd was Australia’s first studio potter and the ceramics training he passed on to the younger men planted the seed that became AMB (Arthur Merric Boyd) Pottery which opened in a former butcher’s shop in 1944.

At the same time, Boyd and Perceval became absorbed in studying the influential technical manual Materials of the Artist and their Use in Painting by Max Doerner. Through this, they sought to emulate in their own paintings the rich colour and glazing of Dutch masters including Rembrandt and Breughel, and Perceval was particularly inspired by the latter’s rustic, bucolic scenes of peasant life. As part of the process, he painted a suite of paintings of locales near Murrumbeena and a number, including Oakleigh Landscape, feature the prominent brickwork chimneys. Others in the series are Brickworks at Oakleigh, 1946 (private collection), Cabbage Field, Oakleigh, 1947 (private collection) and Oakleigh vegetable garden, 1947 (Benalla Art Gallery, Victoria).


Oakleigh Landscape is painted with Perceval’s trademark vigour, but he took pains to dismiss the notion that he was somehow a haptic painter, slapping paint on in an expressive manifestation of ‘joie de vivre’. Instead, he argued, ‘my work is primarily a response to the subject, to light and trees, air, people etc. Whatever success it may achieve is due to the desire to equate the vitality, the pulse of life in nature and the world around us’.2 In works like Oakleigh Landscape, this attitude is on full display as is his technical prowess indicative of his deep study of the painterly techniques of the northern European masters.

1. Until 1953, the area supplied twenty per cent of Melbourne's bricks.
2. Perceval, J. quoted in Reed, J., New Painting 1952-1962, Longmans, Melbourne, 1963, p. 24

ANDREW GAYNOR

Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
51 and 52 with catalogue essays.
CHARLES BLACKMAN
(1928 - 2018)
SCHOOLGIRL WAVING, 1953
oil and tempera on composition board
76.0 x 63.0 cm
signed and dated upper left: Blackman FEBRUARY 53
and
52
CHARLES BLACKMAN
(1928 - 2018)
SLEEPING FIGURE, 1959
oil on composition board
90.0 x 120.5 cm
signed and dated upper left: BLACKMAN 59
signed and dated upper right verso: BLACKMAN 1959
Fairweather Ianview full entry
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53 with catalogue essay
IAN FAIRWEATHER
(1891 - 1974)
COMPOSITION, c.1960 – 61
synthetic polymer paint and gouache on paper on composition board
65.5 x 101.0 cm
signed lower left: Ian Fairweather
bears inscription verso: COMPOSITION BY IAN FAIRWEATHER / 95 GNS – FOR RAYMOND BURR 
Grey-Smith Guyview full entry
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54
GUY GREY-SMITH
(1916 - 1981)
IRONSTONE RIDGE, 1978
oil and beeswax emulsion on muslin on composition board
122.0 x 93.0 cm
signed and dated lower right: G Grey Smith / 78
bears inscriptions verso: No 6 / GUY GREY SMITH / ‘IRON STONE RIDGE’  
inscribed with title on frame verso: IRONSTONE RIDGE
PROVENANCE
Gallery 52, Perth
Private collection, Perth, acquired from the above c.1984
Thence by descent
Private collection, Canberra 
EXHIBITED
Guy Grey-Smith, Gallery 52, Perth, 13 September - 3 October 1979, cat. 6

We are grateful to Mark Grey-Smith for his assistance with this catalogue entry.
CATALOGUE TEXT
Shortly after his successful touring Retrospective held at the State galleries in Brisbane and Perth during 1976 – 77, Guy Grey-Smith bought an ‘ancient’ 150 Cessna and rediscovered his love of flying. As a pilot on secondment to the RAF in the early stages of the Second World War, he had previously mused that there was something spiritual about flying. ‘You are alone in the sky’, he said, ‘and you face your problems alone. The solitariness is the thing the pilot has in common to the artist.’1 He now began to progressively re-explore the Western Australian landscape, one he knew intimately at ground-level having camped regularly with his family throughout the state since the late 1950s. Grey-Smith adapted his process of recording as he flew, somewhat recklessly, with a ‘sketch book on my knee and my left hand on the controls ... The plane almost drives itself.’2Ironstone ridge, 1978, is identified by the artist’s son Mark as being based on an aerial view of salt lakes, probably in the Meekathara region of Western Australia, on Yamatji lands.

During the 1960s, Grey-Smith developed a distinctive, personalised style that fused the ideas of Cézanne and Nicolas de Staël, using trowels and scrapers to apply slabs of bold pigment bulked up by the addition of a homemade beeswax emulsion. Seen up close, it is as if these passages collide with each other, rather than dissolving at the periphery; indeed, the raised edges of the emulsion clearly reveal where each tool started and then left the board, puckering in its wake. Further, the visibility of underlying paint at these junctions ‘reveals the effort involved in (the artist’s) placing colour and form.’3 Grey-Smith’s was a physical process, an expression for him of nature’s life force: ‘I build pictures; they’re structures really.’4

In 1978, Grey-Smith won the prestigious Georges Invitation Art Prize in Melbourne and held a solo show at Ann Lewis’ Gallery A in Sydney. The following year, he was awarded first prize in the McGregor Acquisitive Art Competition in Toowoomba and was invited to enter the John McCaughey Memorial Art Prize at the National Gallery of Victoria. Amidst this, he prepared for what was to be his last solo exhibition, at Perth’s newly opened Gallery 52. As before, the colour literally streamed out of the gallery windows with the installation dominated by two large – and contrasting – views of ‘breakaway’ country around Mt Magnet. In between was a cohesive body of paintings inspired by the regions around Meekathara and Lake Moore, augmented by densely lush expressions of Grey-Smiths beloved karri forests found near his home in the south-west of the state. Running through these was a sense of the artist’s abiding environmentalism, one enraged by the mining and timber industries’ savaging of the landscapes he loved and knew so well. This is less obvious in Ironstone ridge where the artist infuses the otherwise inhospitable salt lakes with patches of citrus green and orange, playing off the deep reds of the iron-rich flatlands. In a deliberately fauvist touch, Grey-Smith also inverts the colour of the lake so that it too is as red as the surrounding country.

1. Hetherington, J., Australian Painters: forty profiles, FW Cheshire, Melbourne, 1963, pp.148 – 49
2. McGrath, S., ‘Trees company’, The Australian, 5 October 1978, np
3. Kubik, M.E., ‘The matter of Guy Grey-Smith’s paintings: methods and materials’, in Harpley, M., Guy Grey-Smith: art as life, exhibition catalogue, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, 2014
4. Guy Grey-Smith, 1978 cited in Western Australian Film Stories on the Arts, ABC program number PWY7521. Date of transmission: 19 October 1979

ANDREW GAYNOR
Meadmore Clementview full entry
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55
CLEMENT MEADMORE
(1929 - 2005)
MEDITATION, 1974
bronze
99.0 cm height
edition: 6/6
signed, dated and numbered at base: Meadmore 1974 6/6
PROVENANCE
Peter Beckwith, Perth
Thence by descent
Estate of Valerie Beckwith, Perth
Margaret Moore, Perth
Private collection, Perth, acquired from the above December 2005
LITERATURE
Gibson, E., The Sculpture of Clement Meadmore, Hudson Hills Press, New York, 1994, p. 72 (illus. another example)
CATALOGUE TEXT
There exists a little-known problem that is recognised by serious sculptors: how to make inert material appear alive. In other words, how to make hard substance look pliant. A close scrutiny of the life-like hands of Michelangelo’s famous Pietà in Rome reveals that even he toiled over the successful resolution of this enduring challenge in the art of sculpture.

Deep within the structures of Clement Meadmore’s sculptures lies evidence of the same aesthetic tussle: there is always in his sculptures the felt sense that unyielding metal has been ‘bent’ to the artistic aim of the artist. Metal is made to do what one thinks it cannot - not wilfully so, but in order to embody a new and extended aesthetic experience. These two factors lie at the core of the tight dynamism ensconced within Meadmore’s sculptures. They twist; they turn, they writhe and in their suggested animation, they add a humanising and contrapuntal balance to the all-to-often bland immobility and visual harshness of our built environments. Meadmore is Minimalism without sterility.

This type of incorporated dynamism is already evident in his famous Sling Chair, 1963 (manufactured in 1981) with its curve set within a rectangle format – it was unpadded, it was crisp and bold, it was simple. It was also his last creation before he, with some rancour, left Australia to live in New York, where his sculptural projects flourished apace. Even in that elegant chair design in Melbourne, Meadmore displayed an almost uncanny feel for the harmonised balance of form and line, of positive and negative spaces and of visual weight – a type of optical ‘meatiness’ that asserted its own place in the physical world.

In New York, the unadorned ‘purity’ of these formational attributes quickly endeared him to the major artists of the American movement of Minimalism: Donald Judd, Tony Smith, Richard Serra, Frank Stella and others. Their purified strictures suited Meadmore’s inherent formalism. His successes, thereafter, were truly remarkable.

Meadmore’s Meditation, 1974, a bronze cast work from a limited edition of six, is a domestic-sized sculpture that epitomises all the attributes that make his works so visually distinctive. Its intimation of ‘coiled’ power is made more evident by contrast with the simple linearity of its upper and lower sections. Taken as a whole, Meadmore’s bronze has sentinel-like composure. We have no way of knowing with certainty, but it is possible that Meadmore was taken by the elegant power of some standing hatha yoga poses where focal energy is concentrated mid-body. Meadmore’s visual acuity would have appreciated and noted the structural underpinnings of such positions – just as André Masson and Pablo Picasso admired and emulated the free lines of mooring ropes lying on piers (no loose rope is ‘uptight’).

Whatever the case, the prime visual impact of Meadmore’s Meditation relies upon its emphasis upon a characteristically compressed tautness that is almost calligraphic in its fixed-in-space elegance. It’s a hallmark sculpture that not only sits firmly anchored in space, but also, like all good sculpture, adds to place.

KEN WACH

Booth Peterview full entry
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79
PETER BOOTH
born 1940
UNTITLED, 2007
oil on linen
117.0 x 198.0 cm
signed and dated verso: BOOTH 2007
PROVENANCE
Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne (label attached on stretcher bar verso)
Shannon Bennett, Melbourne, acquired from the above in 2008
EXHIBITED
probably: Peter Booth, 21st Century, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne, 8 – 31 May 2008
CATALOGUE TEXT
A key figure in the revival of figurative painting in Melbourne in the 1980s, Booth’s reputation as one of Australia’s most renowned contemporary painters was cemented in the early years of that decade when he was chosen (alongside Rosalie Gascoigne) to represent Australia at the Venice Biennale in 1982. Over the intervening decades since, he has only continued to attract further widespread acclaim with his highly expressive, energetic works which, depicting a world both imagined and observed, poignantly explore fundamental human emotions and anxieties; issues of spiritual turmoil; social alienation and the devolution of civilisation. Drawing upon epic legends of the past and prophecies for an imagined future, thus Booth's vision transcends the immediate or particular to acquire a universality comparable to the musings of his greatest artistic predecessors, including Goya, Blake and Shakespeare.
 
In the winter of 1989, Booth first embarked upon what were to become his celebrated 'snow paintings'. Influenced partly by his childhood years in Sheffield in England's industrial north, these works represented an important transition in the artist’s oeuvre which he paralleled to the journey in Milton's epic sequence of poems, Paradise Lost (1667) to Paradise Regained (1671). More specifically however, the series was inspired by the artist's re-reading of Shakespeare's Macbeth (1606) with its chilling themes of ambition and evil bearing resonance for Booth in contemporary Western greed and its blatant disregard for the planet. Accordingly, in many of these paintings, snow throws a white curtain of silence over a charred and blackened landscape, heralding the end of man's aggression towards his fellow man and the environment, like the omen of destruction foretold by the decimation of the Birnam wood in Macbeth.
 
Like these earlier works blanketed in snow, Untitled, 2007 here similarly presents almost as a stage set for a performance whose commencement is imminent, or possibly only just ended. Empty of figures, the composition is overwhelmed by an eerie and profound silence, populated only by vestiges of buildings or rocks, and a disconcertingly oversized claw encroaching on the left – perhaps alluding to emergence of a mutant society after the collapse of human civilisation. Indeed, writing in the introduction to the catalogue accompanying Booth’s exhibition ‘21st Century’, held at Anna Schwartz Gallery in 2008 (in which the present work was most likely featured), Justin Clemens elaborates upon this apocalyptic theme, albeit from a more philosophical perspective:
 
‘How did you end up in this mess? Who’s to blame? How are you going to get out of here? There has to be some way of explain­ing all this uncer­tain­ty, but you wouldn’t know who to ask. Even if you did, you wouldn’t trust them if they told you… It’s the post­mod­ern condition… The death of meta­nar­ra­tives, mul­ti­ple voic­es, het­ero­gene­ity beyond belief, unrepresentable futures, risk, uncer­tain­ty, world-his­tor­i­cal nihilism… In fact, it’s those modernist obses­sions with the­o­ry, method, new ways of doing things, that got us into this Gen-Exis­ten­tial Cri­sis in the first place… No gods, no mas­ters. Isn’t that the prob­lem, though? No one to believe, no one to obey… The environment’s stuffed. Love’s stuffed… Pol­i­tics is stuffed.’1
 
Yet, to focus solely upon the immediate pessimistic impact of such works is to ignore the lyricism – even optimism – frequently underlying Booth’s imagery; as Jason Smith reiterates, '…for Booth, the winter landscape is one of serenity and the promise of renewal. It reminds us of the resilience of nature and is a metaphor for human endurance against the physical and psychological trials of life.’2
 
1. Clemens, J., ‘Introduction’, Peter Booth: 21st Century, Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne, 2008, n.p.
2. Smith, J., 'Peter Booth: Human / Nature', in Peter Booth: Human / Nature, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2003, pp. 14 – 15
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS

Drysdale Russell Head of a Boyview full entry
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93
RUSSELL DRYSDALE
(1912 - 1981)
HEAD OF A BOY, 1950
oil on plywood
20.0 x 14.5 cm
signed lower right: Russell Drysdale
bears inscription with title and date on gallery label verso: EDWARD FORD / 1950 Russell Drysdale / Head of a Boy
PROVENANCE
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney (label attached verso)
Sir Edward Ford, Sydney
Thence by descent
Private collection
Christie’s, Melbourne, 8 May 2001, lot 6
Private collection, Melbourne 
EXHIBITED
Exhibition of Paintings: English and Australian Artists; Studies for Compositions By Russell Drysdale, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 31 May – 12 June 1950, cat. 5
CATALOGUE TEXT
‘Drysdale is the essential Australian painter. Many gifted painters have come out of Australia, and one of them, Sidney Nolan, is a universal figure. But no one except Drysdale gives the same authentic feeling of the resolute humanity that has managed to exist in that terrible continent. Those who love Australia and the Australians as I do will find their feelings reflected in the bold, sincere and deeply human records he has made of the landscape and its inhabitants, black and white. To anyone who cannot visit Australia, I would say look at the paintings of Drysdale and you will understand why so many unexpected people admire Australia.’1
 
During the mid to late 1940s, Drysdale embarked upon a small group of portraits of children in the outback that reveal an acute awareness and empathy for the vulnerability and stoicism of childhood. Combining a sense of both the fragility and toughness of adolescence, Head of a Boy, 1950 is one such image which, with the sitter’s classical, ovaloid face and unwavering gaze, illustrates well the enduring influence of Modigliani upon Drysdale’s art. As is characteristic of many of Drysdale’s portraits, an overwhelming humanity and empathy pervades the work, transcending the individual to contemplate rather the universal human condition. As Professor Bernard Smith poignantly observed of Drysdale’s iconic Two Children, 1945 – 46 (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne) – another portrait of children from this period which features among the artist’s most widely admired images – ‘…By virtue of its formal perfection and profound but controlled feeling, the small painting reaches beyond the individual and the regional to express the consuming loneliness of humankind.’2
 
1. Clark, K., ‘A Tribute to Russell Drysdale’, in Klepac, L., The Life and Work of Russell Drysdale, Bay Books, Sydney, 1980, p.9
2. Smith, B., & Smith, T., Australian Painting 1789 – 1990, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1991, p. 249
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS




93
RUSSELL DRYSDALE
(1912 - 1981)
HEAD OF A BOY, 1950
oil on plywood
20.0 x 14.5 cm
signed lower right: Russell Drysdale
bears inscription with title and date on gallery label verso: EDWARD FORD / 1950 Russell Drysdale / Head of a Boy




93
RUSSELL DRYSDALE
(1912 - 1981)
HEAD OF A BOY, 1950
oil on plywood
20.0 x 14.5 cm
signed lower right: Russell Drysdale
bears inscription with title and date on gallery label verso: EDWARD FORD / 1950 Russell Drysdale / Head of a Boy
Coburn Johnview full entry
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94
JOHN COBURN
(1925 - 2006)
THE PASSION, 1958
oil on composition board
122.5 x 167.5 cm
signed and dated lower right: Coburn 58<br>Blake Prize 1958 entry label attached verso
PROVENANCE
Peter Rushforth, Sydney, acquired directly from the artist, c.1960
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
LITERATURE
Amadio, N., John Coburn Paintings, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1988, p. 195
CATALOGUE TEXT
‘John Coburn’s style is unique in Australian art and his contribution is one of inestimable worth. How does one value or rate in terms of dollars the art of a man whose vision elevates us to spiritual consciousness?’1
 
Unlike his contemporaries for whom abstraction represented the glorification of geometry and colour, John Coburn’s works are seldom purely cerebral or devoid of emotion. To the contrary, suffused with an overwhelming sense of celebration and allegory, his deeply personal iconography is predicated upon the promise of renewal – whether it be the regeneration of nature or the resurrection of the human spirit. Betraying strong affinities with the work of Matisse, Rothko, Picasso and Miró, his remarkable oeuvre encompassing paintings, prints and tapestries is thus motivated by an endearing admiration for the beauty of the created world and its creator, both of which he reveals and exalts through the most direct of images. Indeed, highlighting the profound spiritual significance of his art, Nadine Amadio suggests Coburn as a pilgrim, ‘…his signs and symbols speak[ing] eloquently of a man who has been prepared to make a journey and return with the gifts of his insight.’2
 
Significantly, Coburn staunchly rejected religion during his teenage and early adult years, only converting to Catholicism in 1953 after meeting his future wife, Barbara Woodward (who would later become one of the country’s foremost silkscreen printmakers). Equally influential upon the artist’s evolving interest in more sacred subjects was Father Scott - an organiser of the prestigious Blake Prize for Religious Art to which Coburn had submitted various entries throughout the fifties, before eventually winning the coveted award in 1960 with his celebrated triptych, The Passion, 1960 (Catholic Institute of Sydney). Featuring blues and reds with the shapes of the sharpest pain to depict three aspects of the Passion - The Scourging, The Crucifixion and the Crowning of Thorns – this monumental work of immense dynamic tension and true religious feeling not only attracted widespread critical acclaim, but was instrumental in establishing Coburn’s reputation as one of the leading Australian artists of his generation.
 
Painted two years’ prior, The Passion, 1958 on offer here was gifted by the artist to Peter Rushworth, a well-known potter (and father of the current owners) who met Coburn while they were both teaching at East Sydney Technical College in Darlinghurst, later to become the National Art School, Sydney. Unlike other works from these formative years which remain figuratively inclined such as Crucifixion, 1959, in which the figure of Christ on the cross is surrounded by the sharply-pointed shapes against a backdrop of red, or Litany, 1958 with its floating geometric forms suggestive of Church ceremony, the present directly prefigures the prize-winning triptych in its more abstract, fully integrated structure of organic, thorn-like forms offset by spatters of blue and blood-red paint. Although vividly conveying the agony and humiliation of Christ, there is, however, no wild cry of anguish or unrestrained emotion. Rather, like the best of Coburn’s achievements, the work is imbued with a quiet passion and deep humanity – its subtle yet powerful symbolic language the poignant expression of one man’s profound belief in his religion.
              
1. Strzynecki, P., 'Beyond Psalm 46' in John Coburn, Australian Galleries, Melbourne, 2000, p.8
2. Amadio, N., John Coburn: The Paintings, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1988, p. 10
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS

French Leonardview full entry
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95
LEONARD FRENCH
(1928 - 2017)
FAÇADE, 1981
from the DARK CIRCUS series
enamel on hessian on board
60.5 x 122.0 cm
signed lower right: French
inscribed with title and date on handwritten label attached verso: “Façade” 1981 / Study for a Mural 
PROVENANCE
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired in 1990
EXHIBITED
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 1 – 14 September, 1982, cat. 116 (illus. in exhibition catalogue)
RELATED WORKS
Façade, 1980-1981, enamel on hessian covered hardboard, 122.0 x 244.0 cm, private collection, illus. in Grishin, S., Leonard French, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1996, pl. 35, pp. 130 – 131, 168
CATALOGUE TEXT
One of the most idiosyncratic talents in Australian art, Leonard French forged his own path from relative obscurity to astonishing popularity. Training as a signwriter while pursuing part-time art classes, the artist was initially taken under the wing of Melbourne Technical College lecturer, Victor Greenhalgh, who identified his prodigious talent and later gave French a teaching position. French became further captivated by the Melbourne art scene when he frequented the Swanston Family Hotel in Swanston Street after classes, an establishment also patronised by numerous emerging Antipodean artists including Arthur Boyd, John Perceval, Clifton Pugh, Charles Blackman and John Olsen. The combination of his teaching and signwriting studies, together with regular debates among his artist peers at the Swanston Family Hotel (such congregations were later known as ‘Len French’s University’1), enabled French’s burgeoning artistic vision to solidify and, from the late 1950s, French’s ascent was meteoric, winning in quick succession the Crouch, Perth, Peace Congress, Sulman and Blake prizes – the latter of which he won a second time in 1980.

With the Australian art scene in the late 1960s and 1970s dominated by movements such as colour field abstraction, French’s presence thus became increasingly marginalised as he plunged himself more fully into the figurative idioms that would define his later work. Describing himself as a ‘dog among the fairies’2, in 1981 he embarked upon his some of his most overtly figurative work with the ‘Dark Circus’ series which, permeated by a mood of impending gloom, elaborated upon the dark allegories of captivity and death first explored in his ‘Death of a Revolution’ series in the early 1970s. Indeed, elaborating upon French’s use of the circus iconography, art historian Sasha Grishin suggests: ‘The metaphor of the circus of life has attracted many artists, from the carnivals of Bruegel and Ensor to the clowns and harlequins of Rouault, Léger and Picasso, and in Australian art the ballroom dancers of John Brack, the carnival scenes of John Perceval and the performance arena of Andrew Sibley's grand circus. French's arena is a circus of cut-out facades; among them are rocking horses, and toy elephants which he has appropriated from his daughter's picture books. Behind the facade lies the darkness…’3
 
The spectacular climax to the series which implicitly presents as a journey with an initiation and progression, Façade 1981 exudes a sense of colourful dynamism and excitement, beneath which lies something quite ominous and frightening. A boy crucified on a wheel forms the centre of the composition while below, naked bodies are crammed into a cage like animals and, in the distance, the menacing furnace which – reminiscent of the abandoned Hoffman Brickworks where the artist painted as a child – bears unmistakable associations with the Nazi gas chambers. As Grishin observes, ‘…all seem to rush along, as if on Bruegel’s cart of suffering humanity, or as part of Uccello’s Rout of San Romano turned into a scene of apocalyptic horror with chimney stacks belching ominous emissions into a blood red sky. The strange, disjointed elephants and rocking horses may be a reference to a merry-go-round from the artist’s childhood. He remembers such a merry-go-round where there were broken heads and legs falling off the horses. There may also be unconscious references to his sign painting days… these suspended signs would be ripped by the wind, and through the ripped cloth you could glimpse passages of blue sky, wooden fences or walls of corrugated iron. The painting [Façade, 1981] explores this incongruity of layers of reality, where behind the façade one could catch a glimpse of another plane of being…’4

1. Heathcote, C., A Quiet Revolution: the rise of Australian art 1946-1968, Text Publishing, Melbourne, 1995, p. 63
2. ‘Leonard French, a man apart’, Weekend Australian, 18 – 19 April 1981
3. Grishin, S., Leonard French, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1995, p. 53
4. Ibid., pp. 54 – 55
 
VERONICA ANGELATOS

Hayward Florence Janeview full entry
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98 and 99
FLORENCE JANE HAYWARD
(1859 - 1948)
ELTHAM, c.1901
oil on canvas
33.0 x 46.0 cm
signed lower right: F. Hayward.
bears framer’s label verso: D. Bernard & Co. Fine Art, Melbourne 

99
FLORENCE JANE HAYWARD
(1859 - 1948)
HEIDELBERG, c.1898
oil on academy board
20.0 x 45.5 cm
signed lower right: F. Hayward.
Cummings Elisabethview full entry
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109
ELISABETH CUMMINGS
born 1934
ALONG THE TRACK, 1994
oil on canvas
84.0 x 91.5 cm
signed lower right: Cummings
signed, dated, and inscribed with title verso: Elisabeth Cummings / ‘Along the Track’ / 1994
PROVENANCE
Hidden Valley Gallery, New South Wales
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1995
EXHIBITED
The Easter Show, Hidden Valley Gallery, New South Wales, 8 – 30 April 1995, cat. 12
Elisabeth Cummings Survey 1965 – 1995, Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, Sydney, 2 August – 8 September 1996
CATALOGUE TEXT
Densely layered, chromatically and gesturally raucous, Cummings’ paintings are expressive responses to Sydney’s busy hinterland. Combining the grey-green tones so evocative of vegetation on the Australian East coast, with signature bold hues of yellow, red and purple, Cummings draws the viewer’s eyes on a journey through the picture plane, following the artist’s own steps through the painting’s eponymous track. Along the Track features the confident and considered gestures of a mature artist as she wrestles her way through the visual stimuli placed on picture plane and endowed with a life of its own.

A quiet and steady achiever in Australian art, Elisabeth Cummings has only recently started to receive the critical attention she has deserved over the last 60 years of untiring practice. A gestural and intuitive painter, Cummings has devoted most of her recent years to a semi-abstract style of landscape painting. Hitherto admired mostly by a select coterie of patrons and fellow artists, Cummings has recently been included in large survey exhibitions such as Destination Sydney in 2015, Know My Name at the National Gallery of Australia in 2021 and a second touring retrospective exhibition organized by Terrence Maloon of the ANU Drill Hall gallery in 2017, Interior Landscapes.1

In the 1970s, Cummings was a founding member of the artist community in Wedderburn, a semi-rural enclave south west of Sydney, along with fellow artists John Peart, Roy Jackson and Joan Brassil. A strong environmentalist concern motivated this project, with the artists determined to protect the sandstone bushland around the Georges River from further development. Cummings however suffered a devastating loss when her new studio in Wedderburn was razed by a bushfire in September 1994. Along the Track was painted earlier that year, and by virtue of its inclusion in an Easter exhibition and swift acquisition by the current owner, escaped this destructive blaze.

Using the rugged landscape around her studio in Wedderburn as a point of departure, Along the Track becomes a painting about the act of painting rather of a subject, a call-and-response hierarchy within Cummings practice noted by John McDonald.2 A dialogue between shapes and colours animates both Cummings’ painting process and the viewer’s perception of the finished work. Alive with varied and competing gestures, the marks of Cummings’ hand are layered organically, through a process of placing, scraping back, rebuilding of the painted surface. The resulting grainy and chalky surface, with sinuous lines scratched into the fresh paint with the back of the paintbrush carries the weight of each iteration, its palimpsestic traces peeking through inconsistently throughout the plane. It is the richness of this mysterious alchemy that has endured within Cummings’ paintings and identified her as a unique and powerful voice in the history of Australian art.

1. Cummings’ first survey retrospective was held in 1996 at Campbelltown City Art Gallery, and included Along The Track
2. McDonald, J., ‘Elisabeth Cummings’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 10 June 2017

LUCIE REEVES-SMITH

Johnstone H Jview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett, IMPORTANT WOMEN ARTISTS + SELECTED AUSTRALIAN AND INTERNATIONAL FINE ART, MELBOURNE, 10 November 2021, lot
111
HENRY JAMES JOHNSTONE
(1835 - 1907)
TWILIGHT, RIVER GOULBURN, VICTORIA, 1878
oil on canvas
26.0 x 51.0 cm
signed and dated lower left: H.J. Johnstone 1878
inscribed with title and artist’s name on old label verso
PROVENANCE
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne (label attached verso)
Private collection, Melbourne
Deutscher and Hackett, Melbourne, 20 April 2011, lot 84
Private collection, Melbourne
CATALOGUE TEXT
In nineteenth-century Australia, the marriage of photography and painting reached fascinating heights - perhaps none greater than those achieved by British-born H.J. Johnstone. Drawn to Australia by gold, his popularity grew through his fashionable photographic studio on Melbourne’s Bourke Street, together with his nationalistic landscapes and flamboyant personality. Exhibiting with the Victorian Academy of Arts from 1872, he was inclined to paint looking into the light, especially sunsets – captured with awe-inspiring realism, stillness echoed in mirrored images and gums silhouetted in grandeur. Johnstone’s related work, Evening Shadows, Backwater of the Murray, 1880, was the first painting acquired by the Art Gallery of South Australia in 1881.

DAVID THOMAS


Perryman Malcolm Frederick 1906-1983view full entry
Reference: see Lawsons, October 28, 2021, Sydney, Australia, lot 600: MALCOLM FREDERICK PERRYMAN (1906 - 1983)
Sunset on Middle Head, Sydney Harbour
oil on board
44 x 59 cm (frame: 62 x 78 x 4 cm)
signed lower right
Bell Richardview full entry
Reference: article by John McDonald in Sydney Morning Herald, Spectrum, 16-17 October, 2021, p 6 ‘Subversion, rebellion and the art market’.
Rosen Robert photographerview full entry
Reference: Robert Rosen - Glitterati
Publishing details: Powerhose Museum, 2021 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Rosen Robert photographerview full entry
Reference: article by Lee Tulloch, ‘Snapper to the Stars’, in Sydney Morning Herald, Spectrum, 16-17 October, 2021, p8-9 and 16
Michell Keith 1926-2015view full entry
Reference: The Shakespeare Sonnets, 1976 - the complete suite of twelve lithographs in colours on Saunders wove, an unsigned proof aside from the edition of 100,
Publishing details: printed by Curwen Studio, published by Century Graphics, Henley, each sheet loose, overall 61.6 x 50cm (folio)
Ref: 1000
MORROW Romola (b.1935)view full entry
Reference: see Davidsons auction, October 24, 2021,
Sydney, Australia, lot 51, MORROW, Romola (b.1935)
'Thelma Clune'
The sitter (1900-1992) was an Australian artist & gallery owner; she and her husband Frank Clune were great friends and supporters of William Dobell.
Oil on Canvas
90x75cm

PROVENANCE:
John Schaeffer collection; thence by descent.
Dimensions
90x75cm
Artist or Maker
(b.1935)
Medium
The sitter (1900-1992) was an Australian artist & gallery owner; she and her husband Frank Clune were great friends and supporters of William Dobell.
Provenance
John Schaeffer collection; thence by descent.
Praetorius Hans (1858-1926)view full entry
Reference: see Davidsons auction, October 24, 2021,
Sydney, Australia, lot 74, PRAETORIUS, Hans (1858-1926)
'Dingo (Canis Dingo)' circa 1907.
W/Clr
12.5x20cm
LITERATURE:
'A Greeting from Sunny Australia: Our Animals,' published by C.O. Petersen, Melbourne, 1907; 'Australian Cartophilic Society Newsletter,' June 20/6 (p. 7).
Dimensions
12.5x20cm
Artist or Maker
(1858-1926)

THORNTON Robert Johnview full entry
Reference: see Davidsons auction, October 24, 2021,
Sydney, Australia, lot 143:
THORNTON, Robert John (British 1768-1837)
'Natives of Botany Bay Fishing'
From Portlock's New Collection of Voyages and Travels.
Published by Alexander Hogg, 15th March 1794.
Engraved by Thornton from drawings taken on the spot.
Coloured Engraving
14x19.5cm (plate)
Dimensions
14x19.5cm (plate)
Artist or Maker
(British 1768-1837)
WEST FREDERICK TEMPLE view full entry
Reference: Thomaston Place Auction Galleries
November 14, 2021,lot 3157: FREDERICK TEMPLE WEST (AUSTRALIA, ACTIVE 1895-1910), "The 'Battle Abbey' Under Full Sail, black and white oil on academy board, signed lower right, titled on Wiscasset Bay Gallery of Maine label verso, housed in a deep cove gilt frame, OS: 22 1/2" x 17 1/2", SS: 17" x 12", good condition. The iron barque "Battle Abbey", 1643 tons with three mast rig built in 1875 by T. Roydon & Son, Liverpool. Owners James Poole & Co. Caught fire and abandoned Dec 30, 1913 bound from Newcastle to Vancouver.
Claude Muncasterview full entry
Reference: see Cheffins auction, October 28, 2021, Cambridge, United Kingdom, lot 385: Claude Muncaster, RWS, RBA, SMA, ROI (British 1903-1974) A South Pacific Blow signed 'CLAUDE MUNCASTER' (lower right) oil on canvas 74.5 x 49.5cm; together with Martin Muncaster, The Wind in the Oak, Robin Garton, London, 1978, No.17/100 copies, signed by author to half title, and matching looseleaf folio of 12 etchings, the 2 volumes contained within a slipcase; Martin Muncaster,The Wind in the Oak, Robin Garton, London, 1978; Claude Muncaster, Rolling Round the Horn, Rich & Cowan, London, 1935 (4) Footnote: Literature: Martin Muncaster, The Wind in the Oak, London, Robin Garton, cover illustration Exhibited: Liverpool Guildhall, Society of the Marine Artists, 1947 Described by Muncaster’s son, Martin, as “one of [Muncaster’s] finest marine paintings”, the present lot was presumed lost for several decades, after having been exhibited in 1947. Used as the cover illustration for Martin Muncaster’s 1978 biography of his father, in 1979, possibly a result of the publicity surrounding the book, the painting re-emerged. Thought to have been painted in 1931 on a voyage aboard the Olive Bank from Melbourne to England, chronicled by Muncaster in his 1933 publication Rolling Round the Horn, the present lot, with its deftly observed matrix of rigging and dynamic canted angle, is demonstrative of both Muncaster’s lived experience and his comprehensive maritime knowledge.
Burke Francesview full entry
Reference: From the night. Poems by Maie Casey. Drawings by Frances Burke.
Publishing details: Published by No publication details. [Melbourne], self published 1975? 42pp, illustrated, original wrappers
Ref: 1000
Shumack Kayview full entry
Reference: Kaye Shumack: Drawing Sydney
Drawing Sydney presents recent works by NAS alumna Kaye Shumack in The Drawing Gallery from 6–27 November. With her acute powers of observation, Shumack’s expressive drawings explore the urban landscapes of Sydney’s public spaces and streetscapes, revealing the beauty of some of the lesser-known, ordinary parts of the city as well as key, much-loved landmarks.
Publishing details: National Art School Gallery, 2021 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Olsen Valerie nee also Valerie Marshall Strong Olsenview full entry
Reference: Valerie Marshall Strong Olsen: A rare sensibility
This exhibition, opening soon in the Rayner Hoff Project Space from 6–27 November, pays tribute to the work and life of an extraordinary but unsung Australian artist, Valerie Strong. Although her work has rarely been seen in public, she was an outstanding student at NAS, who together with John Olsen was part of one of Australia’s most renowned creative families and an accomplished and inspired artist and teacher in her own right.
Publishing details: National Art School, 2021 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1009
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: John Olsen: Goya’s Dog, catalogue published to accompany exhibition 29 October – 27 November 2021, NAS Gallery, Steven Alderton curator. [’... gives unique insight into the work and mind of the esteemed NAS alumni and celebrated artist, with major works that have not been seen in public for generations. ’]
[’The National Art School is proud to present John Olsen: Goya’s Dog, a powerful exploration of an extraordinary Australian artist – from his creative awakening in Spain, through the darkness that threatened to overwhelm him at times, and his ability to reach for the light, pursuing a long and acclaimed career.
John Olsen is one of the National Art School’s most renowned graduates, a NAS Fellow, AO and OBE. Goya’s Dog features over 50 major works, sketchbooks and drawings, many not seen in public for generations.
The exhibition begins in Spain during the mid-1950s when the young artist became entranced and inspired by Spanish culture – art, poetry and music – which drew him to explore a darker, more vulnerable side of his personality and experience. Another visit to Spain in the mid-1960s transformed his palette, which became more dynamic and bold.
“It was a remarkable experience because Spain was completely isolated from the modishness of the 20th century, it was still the essential heart of Europe. And then as I began to study, I became aware that even though Spain is a bright and sunny country, that its principle painting lay on the basis of tone – Velazquez, Goya, Murrillo – and somehow those earthy tones reverberated the soul of Spain.  
“It was very profound … rather than thinking outwards, it made you think inwards. Still in Australia today, they like the sunny side of the world, whereas the Spanish like the shadow side of the world. I found that very intriguing.” John Olsen, February 2021 
The exhibition also features Olsen’s work from the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s, a period when his vital urban Australian ‘larrikin’ voice emerged. The Olsen landscape became like a theatre or stage, where human drama takes place. It is vivacious, teeming with metaphysical life; in parallel with and embracing real life.
Known for the irrepressible vitality in his work and his buoyant personality, Olsen is a visual poet with a deep love of poetry underpinning his work. Yet he has also confronted darkness in his life, reflected in works such as Donde voy? Self-portrait in moments of doubt (1989). This powerfully introspective painting fits within a venerable history of western art, one which looks mortality in the face.
“I’m 93, and I’m more entranced with the dark side. Not in a mournful sense, but in a sense of enquiry.” John Olsen 
Olsen has followed his lifelong urge to set sail into the unknown, delving into the landscape that takes on the form of a living being, full of emotions, foibles and beauty. Through the storms, struggles and soul-searching, he lands on moments of enlightenment, where he is able to capture the energy and elemental life forces of nature, and what it is to be human within this world.
“What I’m talking about is the artist as hunter gatherer. Being daring, and not frightened of the outcome. You’re a journeyman, in the real sense. It’s not the question of failure, it’s the question of understanding and feeling, where you’re able to inhabit your interior world.” John Olsen ’]
Publishing details: National Art School Gallery, 2021, [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Waller Christian 1894-1954view full entry
Reference: THE GATES OF DAWN: A BOOK MADE FOR THE YOUNG. edition of 1,000 (15 being produced in leather, and 800 copies comprising the standard tan cloth edition). Printed by photolithography from the single copy produced by The Golden Arrow Press, Melbourne, 1932. children's story by Australian artist Christian Marjory Emily Carlyle Yandell Waller (1894-1954)
Publishing details: Gryphon Books, 1977.
First Edition.
29.5cm x 22.5cm. [52] pages, black and red illustrations. Red cloth, gilt lettering and decoration.
Ref: 1009
TWO TO THE VALLEYview full entry
Reference: TWO TO THE VALLEY: A PORTRAIT IN BLACK & WHITE Dennis Bailey; David Hinchliffe; Hans Rol. Photography of Brisbane's Fortitude Valley in the early 1990s together with interviews of its inhabitants.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Valley Business Association, 1992.
First Edition.149 pages, black and white illustrations. Pictorial wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Bailey Dennis view full entry
Reference: TWO TO THE VALLEY: A PORTRAIT IN BLACK & WHITE Dennis Bailey; David Hinchliffe; Hans Rol. Photography of Brisbane's Fortitude Valley in the early 1990s together with interviews of its inhabitants.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Valley Business Association, 1992.
First Edition.149 pages, black and white illustrations. Pictorial wrappers.
Hinchliffe David view full entry
Reference: TWO TO THE VALLEY: A PORTRAIT IN BLACK & WHITE Dennis Bailey; David Hinchliffe; Hans Rol. Photography of Brisbane's Fortitude Valley in the early 1990s together with interviews of its inhabitants.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Valley Business Association, 1992.
First Edition.149 pages, black and white illustrations. Pictorial wrappers.
Rol Hans view full entry
Reference: TWO TO THE VALLEY: A PORTRAIT IN BLACK & WHITE Dennis Bailey; David Hinchliffe; Hans Rol. Photography of Brisbane's Fortitude Valley in the early 1990s together with interviews of its inhabitants.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Valley Business Association, 1992.
First Edition.149 pages, black and white illustrations. Pictorial wrappers.
Griffiths Thomas woodworkerview full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021. Two extraordinary Queensland boxes in the shape of books. The interest in Australian timbers that began with the beginning of the colony and discovery of our amazing and unique timbers continued into the early 20th Century. Queensland, especially far north Queensland, and Cape York were explored in the late 19th Century. They were still being developed and their native forests actively exploited/cut out through the first two quarters of the 20th Century.
Both of these very similar boxes make the most of what are today rare or virtually unobtainable timbers. First, the similarities: 1. the form, a box-like shape with a sliding section to the top, revealing a pull-out inner compartment or drawer; 2. A very similar layout with parquetry sections separated by string inlay; 3. The extensive use of timbers now unobtainable due to rarity, black palm, Normanbya normanbyi in the corner squares of both makers and central sections of the Griffiths box, as well as the virtually unobtainable Queensland maple and the rare Queensland ebony. Second, the dissimilarities: 1. All known Griffiths boxes have similar northern silky oak, Cardwellia sublimis, unfinished pull out sections/drawers whereas the Neilsen box appears to have an ebonised pine central drawer.
Both makers had sawmills in north Queensland, though Griffiths also had sawmills in southeastern Queensland. Labelled Nielsen boxes are from Port Douglas; labelled Griffiths boxes are from Brisbane or Mount Tamborine. Griffiths also had works near Ipswich so some boxes may have originated from there.
There is an unanswered question about the production of these boxes. Did the makers work together or collaborate?
One absolute certainty? This editor is very jealous of the owners!
An article on Thomas Griffiths’ life and work is planned for Australiana and may be in the November 2021 issue.
Nielsen H A woodworker view full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021. Two extraordinary Queensland boxes in the shape of books. Early C20th. Labelled H A Nielsen. Size: 21.5 x 15 x 5 cm.. The interest in Australian timbers that began with the beginning of the colony and discovery of our amazing and unique timbers continued into the early 20th Century. Queensland, especially far north Queensland, and Cape York were explored in the late 19th Century. They were still being developed and their native forests actively exploited/cut out through the first two quarters of the 20th Century.
Both of these very similar boxes make the most of what are today rare or virtually unobtainable timbers. First, the similarities: 1. the form, a box-like shape with a sliding section to the top, revealing a pull-out inner compartment or drawer; 2. A very similar layout with parquetry sections separated by string inlay; 3. The extensive use of timbers now unobtainable due to rarity, black palm, Normanbya normanbyi in the corner squares of both makers and central sections of the Griffiths box, as well as the virtually unobtainable Queensland maple and the rare Queensland ebony. Second, the dissimilarities: 1. All known Griffiths boxes have similar northern silky oak, Cardwellia sublimis, unfinished pull out sections/drawers whereas the Neilsen box appears to have an ebonised pine central drawer.
Both makers had sawmills in north Queensland, though Griffiths also had sawmills in southeastern Queensland. Labelled Nielsen boxes are from Port Douglas; labelled Griffiths boxes are from Brisbane or Mount Tamborine. Griffiths also had works near Ipswich so some boxes may have originated from there.
There is an unanswered question about the production of these boxes. Did the makers work together or collaborate?
One absolute certainty? This editor is very jealous of the owners!
An article on Thomas Griffiths’ life and work is planned for Australiana and may be in the November 2021 issue.
Whiting Evelyn view full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021. c. 1879. Maker Evelyn Whiting (b. 1860). Cedar cased fretwork, size: 6 x 48 x 32 cm. This interesting item gives a window into the past. It was purchased by the owner at a recent auction, together with excerpts from an exhibition report.
International Exhibition Miss Eveline Whiting exhibits two cases of fretwork. This work requires considerable taste and patient skill. The exhibitor evidences that she has both, her designs are good, and all the articles are nicely carved and carefully finished. Miss Eveline Whiting has used American hickory, oak, tulip, and myall woods, and has been equally successful in all.” “International Exhibition Wood carving as performed, by a lady, is shown by Miss Eveline Whiting. Her representation of a well-known Sydney character, in the act of crying "Umbrellas to mend (?)" cannot fail to excite attention. cases wood fretwork ... ing, 15, Cowper- terrace, 2
SMH January 1872 reports that
When a dusty artisan, lean and ragged, like the needy knife grinder, with a hole in his hat and a rent in his nether garment, pushed before him a tray on wheels, and crying ‘Umbrellas to mend’, works his way along a suburban thoroughfare, he is more often an object of disdain and suspicion than of respect. Evelyn Whiting has chosen to represent him as a cheerful character.
The partial address provides a clue to the date as Evelyn’s family moved to 9 Cowper Terrace, Clarence St, Church Hill in Sydney in 1860, the house where Eveline Mary Whiting (1860-1954) was born. She was the third daughter of Louisa Maria Hobson (1814-1894) and George Robert Whiting (1834-1922) and the family remained there till about 1881 when they
3
moved to Gore Hill. The International Exhibition referred to is most likely the one held in Sydney in September 1879.
Evelyn’s wealthy, widowed grandmother arrived in Sydney in 1848 with her daughter Louisa Hobson and other extended family members. She set up a clothing business in Hunter St and following her daughter’s marriage to George Whiting in 1853, he became a partner, whereupon the business became known as Hobson and Whiting. The business sold hosiery, gloves, bags and portmanteaux. They lived above the shop where daughters Lucilla and Blanche were born. Blanche married James Hobson in 1880 at St James Church Sydney and had 6 children. James started the North Shore Times newspaper in 1885.
There are many references to Evelyn’s artwork in exhibitions in newspaper accounts, but she was not a professional painter and had an independent income (probably from her grandmother as her father was a bankrupt). The SLNSW contains several drawings and a family portrait.
The interesting mix of timbers used in the fretwork have international connections and indicate a high level of international timber trade in the late 1800s. They are stated as being “Hickery” (presumably American hickory) and Kauri (which could be either Australian kauri pine or the imported New Zealand kauri). Two crosses in the central box are myall wood (several Australian acacias have myall in their common name) and “tulip wood” (which could be either Australian tulipwood, Harpullia pendula – the most likely – or Brazilian tulipwood). The case, described as being cedar, is most likely Australian red cedar Toona ciliata.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/Thirteenth%20Australiana%20Virtual%20Show%20and%20Tell%20Report%20October%202021.pdf
Flint F A jewellerview full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021. 4.- Sterling silver and Neotrigonia shell spoon. Circa 1910. Maker F A Flint, Tasmania. Weight: 8g Length: 11cm. Advertisement for FA Flint.
By the 1890s some settlers in Tasmania finally acknowledged that the shell heaps noticeable in parts of the shoreline on the east coast were the kitchen-middens, or "refuse heaps," of the local Aborigines. Using some of these shells, these distinctively Tasmanian spoons with map-of-Tasmania finial were made when Tasmania was a popular tourist destination for mainland Australians from the turn of the century. Steamships sailed regularly from Sydney and Melbourne to Hobart and ports of the northern coast of the island. Many examples of shell spoons or jewellery incorporating the shells, were made by William Golding, also Taylor and Sharp, and F A Flint Jewellers in Hobart or Stewarts of Launceston.
This silver and small Neotrigonia1 shell souvenir spoon was made in Tasmania around 1910. The finial is shaped as the map of Tasmania and is stamped on the front "Tasmania" and on the back "Silver" and “F.A.F” for Francis Albert Flint (1858-1938) of Hobart.
Francis was born in Birmingham, England. His father Francis died in 1860 leaving his mother Elizabeth nee Britland with three very young children Harriet, Francis Alfred and Charles. Four years later she married jeweller George Martin and had two children William and Edith Martin.
In the 1871 English census Francis Alfred Flint is recorded as a jeweller, age 13, apprenticed to his stepfather George. His brother Charles and stepbrother William also became jewellers. Flint’s obituary notes that he arrived in Adelaide on the ship Forfarshire. Its arrival in South Australia in 1877 records emigrants selected by the Colonization Commissioners London, whose passage were paid for out of the Emigration Fund. In 1877 Flint was 19 so the carpenter named Francis Flint age 19 on the Forfarshire was Francis Albert Flint jeweller and he acquired the ‘carpenter’ trade perhaps to be classed as an acceptable immigrant for South Australia. After living in Adelaide for a few years he moved to Melbourne where he married Matilda Mary Le Jeune Smith in 1881 and their first three children were born there.
Around 1891, the family transferred to Hobart where their son Herbert was born in 1892, followed by three other children. Flint would have been employed initially by one of the manufacturing jewellers in Hobart at the time.
In 1896, Flint joined with Joseph Quarmby to form the retail business Flint and Quarmby, jewellers of Liverpool St Hobart. Two years later each had established his own business, F A Flint was listed in Wise’s Tasmania Directory as manufacturing jeweller of 86 Liverpool St. Tasmanian souvenir jewellery manufactured by F A Flint of 116 Liverpool St. Hobart is shown in the advertisement which appeared in A Century of Progress 1804-1917.
F A Flint retired around 1930 and the business became F A Flint Pty Ltd; it was taken over by his second son Charles Ernest Flint who managed it until his premature death in 1939. The business continued until the mid-1950s.
Hattin Leigh and Kevinview full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021. 5. Tasmanian Tour memento. Leigh Hattin, digital print on watercolour paper. Size: 32 x 35 cm. Leigh and Kevin Hattin were participants in the Australiana Society’s 2009 tour of Tasmania and greatly enjoyed the experience. After the tour Leigh painted the original of the above image as a memento. She then had copies printed on water colour paper and generously gifted them to each of the participants on the tour. The prints are a slightly different size to the original retained by Leigh (35 high x 35 wide) as they were restricted to the paper size available for printing.
One of the recipients of a print sent it in to the editors for the virtual show and tell, so we wrote to Leigh, who confirmed “All member couple groups and individuals travelling on their own received a print of the painting to commemorate the wonderful Tasmanian Tour in 2009”.
Hattin Kevin and Leigh view full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021. 5. Tasmanian Tour memento. Leigh Hattin, digital print on watercolour paper. Size: 32 x 35 cm. Leigh and Kevin Hattin were participants in the Australiana Society’s 2009 tour of Tasmania and greatly enjoyed the experience. After the tour Leigh painted the original of the above image as a memento. She then had copies printed on water colour paper and generously gifted them to each of the participants on the tour. The prints are a slightly different size to the original retained by Leigh (35 high x 35 wide) as they were restricted to the paper size available for printing.
One of the recipients of a print sent it in to the editors for the virtual show and tell, so we wrote to Leigh, who confirmed “All member couple groups and individuals travelling on their own received a print of the painting to commemorate the wonderful Tasmanian Tour in 2009”.
Friend Donald carvingview full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021.
9. Carved figure of a woman dancing 1970s. 1970s. Carved by Donald Friend (1915-1989). Size: approx. 22 cm high.
This unusual carving is stated to contain two timbers. The Huon Pine is Tasmanian, and a good carving timber, but the identification and origin of the rowanberry poses more of a challenge. The rowanberry species, Sorbus aucaparia, is a native to Europe, Asia Minor and Siberia. However, there are records that indicate the species is cultivated in Australia, which may become a problem as it has been identified as having the potential to be a major weed in some parts of the country. It isn’t possible to test the identification of the timber in the legs from the photographs, so it is possible that the artist’s identification was incorrect or else was ‘artistic licence’ and alluded to the sometimes-claimed magical properties of the rowan tree.
Provenance
Rather than see the Salamanca Place Gallery in Hobart close, Marjorie Leonora Hill (1919 - 2013) acquired it from her son Mark in May 1972 and became its third Director. This required her to give up her position as Art teacher at Fahan School and maintain it as a gallery for artists.
Over a period of 16 years, she established a solid foundation for the Gallery as an exhibition venue for paintings, prints, antique maps and crafts alternating solo artist shows with mixed exhibitions. Many other enterprises included evening ‘Life Drawing’ classes for artists in the gallery, the sale of art materials, and for about 5 years the very popular mid- Summer outdoor art show on the Parliament House lawns.
10
The success of exhibitions at the Gallery or works exhibited by artists such as Pro Hart, John Olsen, Mirka Mora, Clifton Pugh, Charles Blackman, Fred Cress, Donald Friend, Elain Haxton, Keith Looby, Jorg Schmiesser, Jan Senbergs, Fred Williams, Brett Whitely and other leading Australian contemporary artists built the reputation and profile of the gallery. It also enabled Marjorie to exhibit works by emerging but lesser-known Tasmanian artists.
Many of these artist's works formed part of Marjorie and husband Bernie's private art collection, which was auctioned on 24 August 1990. This object is a piece of whittling (to whittle = carve (wood) into an object by repeatedly cutting small slices from it), by Donald Friend who was a friend of the Hills and always stayed as their guest when he visited Hobart.
Hill Marjorie Leonora 1919 - 2013view full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021.
9. Carved figure of a woman dancing 1970s. 1970s. Carved by Donald Friend (1915-1989). Size: approx. 22 cm high.
This unusual carving is stated to contain two timbers. The Huon Pine is Tasmanian, and a good carving timber, but the identification and origin of the rowanberry poses more of a challenge. The rowanberry species, Sorbus aucaparia, is a native to Europe, Asia Minor and Siberia. However, there are records that indicate the species is cultivated in Australia, which may become a problem as it has been identified as having the potential to be a major weed in some parts of the country. It isn’t possible to test the identification of the timber in the legs from the photographs, so it is possible that the artist’s identification was incorrect or else was ‘artistic licence’ and alluded to the sometimes-claimed magical properties of the rowan tree.
Provenance
Rather than see the Salamanca Place Gallery in Hobart close, Marjorie Leonora Hill (1919 - 2013) acquired it from her son Mark in May 1972 and became its third Director. This required her to give up her position as Art teacher at Fahan School and maintain it as a gallery for artists.
Over a period of 16 years, she established a solid foundation for the Gallery as an exhibition venue for paintings, prints, antique maps and crafts alternating solo artist shows with mixed exhibitions. Many other enterprises included evening ‘Life Drawing’ classes for artists in the gallery, the sale of art materials, and for about 5 years the very popular mid- Summer outdoor art show on the Parliament House lawns.
10
The success of exhibitions at the Gallery or works exhibited by artists such as Pro Hart, John Olsen, Mirka Mora, Clifton Pugh, Charles Blackman, Fred Cress, Donald Friend, Elain Haxton, Keith Looby, Jorg Schmiesser, Jan Senbergs, Fred Williams, Brett Whitely and other leading Australian contemporary artists built the reputation and profile of the gallery. It also enabled Marjorie to exhibit works by emerging but lesser-known Tasmanian artists.
Many of these artist's works formed part of Marjorie and husband Bernie's private art collection, which was auctioned on 24 August 1990. This object is a piece of whittling (to whittle = carve (wood) into an object by repeatedly cutting small slices from it), by Donald Friend who was a friend of the Hills and always stayed as their guest when he visited Hobart.
Salamanca Place Galleryview full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021.
9. Carved figure of a woman dancing 1970s. 1970s. Carved by Donald Friend (1915-1989). Size: approx. 22 cm high.
This unusual carving is stated to contain two timbers. The Huon Pine is Tasmanian, and a good carving timber, but the identification and origin of the rowanberry poses more of a challenge. The rowanberry species, Sorbus aucaparia, is a native to Europe, Asia Minor and Siberia. However, there are records that indicate the species is cultivated in Australia, which may become a problem as it has been identified as having the potential to be a major weed in some parts of the country. It isn’t possible to test the identification of the timber in the legs from the photographs, so it is possible that the artist’s identification was incorrect or else was ‘artistic licence’ and alluded to the sometimes-claimed magical properties of the rowan tree.
Provenance
Rather than see the Salamanca Place Gallery in Hobart close, Marjorie Leonora Hill (1919 - 2013) acquired it from her son Mark in May 1972 and became its third Director. This required her to give up her position as Art teacher at Fahan School and maintain it as a gallery for artists.
Over a period of 16 years, she established a solid foundation for the Gallery as an exhibition venue for paintings, prints, antique maps and crafts alternating solo artist shows with mixed exhibitions. Many other enterprises included evening ‘Life Drawing’ classes for artists in the gallery, the sale of art materials, and for about 5 years the very popular mid- Summer outdoor art show on the Parliament House lawns.
10
The success of exhibitions at the Gallery or works exhibited by artists such as Pro Hart, John Olsen, Mirka Mora, Clifton Pugh, Charles Blackman, Fred Cress, Donald Friend, Elain Haxton, Keith Looby, Jorg Schmiesser, Jan Senbergs, Fred Williams, Brett Whitely and other leading Australian contemporary artists built the reputation and profile of the gallery. It also enabled Marjorie to exhibit works by emerging but lesser-known Tasmanian artists.
Many of these artist's works formed part of Marjorie and husband Bernie's private art collection, which was auctioned on 24 August 1990. This object is a piece of whittling (to whittle = carve (wood) into an object by repeatedly cutting small slices from it), by Donald Friend who was a friend of the Hills and always stayed as their guest when he visited Hobart.
Howells Elizabeth (1907-1985) view full entry
Reference: see 13th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report November 2021.
10. Australian Postage Stamp Art
Greeting cards decorated with hand-cut used Australian postage stamps 14.7 x 9.6 cm., 13.2 x 8.3 cm and 8.2 x 5.2 cm
The decorative elements on these cards are made from used Australian postage stamps. For decades franked stamps have been saved for charities and on sold to collectors.
Sydney-based Elizabeth Howells (1907-1985) also saved some for her craft activities during the 1960s and 1970s, which included the making of these very decorative cards.
At the time of her death, eight cards had been started but had not had the hand-painted gold finishing touches applied.
Steffanoni Sophieview full entry
Reference: see Lautaine Diggins Fine Art press release 22 October, 2021: Featured Artist:  Sophie Steffanoni.
‘SOPHIE STEFFANONI 1873 - 1906
About Windsor 1898
oil on canvas
25 x 45.5 cm
signed lower left: Sophie Steffanoni 1898
 
Sophie Steffanoni had been consigned to the ranks of overlooked women artists of the turn of the twentieth century until a cache of her artwork and correspondence were discovered in 1987, leading to an exhibition of her work at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1996. Steffanoni was a professional artist, working for the family embroidery business where she was the main designer and receiving first prize at the World Columbian Exhibition in Chicago with her embroidered Australian Coat of Arms.  She was a member of the Royal Art Society of New South Wales, regularly exhibiting between 1895 – 1903. Steffanoni took painting lessons with William Lister Lister, along with fellow students including Jessie Scarvell, where she would have been exposed to painting en plein air. Her work was praised by newspaper critics, with her painting Paradise Hill, Blackheath, illustrated in the Sydney Mail in 1903. Sadly, Steffanoni died of tuberculosis aged only thirty-two.
It is likely Steffanoni was influenced by artists synonymous with Australian Impressionism, including Tom Roberts and Charles Conder and Julian Ashton. There is also evidence of her associations with fellow women artists, including Aline and Edith Cusack who provided much inspiration for young women artists on their return to Sydney from Paris in the mid 1890s; Jane Sutherland and Fabiola Tuomy, a student of Phillips Fox in Melbourne, where Steffanoni perhaps attended summer school on her visits in 1895 and 1898.
About Windsor, painted in 1898, presents a delightful bucolic farmyard scene, a cottage on a hill scattered with cascading flowers; misty purple hills in the background; bright green grass, shown in both sunlight and shadow and dotted with flowers; and a picturesque meandering track, framed by trees on either side of the canvas and leading the viewer’s eye to the gate and beyond, where a house can be seen with smoke curling from the chimney. On the way down the path, there are a ducks and chickens, presided over by a loyal black dog. Farmyard scenes featuring chickens was a popular subject, also captured by Clara Southern, AME Bale, Girolamo Nerli, Frederick McCubbin, Walter Withers, John Ford Paterson, Sydney Long, Arthur Streeton.
About Windsor as an impressionist landscape, with a post and rail fence, perhaps with spring blossoms and sometimes domestic fowls, was a subject Steffanoni painted on more than one occasion and contemporary praise for other works can perhaps equally be applied to this picture:
“ "An Australian Home" by Sophie Steffanoni is a bright, strong, true picture; the old house on the brow of the hill among the greenery of cultivation, and the purple hills and distant valley.” (Butterfield, Annette, Sophie Steffanoni, The Personal, Educational and Artistic History of a Woman Impressionist in Late Nineteenth Century Sydney, University of NSW, 2000, p. 221)
“Steffanoni in 20 lets her fancy and her brush combine in a delightful spring blossom picture that makes you long to lie under her trees and let the flowers shower down upon you; they are so delicately poised they look as though a breath would break them into a snowstorm of pink flakes.” (Butterfield, Annette, Towards a Catalogue Raisonne of Paintings by Sophie Steffanoni, University of NSW, 2000, p. 13)
The location of Windsor, NSW was a popular spot for artists with its picturesque farmyard buildings, orchard blossoms and expanse of fields, along with the river and mountains. Artists who are known to have painted there towards the end of the nineteenth century including Lister Lister and Julian Ashton, who contributed to a group of artists tasked with illustrating the area around the Hawkesbury River for The Picturesque Atlas of Australasia in the 1880s. Conder painted there in the spring of 1888 and other artists include the Collinridge brothers, Henry Fullwood, AJ Daplyn, Sydney Long and Arthur Streeton. Paintings of the Hawkesbury by Sophie’s father, Lewis Steffanoni, are in the family collection, so it is an area she would have known from a young age and one she may have visited later as a student of Ashton on a sketching trip. 
About Windsor highlights Steffanoni’s skill in capturing the Australian light and atmosphere in a palette recognisable to the plein air painters of what can be broadly termed Australian Impressionism. The painting is likely to have been sold in her lifetime, as it was not included in the family discovery in 1987, which indicates it’s appeal and importance within her oeuvre, further evidenced by the inclusion in the Spring Exhibition with Joseph Brown in 1979.’
Goerg Edouard Josephview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, November 10, 2021, London, United Kingdom, lot 253: Édouard Joseph Goerg (French/Australian, 1893-1969)
Coquetterie
signed 'E GOERG' (lower left); signed, titled and dated 'Coquetterie/ Ed.Goerg/Avril 1955' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
55.2 x 46.3cm (21 3/4 x 18 1/4in).
For further information on this lot please visit the Bonhams website
Artist or Maker
Édouard Joseph Goerg (French/Australian, 1893-1969)
Webb Philippaview full entry
Reference: see Dobiaschofsky Auktionen AG
November 6, 2021, Bern, Switzerland, lot 2373, WEBB, PHILIPPA (Australien, 20. Jh.) : "Im Coiffeursalon"; Öl auf Leinwand; 57x83 cm; sig. u.r., verso a. Etikett betitelt

Thomson Edward 1822-1873view full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art
17 Nov 2021, Melbourne, lot 7 - 10:
EDWARD THOMSON (1822-1873)
Woods and Kellys Claim, Iron Bark Quarts Reef, c.1860
inscribed verso: 'Woods & Kellys claim, Iron Bark Quartz Reef / Dr T Thomson / Leamington'
watercolour on paper
23.0 x 37.0cm (9 1/16 x 14 9/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Mr Edward Thomson
Dr Thomas Thomson, Warwickshire c.1870
Thence by descent,
Mrs Fanny Thomson, United Kingdom
Thence by descent,
Private collection, United Kingdom
Thence by descent,
Private collection, United Kingdom
Thence by descent,
Private collection, Perth

Little is known about colonial landscape artist, Edward Thomson. Undoubtedly, he spent some time in the New England and northern rivers districts of New South Wales from the late 1840s as his works of this subject (including the work at lot 10) are numerous. References to landscapes by a certain Thomson can be found amongst various art prizes and exhibitions including an 1848 Landscape Australia (New England) in the Sydney Art Union Prize and two views of New England in an 1849 exhibition by the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia reviewed at the time by the Sydney Morning Herald.1

It is possible that in the early 1850s Thomson went to Queensland in search of gold as a certain Edward Thomson 'An Artist, Warwick, Darling Downs' signed off on a letter dated 2 September 1852 responding to accusations of an infamous incident involving a gold nugget hoax.2 The subject of lots 7 and 8 indicate that, following the discovery of gold in north eastern New South Wales in the late 1850s, Thomson was to try his luck at Woodsreef and Ironbark near Barraba. Thomson's presence there is recorded in a report from Woodsreef dated 7 May 1862, published in the Maitland Mercury on 20 May, 1862: 'IRONOBARK - Things in general on these diggings are at present looking more favourable than they have done of late and I am happy to state that the Old Reef is likely to turn on the buoyant expectations of a great many. Two claims have been taken up by two different parties, and I am glad to say they both promise well. A small crushing taken by Messrs Thompson and part from the claim known as Thomas Miles's...have averaged over 4 ozs to the ton'.

Thomson's landscapes are an important historical record of the regions he painted and the activities which took place during the period including agriculture and fossicking. They 'show an ability to capture the distinctive tones of the Australian landscape...There is an atmospheric, impressionistic look to Edward Thomson's panoramas, which are tantalisingly glimpsed through the trees that often frame his images. Rather than paint park-like Europeanised views, Thomson uncompromisingly shows the Australian bush as it really is: wild, untamed, drably coloured, but beautiful in its structure and in the way that it is touched by the luminous, clear light of the Australian sky'.3

Francesca Cavazzini

1. Stephanie Ownen Reeder, The Vision Splendid, National Library of Australia, Canberra, 2011, p. 74
2. Ibid
3. Ibid, p. 75

AND
EDWARD THOMSON (1822-1873)
Tom the Blowers Claim, Iron Bark Quartz Reef, c.1860
inscribed verso: 'Tom The Blowers claim Iron Bark Quartz Reef' / Dr T Thomson / 3 Clarence Terrace / Leamington / Warwickshire'
watercolour on paper
25.5 x 35.5cm (10 1/16 x 14in).

AND
EDWARD THOMSON (1822-1873)
On Rocky Creek — a Troupe of Bustards
signed lower right: 'E Thomson'
inscribed verso: 'On Rocky Creek - a Troupe of Bustards'
watercolour on paper
17.5 x 26.0cm (6 7/8 x 10 1/4in).

AND
EDWARD THOMSON (1822-1873)
Waterhole at First Croping place on Gwydir above Bingara
inscribed verso: 'Waterhole at First Croping place on Gwydir above Bingara'
watercolour on paper
14.0 x 26.0cm (5 1/2 x 10 1/4in).

All the same provenance as lot 7
Bowen Stellaview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art
17 Nov 2021, Melbourne, lot 2:
STELLA BOWEN (1893-1947)
Portrait of a Young Boy, c.1937
oil on panel
35.5 x 30.5cm (14 x 12in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Collection of Lady Chorley, London
Thence by descent
Private collection, London

By the mid 1930s, Stella Bowen had established a strong clientele in London and on the continent for her work as a portraitist. Amongst those who commissioned and sat for her were Aldous Huxley, T. S. Eliot, Edith Sitwell, Naomi Mitchison, Gertrude Stein, and of course, friends and patrons Lord and Lady Chorley. In 1936, the Chorley's commissioned Bowen to paint a 'conversation piece' of the family; a type of informal group portrait which usually featured the subjects casually gathered in their homes or gardens. Painted the same year, Provencal Garden, recently exhibited in the Australian War Memorial's retrospective Stella Bowen: Art, Love and War, shows one such group convivially seated amongst an arbor in Cagnes-sur-Mer, France.

This portrait of one of the three Chorley children was painted c.1937, following the completion of the larger conversation piece, which depicted Lord and Lady Chorley with their children in the family home. Photographs, which remain in the family's collection, show the three children in different settings in the garden and were clearly used by Bowen for painting their individual portraits. The majority of Bowen's portraits and conversation pieces have not been located.
Lady Chorley, the writer Katherine Chorley, was a close friend and benefactor of Stella Bowen. It is likely she and her husband, then Sir Ernest Cassel, Professor of Commercial and Industrial Law at the London School of Economics, were instrumental in the School commissioning Bowen in 1936 to paint portraits of its leading members, Sir Arthur Bowley and Arthur Sargent in honour of their retirement. The Bowley portrait remains on display at the School. Archived correspondence from the period indicate that Katherine Chorley passed on various communications to the artist and that, in 1937, Professor Chorley had to intercede to request swift payment for the commissions, as Bowen was anxious about paying her daughter's school fees.

The painting Jardin Exotique, the following lot in this auction, was a gift from Bowen to Katherine following a trip they made together to Provence in 1938. The trip was also commemorated by Bowen's gift to Katherine Chorley of a copy of the book Provence by Bowen's former husband, the writer Ford Madox Ford, which she inscribed to her.

Merryn Schriever
Syme Evelyn Hyde Park Sydney c1930view full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art
17 Nov 2021, Melbourne, lot 1:
EVELINE SYME (1881-1961)
Hyde Park, Sydney, c.1930
signed with estate stamp lower right: 'E.W.SYME'
watercolour and pencil on paper
37.0 x 22.5cm (14 9/16 x 8 7/8in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Estate of the artist
Jim Alexander Gallery, Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne

EXHIBITED
Eveline Syme and Melbourne's French Connection, Jim Alexander Gallery, Melbourne, 5 - 12 June, 1988 (illus. cover)


'As a child Eveline had some drawing lessons but, on leaving school, she was enrolled at Cambridge University where she completed a Classical Tripos with honours, graduating as a Bachelor of Arts in 1912. She continued her education in Melbourne and graduated with a Diploma of Education from Melbourne University in 1914. Later she was to be awarded her MA by Cambridge University and is believed also to have studied at the Sorbonne in Paris...

Her close and lifelong friend Ethel Spowers was, at the time, studying at the National Gallery School under Bernard Hall and Frederick McCubbin... By January 1929 the two friends were both enrolled at the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London. The Principle was Iain McNab and Claude Flight taught lino-cutting. Both students received a good grounding in the principles of modernism and the liberating influence of Flight was to allow them to become two of Melbourne's best and most interesting print makers in the thirties.

In October 1929 (and possibly earlier), Eveline Syme was back in Paris and studying again under Andrew Lhote. Her first encounter with him does not appear to have produced any marked modernisation of her style but this time miss Syme was very receptive. As well as using Lhote's characteristic abstraction of shapes it appears that she studied with him the principles of Dynamic Symmetry as explained in the book of that name by Jay Hambridge (published in 1920). In a number of her watercolours, done in Australia after her return, you can discern the pencil grids which she drew as a guide to making an interesting composition'.1

As a pioneer of Australian modernism during the flourishing interwar years, Syme has infused the present work with her French learnings. Hyde Park, Sydney, offers the viewer an insight into her technical process with its underlying pencil work, whilst also depicting the lifestyle of the period and urban landscape of Sydney's oldest park and the impressive T&G Building which once occupied the corner of Elizabeth and Park Street, however was demolished in 1975.

Alex Clark

1. Eveline Syme and Melbourne's French Connection, exh. cat., Jim Alexander Gallery, Melbourne, 1988, n.p.
Rowan Ellis decorated screenview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art
17 Nov 2021, Melbourne, lot 12:
MARIAN ELLIS ROWAN (1848-1922)
Decorated Screen with Wildflowers, c.1880
each artwork signed lower centre: 'Ellis Rowan'
watercolour and gouache on paper (painted panels), inset to four-fold screen, decorated with embroidered panel designs, velvet panels and tapestry backing
54.0 x 37.0cm (21 1/4 x 14 9/16in). each (sheet)
screen 188.0cm (74in). high
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Lady Janet Clarke, Clivedon, Melbourne
Thence by descent,
The Hon. William Lionel Russell Clarke, Melbourne
Thence by descent,
The Hon. Michael Clarke, Melbourne
Thence by descent,
Private collection, Melbourne

LITERATURE
Michael Clarke, Clarke of Rupertswood, 1831-1897: The Life and Times of William John Clarke, First Baronet of Rupertswood, Australian Scholarly Publishing, Melbourne, 1995, pp. 118-119
Bode Edwin 1859-1926view full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art
17 Nov 2021, Melbourne, lot 54:
EDWIN BODE (1859-1926)
Sydney Heads from Obelisk Bay, 1923
signed and dated lower right: 'E. Bode / 1923'
titled lower left: 'Sydney Heads / from Obelisk / Bay'
watercolour on paper
22.0 x 32.5cm (8 11/16 x 12 13/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Private collection, Queensland
Gleeson James The Entombment 1952view full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art
17 Nov 2021, Melbourne, lot 58:
JAMES GLEESON (1915-2008)
The Entombment, 1952
oil on panel
17.0 x 14.0cm (6 11/16 x 5 1/2in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 1952 (label attached verso)
Mr Paul Haefliger, Sydney
Mr Robert Shaw, Sydney
Mr Bruce Reynolds, Melbourne, 1994
The Agapitos/Wilson Collection, Sydney, 2000
Rachael Ash & Andrew Turley, Sydney

EXHIBITED
Exhibition of Paintings: James Gleeson, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 3 - 15 September 1952, cat. 35

RELATED WORK
Study for "The Entombment", c.1950, ink, pen and brush, gouache on paper, 21.5 x 12.8cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra


The Entombment comes directly from James Gleeson's body of work that occurred from about 1948 through to the late 1950's, after his extensive surrealist period, when he first travelled to Europe, spending 3 months in Italy. In Europe he discovered the art of the renaissance – especially the work of Michelangelo and Mathias Grunewald.1

Gleeson himself said 'I'd seen Greek and Roman sculpture and Classically inspired Renaissance works in the museums of London and Paris, but in Italy I was surrounded by it... In Italy I encountered a very different view. Man was centre stage – the measure of all things. In this classical or neo-platonic world view, man was created in the image of God, or the gods were conceived in the image of man and the notion of human perfectibility, in that sense that a human being can become god-like, is implicit'2.

In a separate interview he confirmed 'the most important and longest lasting influences (on my painting) were not from any one artist... it was a cumulative effect produced by repeated visits to galleries and museums in Europe'3. Christ's Entombment was painted repeatedly in Renaissance Europe, probably most notably by Raphael, Titian, Michelangelo (unfinished) and Caravaggio. However Gleeson greatly admired Mathias Grunewald (c.1475-1528) one of the most important painters of the German Renaissance and made several visits to see his Isenheim Altarpiece (1515), depicting both the crucifixion, and underneath on a panel, the entombment of Christ.4

The Entombment along with Gleeson's other paintings completed in 1951 and 1952 (Italy 1951, in the collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney and The Crucifixion 1952, in the collection of the S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney) pay tribute to the Renaissance and contain many relics of that classical world. They also had a deliberate method of construction that was carefully considered from the start – very different to his earlier surrealist paintings. In Gleeson's Entombment individual elements such as Mount Calvary, Cyprus trees, a cloaked figure, the miniature figures around Christ's corpse, water (which Gleeson acknowledged he used as a metaphor for the subconscious mind and continuous transformation), the sepulcher and more, were all envisaged separately and brought together in the final work.

1. Hendrik Kolenberg & Anne Ryan, James Gleeson: Drawings for Paintings, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2003, p. 19
2. Renee Free, James Gleeson: Images from The Shadows, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1996 p. 42
3. Interview with James Gleeson in Lou Klepac, James Gleeson: Landscape Out of Nature, Sydney, Beagle Press, 1987 p. 13
4. Hendrik Kolenberg & Anne Ryan, op. cit., Note. 30, p. 28
landscape artview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Burn Ian essayview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Hoffie Pat essayview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
McCubbin Frederick p23-28view full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
pastoral art eg p37view full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Modernism eg p38ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Smith Grace Cossington p41ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Meldrum Max p46ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Beckett Clarice p46ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Boyd Arthur p52 refview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Macqueen Kenneth essay p 52 -67 view full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Keeling David p74ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Arnold Ray p76ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Onus Lin p82ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Namatjira Albert p87ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Cooper Revel p90ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Bull Ronald p94ffview full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Andrews Daisy p108view full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Rea P and Ian Burn p115view full entry
Reference: see Lying about the landscape, edited by Geoff Levitus. A collection of essays which reasses the landscape tradition in Australian art. They provide valuable insights into the complex ways in which the landscape tradition influences contemporary art practice both through its development and its interpretation.
• Introduction / Geoff Levitus
• Incidents of the bush / Sue Rowley
• Pictures of, painting as / Terry Smith
• The ploughman's view / Tim Bonyhady
• Landscape and identity in the 1980s / Pat Hoffie
• Aboriginal landscapes / Sylvia Kleinert
• Lying about the landscape / Gary Lee
• Notes on 'value added' landscapes / Ian Burn
• Present implications / Terry Smith.
Publishing details: Craftsman House, c1997, 112 p.
Bergin Kateview full entry
Reference: Royal Gala Performance, exhibition invite and brief essay and 4 colour illustrations
Publishing details: Arthouse Gallery, Sydney, 2019, 6pp
Ref: 141
Lesueur Charles-Alexandre (attrib)view full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history: 5. [BAUDIN VOYAGE] LESUEUR, Charles-Alexandre (attrib.). Original drawing of Port Louis from the Ile aux Tonneliers.
Pencil drawing, 263 x 428 mm., fugitive note in pencil lower right; mounted. Port Louis (Mauritius), circa 1801.
A fine pencil sketch of Port Louis, Mauritius, with the Géographe at the precise anchorage Baudin noted in his journal: any original depiction of the ship is an important discovery, let alone such a comprehensive view of this important harbour as the great explorers would have known it. In the foreground, ranged dramatically towards the viewer, are the cannons of the fort on the low-lying
Ile aux Tonneliers, the man sketching between two of the guns presumably the artist himself. The background is dominated by the dramatic ridges of the mountains, while the foreshore is rendered in accurate detail, ranging from the Trou Fanfaron on the left to the open country beyond the slave encampments on the right. Charles-Alexandre Lesueur (1778-1846) was appointed to the Géographe because of his skills as a scientific artist: such was his ability that he and his great friend François Péron were appointed to publish the official voyage account, alongside Milbert who was in charge of the engravings.
Although not signed, the view is based on a preliminary pencil study by Lesueur held in the museum at Le Havre, which has an identical perspective and includes all of the main features of the fore- ground, including the fort itself, the details of the ramparts and the Géographe (“suite de la vue prise à l’île aux tonnelliers [sic]”, Baglione & Crémière, p. 52).
In fact, stylistically and technically the drawing appears to be a finished study for a never completed engraving: the style, shape and layout of the scene is closely in keeping with the two known plates which depict Timor and Port Jackson, both also after Lesueur, and both of which show the Géographe from an almost identical angle. It is certainly possible that the present scene was being considered for publication as the third of the three main European settlements visited on the expedition, but was ultimately abandoned: the torturous publishing history of the Baudin voyage makes such a hypoth- esis genuinely quite likely, not least because of the provenance.
Gabrielle Baglione & Cédric Crémière, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur (Le Havre, 2009); Nicolas Baudin, The Journal of Post Captain Nicolas Baudin... Translated from the French by Christine Cornell (Adelaide, 1974); J.B.G.M. Bory de St. Vincent, Voyage to and Travels through the four principal islands of the African Seas... (London, 1805); Jean Fornasiero, Lindl Lawton & John West-Sooby (eds), The Art of Science (South Australia, 2016); Péron, François & Louis de Freycinet, Voyage de Découvertes aux Terres Australes... (Paris, 1807-1816).
Provenance: Baudin voyage artist Jacques-Gérard Milbert when he was in the USA (between 1815
and 1823): the view was in a small portfolio of works he gave to one of his students, which included
at least one other Lesueur watercolour and several of Milbert’s own important views. The entire portfolio remained with the family of the student, whose name is now recorded only as “Raschmann,” until about 1990, when it was sold to an art dealer in California.
Fitzroy Robert attribview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history: 6. [BEAGLE VOYAGE] FITZROY, Robert (attributed to).
Point Nago Spirito Santo
Original watercolour, 85 x 390mm., inscribed “Point Naga S.65.W. H.M.S Beagle Jan 7 1832” lower left; “Spirito Santo 3.20 distant 5 miles” lower centre; on verso inscribed “Fanny 1836”; backed on tissue and mounted. South America, 7 January 1832.
Striking coastal profile, thought to be in the hand of Robert Fitzroy, commander of HMS Beagle. The image is dated 7 January 1832, on which day the Beagle, just 10 days out of Plymouth on what would become one of the most famous expeditions in English maritime history, was off Point Naga heading towards Santa Cruz in the Canary Islands. On 6 and 7 January Darwin made diary entries (Beagle Record, pp. 20-21) that ‘We are now a few miles, tacking with a light wind to Santa Cruz... Point Naga, which we are doubling, is a rugged uninhabited mass of lofty rock with a most remarkably bold & varied outline. In drawing it you could not make a line straight. Everything has a beautiful appear- ance: the colours are so rich and soft...’.
Unfortunately for the Beagle’s crew, within half a mile of Santa Cruz the consul delivered an order that the ship must undergo rigorous quarantine for 12 days because reports had reached the Health Office of cholera in England. Reluctantly, an alternate course towards the Cape Verde Islands was decided upon causing ‘great disappointment to Mr. Darwin who had cherished a hope of visiting the Peak. To
see it -to anchor and be on the point of landing, yet to be obliged to turn away without the slightest prospect of beholding Teneriffe again - was indeed to him a real calamity...’.
Robert Fitzroy (1805-1865) gained wide recognition as the captain of HMS Beagle during this monu- mental voyage. A highly respected meteorologist and surveyor, he had already sailed on the first Beagle voyage under Captains Stokes and Phillip Parker King but it was on this second voyage of five years duration that Fitzroy established his professional reputation and forged a close friendship with Charles Darwin.
In 1837 Fitzroy was awarded the gold medal of the Royal Geographical Society, and in 1839 he pub- lished his account of the voyage: the four-volume Narrative of the surveying voyages of H.M.S. Adventure and Beagle included Darwin’s Journal and Remarks, 1832-1836 as the third volume. Later in his career Fitzroy served as governor of New Zealand (1843-45). Although this atmospheric coastal profile is unsigned, supporting evidence suggests that it is in his hand. The significance of the inscription on the verso of the watercolour (“Fanny 1836”) is not clear; however Fanny was a Fitzroy family name: Fitzroy’s sister Frances (a name commonly shortened to Fanny) also named her daughter Frances (b.1826) while the second of Fitzroy’s four daughters Fanny Fitzroy was born in 1842.
Brierly Oswaldview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history:
7 and 8. BRIERLY, Sir Oswald Walters.
HMS “Rattlesnake” Commanded by Captain Owen Stanley R.N.
Coloured lithograph measuring 250 x 350 mm., mounted and framed. London, Day and Son, 1852.
Dramatic and finely executed coloured lithograph of the survey vessel HMS Rattlesnake by eminent marine artist Sir Oswald Brierly (1817-1894). Under the command of Captain Stanley Owen the Rattlesnake undertook an extensive marine survey of the Great Barrier Reef and seas off New Guinea. Brierly joined the vessel in 1848 and painted skilful and beautiful marine studies throughout the voyage.
Significantly, the expedition was also concerned with investigating the diverse natural history of
the tropical coast of northern Australia and the archipelagos to the east of New Guinea. The chief naturalist, John MacGillivray, was assisted by the youthful surgeon Thomas H. Huxley who was later renowned as a leading biologist of the era.
This lithograph depicts the Rattlesnake entering the Louisiade Archipelago located 200 kilometres to the southeast of New Guinea. This hydrography of this region was virtually unknown by the mid nineteenth-century, largely due to the previous control of the region by the Dutch who discouraged British naval activity in the area. Surveying such waters was skilful and dangerous work, justly celebrated in commemorative prints such as this one.
And
HMS “Mæander” 44 guns, in a heavy squall [and] Shortening sail... Pair of colour lithographs, 375 x 535 mm. London, Ackermann, 1852.
A fine pair of portraits of a splendid ship: these colour lithographs after original watercolours by Oswald Brierly were made by T. G. Dutton and printed by Day and Son for Ackermanns. The first print shows the Mæander in the Pacific, shortening sail in heavy weather; the caption dates the events to 9 July 1850; in the second the ship is coming slowly to anchor in Rio de Janeiro, and the scene is dated 9 June 1851. Both prints are dedicated to Henry Keppel, and the ship’s officers.
Oswald Brierly (1817-1894) was a leading marine painter, and he had also studied naval architecture. He sailed on numerous expeditions including the Rattlesnake voyage surveying the Barrier Reef,
with Benjamin Boyd on the Wanderer, and on the Galatea with the Duke of Edinburgh in 1867. Brierly joined Henry Keppel on H.M.S. Mæander after his voyage on the Rattlesnake and visited New Zealand, Tahiti and South America, returning to England in July 1851. A description of the voyage is given in Admiral Keppel’s A Sailor’s Life Under Four Sovereigns (London, 1899).

Clark Mview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history: 10. CLARKE, M.
The Wreck of ‘The Hereward’ Maroubra Beach, Sydney. Watercolour, 182 x 540 mm, mounted and framed.circa 1898.
This watercolour, signed lower left by M. Clarke, was painted as the clipper ship Hereward lay on
her side stranded on Maroubra Beach. The ship had blown onto soft sand at the northern end of the beach, luckily avoiding two rocky reefs, and the crew of 25 was brought safely ashore. ‘The Hereward was a 1513-ton full rigged iron clipper built in Glasgow in 1877. It had a length of 254 feet, beam of 39 feet, and depth of 23 feet. The Hereward was a trader to the colonies making frequent trips from Lon- don to Sydney with general cargo. The fateful trip began in the Dutch East Indies port of Sourabaya, bound for Newcastle to load coal for South America. On 5 May 1898 the Hereward was battling up the New South Wales coast in appalling weather, with wind velocities recorded up to 47 miles per hour. The Hereward was flung towards the shore by the winds, and with sails torn to shreds the captain, Captain Gore, was helpless to keep the vessel from the shore.
‘The ship, insured for 6000 pounds, was sold a few months after being stranded for 550 pounds to a Mr Cowlishaw who bought the wreck for salvage. Despite several enthusiastic attempts to refloat her the Hereward ended up once more stranded on the beach, with the waves finally managing to break her in two on 9 December 1898. The wreck lay on Maroubra Beach for many years and by 1937 the only visible sign of her was a triangular dorsal fin above the water line. In 1950 Randwick Council feared injury to surfers from the wreck and began blasting the remnants. Further blasting in 1965, and by Navy divers in 1966/7 has removed all trace of the Hereward. As with other wrecks on this part of the coast, thousands of sightseers made the long trek to the then remote south of Sydney to view the wreck’. (Randwick City Council records).
Cordner J H Jview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history: 14. [CORDNER, J.H.J.]
‘Banda - The Spice Islands’.
Pencil drawing measuring 204 x 260 mm. (sheet size), well preserved, mounted. Lisbon, 1841.
Original mid-nineteenth century sketch of Bandanaira in the Banda Islands, the fabulously lucrative and contested source of spices in present day Indonesia. Once the primary source of nutmeg and mace, the Banda islands were a prized Dutch possession until captured by four Royal Navy vessels in 1810. This drawing details the main settlement of Bandanaira island, with part of the original Dutch fort visible on the foreshore. This fort was constructed by the VOC in 1611 to protect the Dutch spice monopoly in the region, and remains the largest structure on the island to the present day. The draw- ing also illustrates the active volcano Gunung Api rising some 650 meters above sea level. Three native praus and a two-masted junk are clearly discernible in the Bay.
Firm attribution of the artist is difficult. Below the graphite image is inscribed in a faint cursive hand ‘Banda – The Spice Island J.H.J. Cordner, October 18th 1841 Lisbon’, this is followed by another notation in a different hand ‘Derramore May 9 1859 for J.H.S. Fre...’ [remainder illegible]. Whether Cordner was the artist or the owner of the sketch remains ambiguous. The name is absent from the standard British naval references, including O’Byrne’s Naval Biographical Dictionary or Clowe’s Royal Navy. Likewise, the name Cordner does not appear in texts relating to the capture of Banda by the British. However, Walford’s County Families of the United Kingdom (1860) does list, without individual names, the Cordner family of Derramore in Ireland.
Notwithstanding the identity of the artist, this sketch is noteworthy for its detail and meticulous execution. The capture of Banda by the British in 1810 is indicative of the shift in power between the two great trading nations.
Arago Jacquesview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history: 16. [FREYCINET VOYAGE] ARAGO, Jacques.
Original watercolour “L’Intérieur d’un ménage, à Coupang”...
Fine watercolour, the image 198 x 265 mm., on laid paper ; pencil note “Mr. Arago” in Freycinet’s later hand at bottom left; mounted. Timor, during the expedition of the Uranie, 1818.
Fine scene in Timor, drawn by Jacques Arago during the visit of the Freycinet expedition in late
1818. Arago’s observations on Timor were acute, and he is known to have toured and made sketches in both the wealthy Chinese and Malay quarters. A series of his Timor scenes was later included in the official Freycinet voyage account, but this scene was not made into an engraving and is in fact otherwise unrecorded. Jacques Etienne Arago (1790-1855) was the official artist on Freycinet’s voyage, and is known for the witty and caustic account he later wrote as much as for his fine sketches. As with many other Arago drawings relating to the voyage, this was evidently subsequently owned by Freycinet, and it is his handwriting that signs the picture “Mr. Arago” at bottom left.
Arago was the third of four brothers who excelled in diverse professions, the most notable being
his eldest brother François, a scientist and politician. Arago’s undoubted artistic ability attracted
the attention of the naval authorities who chose him for the demanding role of draughtsman for the Freycinet expedition. By all accounts a charming, gregarious and eccentric man, these attributes stood him in good stead during the voyage, and are reflected in the sketches he made. Freycinet is known to have retained a large number of voyage images by both Arago and his colleague Pellion, which would have been surrendered to him as both commander and official chronicler of the voyage. It is interesting to note that Arago’s famous scene of Rose going ashore at Timor, sold by us in our Baudin & Flinders catalogue (2010, no. 69), has almost identical borders and annotations, as did his sketch of a man of Timor (no. 81).
Provenance: Originally owned by Louis de Freycinet, commander of the Uranie.
AND
17. [FREYCINET VOYAGE] ARAGO, Jacques. Original drawing “M le curé d’Agana en petit negligé”. Original ink drawing, 310 x 245 mm., fully signed and dated, framed. Guam, 1819.
Jacques Arago, artist on board Freycinet’s Uranie during the French circumnavigation of 1817-20, drew this intimate portrait of Brother Ciriaco, the curé in Agana, the capital of Guam, during the visit there of the Uranie expedition between March and June 1819. This is a charming and unusual portrait of a figure who likely expected to be taken more seriously: the cleric is shown in his “at home” attire, his petit negligé, smoking. His relaxed stance, dressed in a vest and daringly striped leggings is further enriched by the addition of the most delicate slippers.
Arago (1790-1855) was not only the most accomplished of the artists who made the voyage aboard the Uranie, but was one of the most intriguing of the early travellers. The wonders of the long expedition stayed with him for the rest of his life, and he continued writing and drawing about the Pacific right up until he lost his sight. In 1822 he published his own well-regarded account of the voyage, Prom- enade Autour du Monde, which was published in an English version in 1823. Over the ensuing decades he wrote many more differing versions of this interesting account.
The Freycinet expedition stayed for a long time in Agana where they were well received by the Spanish Governor Don Jose Medinilla. Agana (modern Hagåtña) is the capital of Guam and thus the westernmost state or territorial city of the United States, despite its modern population numbering only about a thousand.
As several of the Uranie crew had recently died from dysentery, Louis de Freycinet took this opportu- nity to rest his men for several months. Here in the Marianas the Spanish missionaries were both pow- erful and respected and the sailors were required to attend holy week services. Arago was particularly known for his lively and arresting images of the people he encountered, with a distinct preference for the unusual or the grotesque. Whether the priest knew that Arago was drawing him at this intimate moment is not known, but it seems more likely that Arago captured this image surreptitiously, and certainly the satirical tone of the caption - with its reference to the curé and his very informal attire - suggests that this delightful vision of the priest off his guard was not meant to be shared.
Although unpublished, though fully signed and dated, the drawing remained in the archives of Louis de Freycinet and his descendants, which perhaps indicates that it was at least considered for publica- tion in the massive official account of the voyage.
Provenance: Until the 1960s in Freycinet family ownership, subsequently in a private collection.

Martens Conrad Tahitiview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history:
20. MARTENS, Conrad (1801-1878)
View on the South Side of Moorea, Tahiti 1836
Watercolour on board, 440 x 640 mm, signed and dated lower right: C. Martens 1836; mounted and framed, overall size 80.5 x 100 cm. Sydney, 1836.
This large scale and early watercolour of Moorea, Tahiti was painted in Sydney soon after Conrad Martens’ arrival, based on his pencil sketch done “on the spot” in 1835.
The voyage of HMS Beagle is today famously linked to Charles Darwin, while a surprising number of people who sailed on her have become part of Australian history. Robert Fitzroy became a governor of New Zealand whilst John Clements Wickham, Phillip Gidley King and Conrad Martens all settled in Australia.
A pupil of Copley Fielding, Martens’ early sketchbooks show his familiarity with the works of Turner, Varley, Cox, Girtin and Burnett, with a special interest in the effects of rain clouds and mist. But it
is specially during Martens’ time travelling on the Beagle accompanied by scientists and naval men, skilled observers and often themselves proficient draughtsmen, that his work become more empirical and topographical. As well as providing an accurate visual account he worked in capturing distinc- tive moods and subtle atmospheres. Bernard Smith comments (European Vision and the South Pacific 1768-1850) that ‘Tahiti provided an ideal subject in which to combine classical idealism and scientific accuracy because in that island, as it was generally agreed, nature herself approached the classical ideal... coconut-palm replaces olive-tree...[Tahitians] replace Arcadian [shepherds]... the precipitous peaks of the interior of the island replace the hills of Campagna’.
Martens had replaced Augustus Earle as the Beagle’s artist in Montevideo in 1833, while the ship was under the command of Robert Fitzroy. It was here that he met the young Charles Darwin: they be- came lasting friends. ‘His association with Darwin and the other scientists heightened his perception of landscape forms, climatic effects and the unique qualities of the exotic coastal areas through which they passed. It may also have resulted in his life long interest in astronomy. Several of his Tahitian drawings were later purchased in Sydney by Fitzroy’ (Dictionary of Australian Artists, p. 513).
Abruptly, possibly having to do with the volatile temperament of Captain Fitzroy, Martens was forced to leave Charles Darwin and the Beagle in Valparaiso, travelling on to Tahiti in December 1834 aboard the American schooner Peruvian, “which was about to sail for Tahiti... there were thence frequent opportunities of a passage to go to N.S.Wales” (Martens “Journal” ff 89-90). The beauty of the Tahitian islands astonished him; just a few months later he again boarded another American ship, Black Warrior, this time heading for Port Jackson.
Martens arrived in Sydney in April 1835, where he would remain for the rest of his life, just on 43 years. He arrived with an important letter of introduction, written in Valparaiso by Robert Fitzroy to his predecessor as captain of the Beagle, Phillip Parker King, now settled on his property “Dunheved” near Penrith. “This letter played a major role in determining the artist’s future in New South Wales”. (Elizabeth Ellis, Conrad Martens, 1994, p. 16). With the help of this valuable connection to the former
governor, Martens quickly attracted wealthy patrons and was commissioned to paint in watercolour and oils their houses and estates throughout the colony, becoming an unique figure in colonial art,
It was the voyage with Darwin on the Beagle, arguably the most famous voyage of exploration in the nineteenth century, that had the most profound and lasting effect on Martens both privately and professionally: the survival of this beautiful watercolour is testimony to this.
Related sketch:
View on the South Side of Moorea 1835, pencil on paper, from Sketchbook I, no. 81, The Collection of
Cambridge University Library, Cambridge.
Exhibited:
Sydney, S.H. Ervin Museum and Art Gallery, “Conrad Martens Centenary Exhibition”, 24 May-23 July 1978, no. 10. Sydney,
Art Gallery of New South Wales, “Conrad Martens, The H.W.B. Chester Memorial Collection”, 22 December 1979 -10 February 1980, no. 5 (illustrated in colour), where the catalogue description reads: ‘Martens departed from Tahiti in 1834 and this work exemplifies his habit to complete sketches or re-work them later’.
Provenance: Christies, Sydney, 6 June 1976, lot 288; Collection of Kenneth. R. Stewart; Consolidated Press Holdings, Melbourne (The H.W.B. Chester Memorial Collection); Collection of Dr. J. L. Raven; Sotheby’s, Fine Australian Paintings including the Dr. John L. Raven Collection, Melbourne, 17 April 1989, lot 343; Private collection, Western Australia; Leonard Joel, Melbourne, June 2021.
Tobin George attribview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, October 2021, Pictorial maritime history: 29. TOBIN, George (attributed).
Original watercolour of a British fleet of ships among icebergs. Watercolour, oval shape, 132 x 195 mm., tipped on to card, in gilt frame.circa 1793-, 1797.
A finely executed watercolour of a fleet amidst icebergs. Although unsigned, this watercolour was originally found in a nineteenth century album with another of very similar style signed and dated by Tobin, an important amateur artist in the early history of Australia. Tobin was born in 1768 and joined the Navy as a lively lad in 1780. He showed natural aptitude and rose to the rank of lieutenant after an extended voyage for the East India Company between 1788-1790. He served with Flinders under Bligh on the Providence, the second voyage to Tahiti to gather breadfruit following the disastrous Bounty mutiny.
Tobin was a highly skilled watercolourist who kept a detailed record of the Providence voyage includ- ing paintings of Tasmanian scenes. On his return to England he served under Cochrane on the Thetis between 1793-1797 and continued to produce marine scenes in a more mature and conservative style than the watercolours undertaken in the Pacific. The Mitchell Library holds an important album of watercolours dating from his service on the Thetis. This study of ships amidst icebergs is strongly reminiscent of the marine studies in this album, characterised by the highly detailed treatment of rigging and naval architecture, accomplished treatment of sea, clouds and sky and the use of subdued and harmonious colouring.
This scene more than likely depicts British ships off Newfoundland in 1796. A much larger combined fleet of French and Spanish ships had been repelled by a smaller number of British ships in their attempt to disrupt the fishing industry on Newfoundland in 1796. The flag signal from the main mast of the ship is likely to state “In case of parting company either by accident or otherwise, without have orders where to go Repair to the rendezvous No 2”.
George Tobin was one of the most important and accomplished amateur artists in the early history of Australia and the opening of the Pacific: ‘His colouring was very good - bold and strong and sure. He had an accurate eye for perspective, a sensitive feeling for distance and for the movement of wind and water, and his general composition was almost always excellent’ (Rex and Thea Rienits, Early Artists of Australia).
Provenance: From a nineteenth century album of watercolours.

Goodwin Sidney aka William Youngview full entry
Reference: see Minster Auctions, UK, 3 November, 2021, lot 217 SIDNEY GOODWIN (1875-1944). Kelp Gatherers returning Home, signed, watercolour, 12 ½ x 19 ½ in
The nephew of Albert Goodwin, the artist exhibited at the Southampton and Bournemouth Art Societies, as well as the Royal Hibernian Academy of Arts in Dublin. He emigrated to Australia after World War One, and remained there for the rest of his life .





Paton Frank 1855-1909view full entry
Reference: see Setdart.com auction, Barcelona, Spain, Wednesday 10 November, 2021, lot 70: FRANK PATON (Stepney, London, 1855-1909).
"Dogs indoors," 1890.
Oil on canvas.
Period frame.
Measurements: 92 x 128 cm; 112 x 148 cm (frame).
A painter who specialized in painting animals and scenes of rural life, Frank Paton was a successful artist during his lifetime. Among his most devoted clientele was Queen Victoria. Paton was a precocious artist: as early as age sixteen he had his first known exhibition. It is rumored that Paton briefly spent time in France working in stained glass before being called upon by his father. It is believed that he then traveled and earned a living in Australia. Upon his return to England, Paton was accepted for his work "You Are No Chicken" at the Royal Academy, an aspect that attracted numerous collectors who decided to invest in his work. "You Are No Chicken" was engraved on mezzotint by J B Pratt in 1880. Its commercial success cemented a lifelong association with collector Leggatt, who became the principal publisher of Frank Paton's work. Although he was never a member of the Royal Academy, a total of 20 works by Paton were exhibited at its annual sale exhibition between the years 1878 and 1890. After this year, Frank Paton stopped exhibiting at the Royal Academy following a dispute with the organizers. His firmly established reputation led him to continue working until his last days. Along with the hunting theme, the representation of domestic animals was a very common subject in nineteenth-century society, since there were painters who specialized in painting animals. In this type of compositions, domestic animals were usually treated as we see here, with great naturalism and expressiveness, paying special attention to anatomical details, fur, facial expressions, etc., immortalized in ostentatious interiors typical of the wealthy bourgeois classes. The present work, a faithful follower of this genre, shows us up to six dogs of different breeds (mastiff, bichon, cavalier and dachshund), all of them arranged on a carpet of grecian design, in a clearly bourgeois interior in which even a metallic armor appears. It is a harmonious work in its palette of colors and lighting, intended to decorate the interior of nineteenth-century wealthy homes.



Longstaff Sir Johnview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of Exhibition of Paintings - Fine Art Society Gallery, Melbourne 1-12 September, 1936
Publishing details: Fine Art Society Gallery, 1936 [catalogue details to be entered].
Ref: 1000
Longstaff Sir Johnview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of Exhibition of Paintings by the late Sir John Longstaff - Athenaeum Gallery 25 May - 26 June, 1942
Publishing details: Athenaeum Gallery, 1942 [catalogue details to be entered].
Ref: 1000
Longstaff Sir Johnview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of Sir John Longstaff Memorial Loan Exhibition - La Trobe Gallery, 1943
Publishing details: La Trobe Gallery, 1943 [catalogue details to be entered].
Ref: 1000
women artistsview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.177 pages
Modernismview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.177 pages
Meeson Doraview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.177 pages
Mahood Margueriteview full entry
Reference: From the earth I arise : the ceramics of Marguerite Mahood / [written by Anna Clabburn]. "A NETS Victoria touring exhibition brochure" "Curator: Alisa Bunbury". Bibliography: p. [6]

Publishing details: Melbourne : NETS Victoria, 1997 
1 folded sheet [6] p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 1000
Personal Journeysview full entry
Reference: Personal Journeys: 40 Years of Australian Women's Abstract Art. Works from the Max Dingle and Gavin B. Hughes Collection. Works by 14 artists with a brief comment on each work.
Publishing details: Nowra: Shoalhaven City Arts Centre, 2009. 32pp, colour. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. First Edition. Stiff Wrappers. Fine. 4to
Ref: 139
Useless Beauty: Flowers and Australian Art view full entry
Reference: Useless Beauty: Flowers and Australian Art, by Ann Elias. [’The story of Australian art does not begin and end with landscape. This book puts flowers front and centre, because they have often been ignored in preference for more masculine themes.Departing from where studies of single flower artists leave off, Useless Beauty embraces the general topic of flowers in Australian art and shines new light on a slice of Australian art history that extends from 1880 to 1950. It is the first book of broad chronology to discuss Australian art through blossoms, which it does by addressing stories of major figures including Hans Heysen, Margaret Preston and Sidney Nolan, as well as specific objects such as surreal flowers, Aboriginal flowers and war flowers.Whether modern or conservative, the artists in this study shared an intellectual and emotional passion for flora. This was true for men as well as women, despite blossoms being a more traditionally feminine subject.Through spectacular reproductions of historical and contemporary artworks drawn from collections in Australia, the United States, Britain and New Zealand, Useless Beauty explores how flowers influenced the psyche, governed rituals, defined identity and brought a psychological dimension to the everyday. The peak years for flower-centricity in Australian art were between 1920 and 1940 when flowers were known as the apotheosis of useless beauty.’]
Publishing details: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015
Used. 332pp., illus.
Ref: 1009
Flowers in Australian art view full entry
Reference: Useless Beauty: Flowers and Australian Art, by Ann Elias. [’The story of Australian art does not begin and end with landscape. This book puts flowers front and centre, because they have often been ignored in preference for more masculine themes.Departing from where studies of single flower artists leave off, Useless Beauty embraces the general topic of flowers in Australian art and shines new light on a slice of Australian art history that extends from 1880 to 1950. It is the first book of broad chronology to discuss Australian art through blossoms, which it does by addressing stories of major figures including Hans Heysen, Margaret Preston and Sidney Nolan, as well as specific objects such as surreal flowers, Aboriginal flowers and war flowers.Whether modern or conservative, the artists in this study shared an intellectual and emotional passion for flora. This was true for men as well as women, despite blossoms being a more traditionally feminine subject.Through spectacular reproductions of historical and contemporary artworks drawn from collections in Australia, the United States, Britain and New Zealand, Useless Beauty explores how flowers influenced the psyche, governed rituals, defined identity and brought a psychological dimension to the everyday. The peak years for flower-centricity in Australian art were between 1920 and 1940 when flowers were known as the apotheosis of useless beauty.’]
Publishing details: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015
Used. 332pp., illus.
botanical art view full entry
Reference: Useless Beauty: Flowers and Australian Art, by Ann Elias. [’The story of Australian art does not begin and end with landscape. This book puts flowers front and centre, because they have often been ignored in preference for more masculine themes.Departing from where studies of single flower artists leave off, Useless Beauty embraces the general topic of flowers in Australian art and shines new light on a slice of Australian art history that extends from 1880 to 1950. It is the first book of broad chronology to discuss Australian art through blossoms, which it does by addressing stories of major figures including Hans Heysen, Margaret Preston and Sidney Nolan, as well as specific objects such as surreal flowers, Aboriginal flowers and war flowers.Whether modern or conservative, the artists in this study shared an intellectual and emotional passion for flora. This was true for men as well as women, despite blossoms being a more traditionally feminine subject.Through spectacular reproductions of historical and contemporary artworks drawn from collections in Australia, the United States, Britain and New Zealand, Useless Beauty explores how flowers influenced the psyche, governed rituals, defined identity and brought a psychological dimension to the everyday. The peak years for flower-centricity in Australian art were between 1920 and 1940 when flowers were known as the apotheosis of useless beauty.’]
Publishing details: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015
Used. 332pp., illus.
flora in Australian art view full entry
Reference: Useless Beauty: Flowers and Australian Art, by Ann Elias. [’The story of Australian art does not begin and end with landscape. This book puts flowers front and centre, because they have often been ignored in preference for more masculine themes.Departing from where studies of single flower artists leave off, Useless Beauty embraces the general topic of flowers in Australian art and shines new light on a slice of Australian art history that extends from 1880 to 1950. It is the first book of broad chronology to discuss Australian art through blossoms, which it does by addressing stories of major figures including Hans Heysen, Margaret Preston and Sidney Nolan, as well as specific objects such as surreal flowers, Aboriginal flowers and war flowers.Whether modern or conservative, the artists in this study shared an intellectual and emotional passion for flora. This was true for men as well as women, despite blossoms being a more traditionally feminine subject.Through spectacular reproductions of historical and contemporary artworks drawn from collections in Australia, the United States, Britain and New Zealand, Useless Beauty explores how flowers influenced the psyche, governed rituals, defined identity and brought a psychological dimension to the everyday. The peak years for flower-centricity in Australian art were between 1920 and 1940 when flowers were known as the apotheosis of useless beauty.’]
Publishing details: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015
Used. 332pp., illus.
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: Wartime Australia tour: Max Dupain exhibition and Rathmines Theatre. Tour; Explore the recently restored Rathmines Theatre and our current exhibition Max Dupain: Art and War with our expert guides.
Join Professor of Art History, Ann Elias an expert on camouflage to immerse yourself in Dupain's wartime photography and period images of RAAF Rathmines Learn about the extraordinary history of camouflage and the contribution of artists to the WWII war effort. Climb onstage and walk through the wings into the backstage areas of the historic Rathmines Theatre, used for performances since the second world war. [Ann Elias is Professor of Art History and Visual Culture at the University of Sydney. Her research interests include camouflage as a military, social and aesthetic phenomenon; flowers and their cultural history; coral reef imagery of the underwater realm. The research is published in three books: Camouflage Australia: art, nature, science and war (2011), Useless Beauty: flowers and Australian art (2015), and Coral Empire (2019).]
Publishing details: Lake Macquarie Arts, Culture & Tourism. Nov 21, 2021 [printed information to be added]
Ref: 1000
Women's Art Movementview full entry
Reference: see Setting the Pace: The Women's Art Movement, 1980-1983
Kent, Jane (ed.)

Publishing details: Published by The Women's Art Movement, Adelaide, South Australia (1984)
Difference : a radical approach to women and artview full entry
Reference: Difference : a radical approach to women and art / by Anne Marsh
Publishing details: Adelaide : Women's Art Movement, 1985 
v, 56 p.
Ref: 1000
women artistsview full entry
Reference: see In The Company of Women - 100 Years of Australian Art From The Cruthers Collection
Publishing details: Perth Institute of Comtemporary Arts, 1995, pb
In The Shadow Of Young Girls & Flowers view full entry
Reference: In The Shadow Of Young Girls & Flowers - A L'Ombre Des Jeunes Filles Et Des Fleurs: A Guide To Women Artists in The Benalla Art Gallery Collection, Pre 1960. Includes list of exhibits. Some biographical information in 18-page essay by Juliet Peers. [’A lot of these paintings came from the Ledger Collection’]

Publishing details: Benalla Art Gallery, Benalla 1995, 1995
Used. 27.0 x 21.0cms, 36pp, b/w & colour illsust,
women artistsview full entry
Reference: see In The Shadow Of Young Girls & Flowers - A L'Ombre Des Jeunes Filles Et Des Fleurs: A Guide To Women Artists in The Benalla Art Gallery Collection, Pre 1960. Includes list of exhibits. Some biographical information in 18-page essay by Juliet Peers. [’A lot of these paintings came from the Ledger Collection’]

Publishing details: Benalla Art Gallery, Benalla 1995, 1995
Used. 27.0 x 21.0cms, 36pp, b/w & colour illsust,
Benalla Art Galleryview full entry
Reference: see In The Shadow Of Young Girls & Flowers - A L'Ombre Des Jeunes Filles Et Des Fleurs: A Guide To Women Artists in The Benalla Art Gallery Collection, Pre 1960. Includes list of exhibits. Some biographical information in 18-page essay by Juliet Peers. [’A lot of these paintings came from the Ledger Collection’]

Publishing details: Benalla Art Gallery, Benalla 1995, 1995
Used. 27.0 x 21.0cms, 36pp, b/w & colour illsust,
Women's work aspects of female art practiceview full entry
Reference: women's work aspects of female art practice in the twentieth century, by Sally Quinn. "Curated by Sally Quin" -- Back cover.
Exhibit held 8 June - 6 August 2003.
Includes bibliographical references. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, 2003 
1 folded sheet (5 p.) : col. ill
Ref: 1000
A guiding hand - prints directorsview full entry
Reference: A guiding hand - prints directors 1967-2011. Gordon Morrison, Roger Butler.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2011 [publication details to be added]
Ref: 1000
prints view full entry
Reference: see A guiding hand - prints directors 1967-2011. Gordon Morrison, Roger Butler.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2011 [publication details to be added]
Ballarat Art Galleryview full entry
Reference: see A guiding hand - prints directors 1967-2011. Gordon Morrison, Roger Butler.
Publishing details: Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2011 [publication details to be added]
Allnut Audrey 1910-96 2 ceramicsview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Alsop Edith 1871-1958 woodcutview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Allport Lily 1860-1949 6 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Atkinson Yvonne 1918-99view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Audette Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Bale A M E 1875-1955view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Beckett Clariceview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Bell George The Conversationview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Bellette Jeanview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Black Dorrit oil and linocutview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Blackburn Vera linocutview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Bresslern-Roth Norbertine von 2 woodcuts Austrianview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Bryans Linaview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Bull Norma 1906-1980view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Burleigh Bertha Bennettview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Fox Ethel Carrickview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Cohn Ola 1892-1964view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Colquhoun Amalieview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Craig Sybil 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Crombie Peggieview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Crowley Grace 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Davies Lewis Royview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Derham Francis 1894-1987view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Edwards Maryview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Evatt Mary Aliceview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Farmer John 1897-1989view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Fasken Myrtle 1899-1972 2 wood engravingsview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Francis Margaret 1909-1987view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Goodsir Agnes 1964-1939view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Fleay Maude Glover oilview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Gregory Ina 1874-1964view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Gude Nornie 1915-2002view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Haxton Elaineview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Hester Elaineview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Hewitt Irene oil 1930sview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Heysen Noraview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Hinder Frank 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Hinder Margelview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Hortin Nan 1916-1971 4 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Hurry Polly 1883-1963view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Joyce Enaview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
King Ingeview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Kingston Amieview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Kohlhagen Lisette 1890-1969view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Lawler Adrian 1889-1969view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Lindsay Ruby 1887-1919view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Lindsay Ruby 1887-1919 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Longstaff John 1861-1941view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Mackintosh Jessie 1892-1958view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Mahood Marguerite 1901-89view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Mayo Daphne 1895-1982view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Mayo Daphne 1895-1982 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
McInnes Violet 1892-1971view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Meeson Dora 1869-1955view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Merritt Jessie c1900-1986 ceramicview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Montgomery Anne 1908-1991 2 printsview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Mora Mirka 1928-2018view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Muntz-Adams Josephine 1862-1949view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Muskett Alice 1869-1936view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
O’Connor Ailsa 1921-1980view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
O’Connor Kateview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Ogilvie Helen 1902-93view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Ogilvie Helen 1902-93 12 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Ohlfsen Dora 1869-1948 8 sculpturesview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Owen Gladys 1889-1960view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Palmer Ethleen 1906-1958 2 printsview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Pate Klytie 1912-2010view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Paterson Betty 1895-1970view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Perry Adelaide 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Plante Ada May 1875-1950view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Preston Margaret 6 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Pringle Beryl 1874-1962 oil c1925view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Proctor Thea 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Pye Mabel 1894-1982view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Rede Geraldine 1873-1943 2 woodcuts and others with Violet Teagueview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Reynell Gladys 1881-1956view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Nicholas Hilda Rix 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Rowan Ellisview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Sherwood Maud 1880-1956view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Smith Herbert H 1875-1957 watercolour of art students c1898view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Southern Clara 1860-1940view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Spowers Ethel 1890-1947view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Spowers Ethel 1890-1947 6 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Stephens Ethel 1864-1944view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Stevenson Molly 2 ink drawings c1920sview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Stokes Constance 1906-1991view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Parkin Constance see Stokes Constance 1906-1991view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Syme Eveline 1888-1961view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Sutherland Jane 1852-1928view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Syme Eveline 1888-1961 7 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Thomas Louise 1882-1946view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Thomas Megan b1917 -?view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Thomas Megan b1917 -? 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Thornhill Dorothy 1910-1987view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Townsend Meta 1888-1977view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Traill Jessie 1881-1967view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Traill Jessie 1881-1967 5 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Trethowan Edith 1901-1939view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Tweddle Isobel Hunter 1875-1945view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Waller Christian 1894-1954view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Ward Fred 1900-1990view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Watson Alice 1914-2010 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
White Unk 1900-1986view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
White Unk 1900-1986 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Wood Rex 1906-1970view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Woolcock Marjorie 1898-1998 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Younghusband Adele 1878-1969view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Zuvella Mary b1928view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Lord Margaret 1909-72 view full entry
Reference: see Becoming Modern : Australian women artists 1920-1950 / authors: Julie McLaren, Louise Tegart ; design, production and photography: Ben Cox. Exhibition held 18 May 2019 - 9 August 2019. [Australian women artists]. "...features works by over forty artists, including Margaret Preston, Grace Crowley, Thea Proctor and Grace Cossington Smith. This stunning exhibition is an opportunity to view rarely seen works from the Gallery's collection, including paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics..." Publisher's website. Includes bibliographical references, list of exhibited works.
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2019, pb,
177 pages.
Interior decoration view full entry
Reference: Interior decoration : a guide to furnishing the Australian home, by Margaret Lord. Illustrated by Alistair Morrison and Elaine Haxton

Publishing details: Ure Smith, 1944 
110 p. : ill. (some col.), plans
Lord Margaret Florence 1908-1976view full entry
Reference: see Interior decoration : a guide to furnishing the Australian home, by Margaret Lord.

Publishing details: Ure Smith, 1944 
110 p. : ill. (some col.), plans
Haxton Elaineview full entry
Reference: see Interior decoration : a guide to furnishing the Australian home, by Margaret Lord. Illustrations by Elaine Haxton?

Publishing details: Ure Smith, 1944 
110 p. : ill. (some col.), plans
Cedar in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
furnitureview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
woodworkersview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Abrahams Louis cigar box lids for painting p19view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
cigar box lids for painting p19view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Baker Richard Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Bauer Ferdinand 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
cabinetmakersview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Gould W B 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Gritten Henry 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Gvon Guerard Eugene 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Henderson John aka McDonald settler author and artist 1840s 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Hennessey John architect c1888 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Henry Lucien 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Hood Robin L framemaker 1 refview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
King Philip Gidley 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Krimper Schulim 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Lewin John William 1 ref and illustrationview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Lincoln Abraham artist 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Martens Conrad 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
McCubbin Frederick 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Peacock George Edward 1 ref and illustrationview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Prenzel Robert 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Roberts Tom 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Roberts Tom 4 refs inc cedar panelsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Tramp art p105view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Verdich E W 4 refs and illustrationsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Ward Fred 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
MacDonald John Henderson aka John Henderson view full entry
Reference: see Excursions and Adventures in New South Wales; with Pictures of Squatting and of Life in the Bush; An Account of the Climate, Productions, and Natural History of the Colony, and of the Manners and Customer of the Natives, with Advice to Emigrants, etc., by John Henderson. Some illustrations by the author
Publishing details: London : W. Shoberl, 1851, two volumes, xii, 314 and viii, 294 pages plus a map, 2 illustrations and 2 tinted lithographic frontispieces
Dohnt J A cedar framemaker illustrationview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Hogg J J photographer 1897 illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Agate Alfred 1845 illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Westall William illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Hoddle Robert after illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Lindt R W illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Phillip-Stephan photo-litho illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Ramsay James c1900 illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Barrie Fred photograph illustration view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Cunningham James carver c1867view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Lenehan Andrew attrib table etcview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Vernon W L architect illustrationview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Walker Sons & Bartholomew furniture makersview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
McBeath David architect and designerview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Coleman William designer illustrationsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Merriman H ink drawing 1905view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Vaughan Grant bowl illustrationsview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Wilkin George desk 1835view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Graham Robert desk 1835view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Arbuckle John furniture maker 1846view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Sly Joseph furniture maker 1840sview full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Archer Charles watercolour c1847view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
Porschoest T frame maker c1900 p106view full entry
Reference: see Red cedar in Australia, curated by John McPhee. Indexed, extensively illustrated. Edited by Vani Sripathy. Author/s: McPhee, John (John Alexander) ; Mabberley, D. J. ; Ritchie, Rod ; Lucas Clive. ; Toy, Ann. ; Betteridge, Margaret.
‘This book was published in association with the exhibition Red cedar in Australia held at the Museum of Sydney on the site of first Government House 8 May to 15 August 2004. Bibliography: p. 114.
Contents: Introduction / John McPhee -- 1. European discovery, description and naming / David Mabberley -- 2. The red cedar timber industry in New South Wales and Queensland / Rod Ritchie --3. '...Like a London gin-palace!' Red cedar in the Australian interior / Clive Lucas -- 4. Furnishing a colonial palace: Government House, Sydney / Ann Toy -- 5. 'Of the best cedar procurable...': Cedar in Sydney Town Hall / Margaret Betteridge -- 6. Carpenters, cabinetmakers, woodcarvers and craft workers / John McPhee.’
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 2004, 128 p. : ill. (some col.)
O’Connor Kathleen lot 3 Luxemburg Gardens c1913view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Nicholas Hilda Rix lot 4 Arab Lanternview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Fox Ethel Carrick lot 5 Market in Kairouan c1911view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Feint Adrian lot 6 Autumn Canberra 1944view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Crooke Ray lot 7 Islanders 1960view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Perceval John lot 10 Uriarra Crossing ACT 1965view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
O’Brien Justin lot 8 Kiss of Judas 1974 and also lot 9view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Balson Ralph lot 13 Painting number 13 1941view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Smart Jeffrey lot 14 studies 1979view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Tucker Albert lot 15 Gamblers 1990 and lots 16 and 25view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Storrier Tim lot 40 and 41 view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Boyd Arthur lot 17 Shoalhaven River 1990-1 and lot 18 Burnt Wheat and lot 38view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Onus Lin lots 19-22view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Smart Jeffrey lot 23 The New School 2004view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Blackman Charles lot 35 Night Flowers 1958 and 36 in the Laneview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Whiteley Brett lot 24 The Dove and the Mango Tree 1984view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Whiteley Brett lot 24 The Dove and the Mango Tree 1984view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Streeton Arthur lot 26 Sirius Cove 1914 and lot 28 Veniceview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Streeton Arthur lot 26 Sirius Cove 1914 and lot 30 Cairo 1897view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
McCubbin Frederick lot 27 A Forest Glade 1913 and lot 29 The Letter 1884view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Streeton Arthur lot 26 Sirius Cove 1914 and lot 28 Veniceview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
McCubbin Frederick lot 27 A Forest Glade 1913 and lot 29 The Letter 1884view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Tetley Joseph Swabey circle of view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, lot 31, 12 drawings of Aborigines c1805, with extensive catalogue essay, pages 88-105 all works illustrated.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
McCubbin Frederick lot 27 A Forest Glade 1913 and lot 29 The Letter 1884 and lots 58-60view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Smart Jeffrey lot 23 The New School 2004 and lot 32 Farmhouse 2004 and 33 New Yorkview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Williams Fred lot 37 Purple Landscape 1958view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Williams Fred lot 37 Purple Landscape 1958view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Larwill David lots 42-44view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Gascoigne Rosalie lot 46 Drawing Board 1996view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Barton Del Kathryn lot 47view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
de Maistre Roy lot 48 Irish Chieftan 1925 anf lot 49 Still Lifeview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Pugh Clifton lot 50 Dame Mabel Brooksview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Brooks Thomas (British) lot 63 England Farewell The Emigrant’s Departure 1864 view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
emigration paintingview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay. Brooks Thomas (British) lot 63 England Farewell The Emigrant’s Departure 1864
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Klippel Robert lots 65-7 and 72view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Boyd Arthur lot 75 sculpture 1943view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Wakelin Roland lot 74 RMS Aquitana 1943view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, Sydney, 16 November, 2021, with catalogue essay.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2021, 229pp.
Banquet of Books Aview full entry
Reference: A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Banquet of Books Aview full entry
Reference: A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Gosse Thomas printmaker British view full entry
Reference: ‘Founding of the Settlement of Port-Jackson at Botany Bay in New South Wales’. Height: 540.00mm; Width: 610.00mm
‘The print shows the first British penal colony in Australia at Sydney Cove, Port Jackson a few miles from the originally intended site at Botany Bay. The First Fleet arrived in January 1788 with about 750 convicts together with officials, seamen and marine guards. Sailors and convicts are shown here clearing land for settlement. Native turtles and exotic birds are being killed for food. Cattle and pigs have been introduced to stock the new farms. An Aborigine is being questioned by a marine. At first the settlers lived in tents. It took several years to complete the buildings that are seen in the distance.The loss of the British-American colonies after the American Revolution created a need for a new place to send convicts. Botany Bay, in Australia, was chosen in 1786, having been deemed suitable by Sir Joseph Banks who had visited in 1770. The convicts, the vast majority of whom were transported overseas because of various forms of theft, sometimes settled in the colony after their term of penal servitude expired. Australia was used as a destination for 160,000 convicts between 1788 and 1868.The naval officer is probably intended to represent Captain Arthur Phillip (1738-1814), first governor of New South Wales, who returned to England in 1792.Thomas Gosse (1765-1844) appears to have spent his entire career in Britain and to have based this and other Pacific subjects on descriptions by those who went on voyages of exploration.’
Publishing details: Published in London, 1799, Print made by Thomas Gosse
Founding of the Settlement of Port-Jackson view full entry
Reference: ‘Founding of the Settlement of Port-Jackson at Botany Bay in New South Wales’. Gosse Thomas printmaker, British. Height: 540.00mm; Width: 610.00mm
‘The print shows the first British penal colony in Australia at Sydney Cove, Port Jackson a few miles from the originally intended site at Botany Bay. The First Fleet arrived in January 1788 with about 750 convicts together with officials, seamen and marine guards. Sailors and convicts are shown here clearing land for settlement. Native turtles and exotic birds are being killed for food. Cattle and pigs have been introduced to stock the new farms. An Aborigine is being questioned by a marine. At first the settlers lived in tents. It took several years to complete the buildings that are seen in the distance.The loss of the British-American colonies after the American Revolution created a need for a new place to send convicts. Botany Bay, in Australia, was chosen in 1786, having been deemed suitable by Sir Joseph Banks who had visited in 1770. The convicts, the vast majority of whom were transported overseas because of various forms of theft, sometimes settled in the colony after their term of penal servitude expired. Australia was used as a destination for 160,000 convicts between 1788 and 1868.The naval officer is probably intended to represent Captain Arthur Phillip (1738-1814), first governor of New South Wales, who returned to England in 1792.Thomas Gosse (1765-1844) appears to have spent his entire career in Britain and to have based this and other Pacific subjects on descriptions by those who went on voyages of exploration.’
Publishing details: Published in London, 1799, Print made by Thomas Gosse
Lewin John William Birds of New Holland p18-19view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Gould John Birds of Australia p20-21view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Gould John Mammals of Australia p22-3view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Briggs Jack possible Hobart illustrator of Dickens p27view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Barton Charlotte A Mother’s Offering to her Children p28view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Baker William 1806-1857 engraver and printerp30-31view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Chevalier Nicholas fore-edge painting p71view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
fore-edge painting p71view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Currie C B fore-edge painting p70-71view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Lindsay Lionel 21 woodcuts p72-3view full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Cook Captain Florilegiumview full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Florilegium - Captain Cookview full entry
Reference: see A Banquet of Books - National Library of Australia. Bibliography: p. [82-87].
Publishing details: Canberra, A.C.T. : National Library of Australia, c2007 
[87] p. : col. ill., maps
Strong Valerie wife of John Olsen view full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Antipodeans and manifestoview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Annandale Imitation Realists p175-8view full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Backen Earle 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Bakery Art Schoolview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Bellette Jean 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Blackman Charles 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Boyd family numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Brack John and Helen 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Brown Mike 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Churcher Betty 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Coburn John 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Crowthall Ross 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Dattilo-Rubbo A p47-50 and 87view full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Daws Lawrence 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Dawson Janet 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Orban Desiderius and art schoolview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Dobell William 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Dridan David various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Drysdale Russell 8 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
East Sydney Technical College various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Fairweather Ian various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Firth-Smith John 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Flower Cedric various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
French Leonard various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Gallery A various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Gibbons Henry Cornwallis 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Gleeson James various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Haefliger Paul various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hessing Leonard various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hjorth Noela various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hodgkinson Frank various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Howlett Leonora various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Hughes Robert various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Johnson Michael 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Julian Ashton Art School various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Ashton Art School various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Klippel Robert various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Komon Rudy various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Lanceley Colin various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Lynn Elwyn various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
McDonald Frank art dealer various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Meadmore Clement various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Miller Godfrey various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Nolan Sidney various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Passmore John various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Perceval John various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Powditch Peter 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Pugh Clifton various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Rapotec Stanislaus various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Rees Lloyd 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Robertson-Swann Ron various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Rose Bill various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Sharp Martin 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Shaw Robert 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Smart Jeffrey 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Storrier Tim 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Storrier Tim 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Streeton Arthur 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Tucker Albert various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Upward Peter various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Whiteley Brett various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Williams Fred various refsview full entry
Reference: see John Olsen, an artist’s life by Darlene Bungey. Includes notes,select bibliography, a list of selected solo exhibitions and index [[’This landmark biography by Darleen Bungey, the author of the celebrated biography of Arthur Boyd, graphically depicts the forces that drove John Olsen to become one of the country's greatest artists. An exhilarating book, both trenchant and tender, it strips away the veneer of showmanship and fame to show the substance of a painter driven by a need to depict his country's landscape as Australians had never seen it before.

Given access to his uncensored diaries and drawing on years of extensive interviews with both Olsen and those who have known him best, she explores his passionate life and follows his navigation though the friendships, rivalries and politics of the Australian art world. How did a shy, stuttering boy from Newcastle, neglected by his alcoholic father, come to paint the great mural Salute to Five Bells at the Sydney Opera House?

This biography follows that journey -- through Olsen's early experiences in the bush, particularly a formative period at Yass (a time previously unrecorded), to years of cleaning jobs to pay his way through art school, to a milestone time spent in France and Spain -- and traces his constant travels and relocations within Australia, including his epic journeys into the outback and to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre.

From a child who was never taken to an art gallery, who learnt how to draw from comics, we come to see the famous artist in the black beret, the writer and poet, the engaging public speaker, the bon vivant -- whose life has been defined by an absolute need to paint.

Lived on a large canvas, in sunny vivid colour, this captures the messiness of Olsen’s palette and the paella he loved to cook and paint as well as his chaotic love-life.

Darleen Bungey has been an advertising copywriter, an associate editor and writer for British magazines, and a freelance journalist. In 1999 she began researching her seminal biography of Arthur Boyd, which was published to critical acclaim in 2007 and for which she was awarded a PhD. It won the Dobbie Literary Award and the Australian Book Industry Award for Biography of the Year.’]
Publishing details: Harper Collins, 2014, 528pp, with index.
Art Gallery of Ballarat - stories from the collectionview full entry
Reference: Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Alston Aby work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Amor Rick work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Andrew Brook work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Annois Len work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Armstrong Bruce work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Aspden David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Audette Yvonne work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Badhan Herbert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Baldessin George work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Ball Syd work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Balson Ralph work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Barak William work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bartlett William work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Baxter George British work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Beckett Clarice work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bell George work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bergner Yosl work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Black Dorritt work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Blackman Charles work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Blandowski William work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Blyth Eliza work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Booth Peter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Borgelt Marion work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Boyd Arthur work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Brack John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bratby John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bren Jeffrey work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bryans Lina work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bull Knud work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bulunbulun John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Bunny Rupert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Buvelot Louis work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Buzacott Nutter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Byrne Penny work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Canning Criss work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Carrington Tom work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Carter Maurie work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cattapan Jon work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Centre 5 work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Chevalier Nicholas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Clouston Alison work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Coates George work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cockram Paul work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cohn Ola work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Colquhoun Archibald Douglas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Conder Charles work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Connelly-Northy Lorraine work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Connor Kevin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cooper Duncan Elphinstone work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Corlett Peter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Smith Grace Cossington work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Costantini C H T work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Counihan Noel work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cran Tony work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cress Fred work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Crowley Grace work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dale Robert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Danko Aleks work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dattilo-Rubbo Anthony work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Davies David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Davila Juan work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dawson Janet work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dermer John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dickerson Robert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
DMOTE work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Peel Shannon work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dobell William work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Doudiet Charles Alphonse work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dowling Julie work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Drysdale Russell work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dyson Edward work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Dyson Will work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Eaton Janenne work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
ELK Luke Cornish work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Cornish Luke work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Evatt Mary Alice work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Fairweather Ian work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Feint Adrian work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Firth-Smith John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Fizelle Rah work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Flintoff Thomas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Folingsby George work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Ford William work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Fox Emanuel Phillips work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Fox Ethel Carrick work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Francis Ivor work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Friend Donald work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Fullwood A H work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Niven F W & Co work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Garling Frederick work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gill Justin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gilson Marlene work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gittoes George work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gleeson James work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Glover John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gould John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gould William Buelow work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Graham Peter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Greenham Robert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Griffin Murray work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Grogan Lucas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Gruner Elioth work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
von Guerard Eugene work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hall Fiona work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hanssen Piggott Gwyn work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Piggott Gwyn Hanssen work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Havell Robert Jr work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hawkins Weaver work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Haxton Elaine work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Headlam Kristin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hester Joy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Heysen Hans work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Heysen Nora work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hickey Dale work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hinder Margel work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hodgkinson Frank work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hopkins John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hortin Nan work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Hubbard John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Jacks Robert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Johnson Michael work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Jomantas Vincas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Jordan Col work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Kemp Roger work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
King Grahame work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Klein Deborah work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Kuyper Jacques work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lang Ludwig work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Larter Richard work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Last Clifford work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lawlor Adrian work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Leach-Jones Alun work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Leason Percy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Brown Mitty Lee work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
van Leest Emma work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lemon Arthur work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lewis E Godwyn work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lincoln Kevin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lindsay Norman work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lindsay family work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lindsay Percy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lindsay Ruby work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Littler Frank work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Long Sidney work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Low David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Lycett Joseph work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mackennal Bertram work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mackinolty Chips work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mainwaring Geoffrey work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
de maistre Roy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mather John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mawurndjul John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Maymuru-White Naminapu work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
McCubbin Frederick work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
McDiarmid David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
McGillick Tony work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
McGregor Laith work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
McInnes William Beckwith work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Meek James McKain work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Meere Charles work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Meeson Dora work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Punch Melbourne work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Melbourne Punch work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Meldrum Max work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Middleditch Edward work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Miller Godfrey work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mingelmanganu Alec work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Molvig Jon work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Morrison James work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Morrow Ross work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mortenson Kevin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Mundy Henry work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Muntz Adams Josephine work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Nangala Yinarupa work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Napurrula Mitjili work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Ngala Angelina Pwerle work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Nolan Sidney work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Noonan David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
O’Brien Justin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
O’Connor Vic work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Ostoja-Kotkowski Stanislaus work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Pachuka Ewa work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Passmore John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Paterson Jim work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Perceval John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Petit -Martin work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Piguenit W C work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Pottinger David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Power Harold Septimus work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Preston Margaret work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Price Thomas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Proctor Thea work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Prout John Skinner work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Pugh Clifton work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Puruntatameri Paddy Freddy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Prout Victor work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Purves Smith Peter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Ramsay Hugh work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Ramsden Mel work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rapotec Stanislaus work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Redback Graphix work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Redpath Norma work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Reed Sweeny work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rees Lloyd work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rice Estelle work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Nicholas Hilda Rix work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Roberts Tom work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rooney Robert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rowan Ellis work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rowell John work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Rowell William work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Sainthill Loudon work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Sansom Gareth work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Senbergs Jan work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Shannon Michael work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Shead Garry work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Sheffer Avital work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Shimmen Heather Jane work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Shomaly Alberr work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Shore Arnold work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Simon Lucien work illustrated/discussed not Australianview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Smart Jeffrey work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Smiley Shannon work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Smith Herbert H work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Southern Clara work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Spooner work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Spowers Ethel work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Spronk Petrus work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Stavrianos Wendy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Stephen Clive work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Stones Margaret work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Strachan David work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Streeton Arthur work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Stuart Guy work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Summers Charles work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Syme Eveline work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Taylor Neil work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Taylor Terry work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Thake Eric work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Thompson Thomas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Tillers Imants work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Tjapaltjarri Clifford Possum work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Tjapaltjarri Tim Leura work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Tucker Albert work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Tuckson Tony work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Vassilieff Danila work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Vike Harald work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Vu Trinh work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Wakelin Roland work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Waller Christian work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Wanambi Wukun work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Watson Douglas work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Werner J C work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Westwood Peter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Wheeler Charles work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Whisson Ken work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Whiteley Brett work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Wigley James work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Williams Fred work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Wilson Carole work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Winkles Henry work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Withers Walter work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Yalandja Owen work illustrated/discussedview full entry
Reference: see Art Gallery of Ballarat : stories from the collection / Gordon Morrison, Peter Freund, Anne Rowland, Jennifer Jones-O'Neil, Julie McLaren, Brenda Wellman, Robyn Walton ; with foreword by Patrick McCaughey. [’The Art Gallery of Ballarat is truly one of Australia’s great galleries. It is not only the oldest and largest regional gallery but, more importantly, one of the most welcoming and engaging. Printed in 2016, Art Gallery of Ballarat: Stories from the Collection, tells the compelling stories of how the gallery collection began and how it has grown since 1884.’]
Publishing details: Ballarat, Victoria : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2017, 513 pages, illustrations, index.
Farmer Johnview full entry
Reference: In 1914 Farmer enrolled at the Melbourne National Gallery School in the drawing class under Fred McCubbin, attending for three and a half years. In 1917, on advice from Richard McCann, he enrolled to study under Max Meldrum for several years, wishing to gain further knowledge of the Old Masters work he left for Europe in 1924, travelling and studying in England, France and Holland. In 1925 he had 2 paintings hung in the Royal Academy. In 1928 Farmer exhibited by invitation in the 10th annual exhibition of the Society of Twenty Melbourne Painters. Works have been extensively exhibited, including this piece at The Fine Art Society`s Gallery, Melbourne November4 to November 14, 1936. He is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, State Galleries of NSW, Queensland, SA and Victoria, Regional Galleries of Ballarat, Bendigo, Broken Hill, Casg class under Fred McCubbin, attending for three and a half years. In 1917, on advice from Richard McCann, he enrolled to study under Max Meldrum for several years, wishing to gain further knowledge of the Old Masters work he left for Europe in 1924, travelling and studying in England, France and Holland. In 1925 he had 2 paintings hung in the Royal Academy. In 1928 Farmer exhibited by invitation in the 10th annual exhibition of the Society of Twenty Melbourne Painters. Works have been extensively exhibited, including this piece at The Fine Art Society`s Gallery, Melbourne November4 to November 14, 1936. He is represented in the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, State Galleries of NSW, Queensland, SA and Victoria, Regional Galleries of Ballarat, Bendigo, Broken Hill, Cas
Publishing details: source not known.
Farmer Esmeview full entry
Reference: ESME FARMER, of Mona Vale, who studied in Sydney with Fred Leist, and at various art schools and galleries abroad, will hold her first exhibition of pictures at the Macquarie Galleries. The exhibition will be opened by Miss Jeanie Ranken next Wednesday. Mrs. Farmer is the wife of F. Rhodes Farmer, who published his first novel, "Thirsty Earth," a few years ago; they have a three-year-old son, Bill. TO HOLD HER FIRST ART EXHIBITION. (1940, January 4). The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), p. 17. Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article17651053 

Finalist in Wynne Prize 1941 - Esme Farmer: Title Old Bakehouse, Mona Vale

MONA VALE SCENES. 
Mrs. Farmer's Exhibition.
Among all the centres of population along the coastal road to Palm Beach, Mona Vale has been least spoiled by tourists. Half a mile from the beach are rows of tiny, picturesque farms, inhabited by simple rural people.
In her exhibition at the Macquarie Galleries, Esme Farmer has depicted the Mona Vale district with singular directness. Her style is as fresh and unsophisticated as the scenery. She joys in the growth of trees and vines and bushes, and she communicates that enthusiasm to the beholder.
Yet, although Mrs. Farmer places her colours and forms on canvas with such youthful liveliness, she has a solid record of academic study behind her. She won the figure painting competition at the Technical College, and, having gone to London, continued her researches at the Royal College, South Kensington, and at the St. John's Wood Art, School. The exhibition will be opened this afternoon by Miss Jeanie Ranken.
MONA VALE SCENES. (1940, January 10).The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), , p. 9.
Publishing details: Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article17663134 
Royal Academy of Arts Exhibition titled Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes bibliography, artists’ biographies and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Swainston Rogerview full entry
Reference: Swainston's Fishes of Australia, by Roger Swainston. [’Roger Swainston's breathtaking artwork provides a fascinating overview of the extraordinary diversity of Australia's marine and freshwater fishes. More than 1500 remarkable illustrations portray every family of fishes ever recorded from Australian waters. The names of all known species are listed alongside detailed information on the taxonomy and biology of each family.’]
Publishing details: Viking, an imprint of Penguin Books, 2020, 821 pages : colour illustrations, colour maps
Maddock Beaview full entry
Reference: see article by Irena Zdanowicz in Print Quarterly Vol 28, no. 4, 2011.
Publishing details: Print Quarterly Vol 28, no. 4, 2011.
Print Quarterly view full entry
Reference: Print Quarterly - Vol. 1, no. 1 (Mar. 1984)- Full Text available online. [To be indexed for Australian printmakers?]
Publishing details: [London] : [Print Quarterly Ltd.], [1984]- 
Ref: 1000
Declan - Declan Apuatimiview full entry
Reference: Declan, a Tiwi artist / Margaret K.C. West ; with an appreciation of Tiwi art by R. Berndt. Life and work of Tiwi artist Declan from Bathurst Island; burial posts (tutiri), barbed ceremonial spears, carved animals, bark paintings; pukamani ceremony; kulama ceremony; myuthological context of ceremonies; from touring memorial exhibition.
Notes "A touring exhibition sponsored by Australian City Properties Ltd.'.
Available from The Manager, Australian City Properties, Bishops House, 90 Mounts Bay Road, Perth, W.A. 6000.
Bibliography: p. 39.
Publishing details: Perth, W.A. : Australian City Properties, 1987 
39 p. : ill. (some col.), map, ports
Ref: 1000
Tiwi artview full entry
Reference: see Declan, a Tiwi artist / Margaret K.C. West ; with an appreciation of Tiwi art by R. Berndt. Life and work of Tiwi artist Declan from Bathurst Island; burial posts (tutiri), barbed ceremonial spears, carved animals, bark paintings; pukamani ceremony; kulama ceremony; myuthological context of ceremonies; from touring memorial exhibition.
Notes "A touring exhibition sponsored by Australian City Properties Ltd.'.
Available from The Manager, Australian City Properties, Bishops House, 90 Mounts Bay Road, Perth, W.A. 6000.
Bibliography: p. 39.
Publishing details: Perth, W.A. : Australian City Properties, 1987 
39 p. : ill. (some col.), map, ports
Temin Kathyview full entry
Reference: Kathy Temin, by Jason Smith and Sue Cramer
Publishing details: Heide, 2009
Ref: 1000
Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Australian Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Art from the land : dialogues with the Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Australian Aboriginal art / edited by Howard Morphy and Margo Smith Boles. Includes index.
Bibliography.. [To be indexed] [’"The Kluge-Ruhe Collections, now held by the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, is one of the largest and best-documented collections of Australian Aboriginal art outside Australia. Art from the Land focuses on the desert region and Arnhem Land, drawing on the many fine works in the collection and on the authors' detailed knowledge of the artists and their communities to illustrate the unique and complex nature of Australian Aboriginal artistic expression."--BOOK JACKET.’]
Publishing details: Charlottesville, Va. : University of Virginia ; Michelago : MSquared, 1999 
vi, 266 p. : col. ill., ports
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Art from the land : dialogues with the Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Australian Aboriginal art / edited by Howard Morphy and Margo Smith Boles. Includes index.
Bibliography. [’"The Kluge-Ruhe Collections, now held by the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, is one of the largest and best-documented collections of Australian Aboriginal art outside Australia. Art from the Land focuses on the desert region and Arnhem Land, drawing on the many fine works in the collection and on the authors' detailed knowledge of the artists and their communities to illustrate the unique and complex nature of Australian Aboriginal artistic expression."--BOOK JACKET.’]
Publishing details: Charlottesville, Va. : University of Virginia ; Michelago : MSquared, 1999 
vi, 266 p. : col. ill., ports
Shaw Gayfieldview full entry
Reference: The Gayfield Shaw art collection ... Sydney, 1925. Auction catalogue.
Publishing details: [Sydney] : James R. Lawson, [1925] 
[16] p. : ill. (1 col.)
Ref: 1000
Journey in timeview full entry
Reference: Journey in time : the world's longest continuing art tradition : the 50,000-year story of the Australian Aboriginal rock art of Arnhem Land / George Chaloupka. Descriptions and illustrations of rock images of the Arnhem Land Plateau; rock paintings; rock engravings; pigments, brushes and techniques; language groups and clans; Aboriginal view of rock images; chronology of the Arnhem Land Plateau rock images; 50,000 years ago to the present day images; beeswax designs; x-ray art; sorcery paintings; decorated hands; rubbish paintings, casual art; earth art; stone arrangements. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 250-251
Publishing details: Reed, 1993 
256 p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 1000
rock artview full entry
Reference: see Journey in time : the world's longest continuing art tradition : the 50,000-year story of the Australian Aboriginal rock art of Arnhem Land / George Chaloupka. Descriptions and illustrations of rock images of the Arnhem Land Plateau; rock paintings; rock engravings; pigments, brushes and techniques; language groups and clans; Aboriginal view of rock images; chronology of the Arnhem Land Plateau rock images; 50,000 years ago to the present day images; beeswax designs; x-ray art; sorcery paintings; decorated hands; rubbish paintings, casual art; earth art; stone arrangements. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 250-251
Publishing details: Reed, 1993 
256 p. : ill. (some col.)
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Journey in time : the world's longest continuing art tradition : the 50,000-year story of the Australian Aboriginal rock art of Arnhem Land / George Chaloupka. Descriptions and illustrations of rock images of the Arnhem Land Plateau; rock paintings; rock engravings; pigments, brushes and techniques; language groups and clans; Aboriginal view of rock images; chronology of the Arnhem Land Plateau rock images; 50,000 years ago to the present day images; beeswax designs; x-ray art; sorcery paintings; decorated hands; rubbish paintings, casual art; earth art; stone arrangements. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 250-251
Publishing details: Reed, 1993 
256 p. : ill. (some col.)
MCA collection handbookview full entry
Reference: MCA collection handbook / edited by Natasha Bullock. MCA Collection Handbook is an A to Z of over 150 artists' works from across Australia. Each is accompanied by a curatorial overview. The Handbook also includes an introductory essay charting the evolution of the MCA collection. Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2016, 415 pages : chiefly colour illustrations, portraits
Ref: 1000
Volume one : MCA collectionview full entry
Reference: Volume one : MCA collection / [edited by Ewen McDonald]. “The work features over 280 works by more than 170 Australian artists drawn from a period of acquisitions which began with the consitution of the MCA in May 1989."--p. 17.
This work was released upon the reopening of the MCA after expanding and creating galleries dedicated to permanent display of its collection. Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2012, 456 p. : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
Museum of Contemporary Art collectionview full entry
Reference: see Volume one : MCA collection / [edited by Ewen McDonald]. “The work features over 280 works by more than 170 Australian artists drawn from a period of acquisitions which began with the consitution of the MCA in May 1989."--p. 17.
This work was released upon the reopening of the MCA after expanding and creating galleries dedicated to permanent display of its collection. Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2012, 456 p. : col. ill.
Museum of Contemporary Art collection MCA unpacked IIview full entry
Reference: MCA unpacked II : six Australian artists select works from the MCA collection. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, from 5th September to 30th November 2003, of works from its collection. [To be indexed]

Publishing details: Sydney : Museum of Contemporary Art, 2003, 63 p. : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
unpacked II at MCAview full entry
Reference: see MCA unpacked II : six Australian artists select works from the MCA collection. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, from 5th September to 30th November 2003, of works from its collection. [To be indexed]

Publishing details: Sydney : Museum of Contemporary Art, 2003, 63 p. : col. ill.
Unpacked at MCAview full entry
Reference: see MCA Unpacked [’30 pages of 8 leaflets held loosely in trifold cover - An exhibition held in Sydney in 2001 with focus on selections by 7 prominent Australians from diverse fields who chose a work of personal interest from the MCA collection. Artists include - imants tillers, howard arkley, joseph beuys, rosalie gascoigne, various aboriginal artists, keith haring, andrew browne,’]
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art, 2001
Remain in light view full entry
Reference: Remain in light : photography from the MCA Collections / foreword by Elizabeth Ann McGregor ; curated by and essay by Glenn Barkley. "Remain in Light: Photography from the MCA Collections is a MCA Australia touring exhibition of over 70 artworks by Australian and international artists collected by the University of Sydney and the Museum of Contemporary Art during a period spanning more than 50 years. The exhibition provides a broad overview of photographic practice by artists, many who have been recognised as contributing significantly to critical debates in art from the late 1960s to the present day, exploring the influence of photographic theory and technique in contemporary art. Key genres are explored including documentary photography, serial photography, performance photography and the manipulation of the photographic image. Artists include Julie Rrap, Ed Ruscha, Tracey Moffatt, Ricky Maynard, Rosemary Laing and Barbara Kruger."--Publisher's website -
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, [2014] 
72 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Ref: 1000
Museum of Contemporary Art photography collectionview full entry
Reference: Remain in light : photography from the MCA Collections / foreword by Elizabeth Ann McGregor ; curated by and essay by Glenn Barkley. "Remain in Light: Photography from the MCA Collections is a MCA Australia touring exhibition of over 70 artworks by Australian and international artists collected by the University of Sydney and the Museum of Contemporary Art during a period spanning more than 50 years. The exhibition provides a broad overview of photographic practice by artists, many who have been recognised as contributing significantly to critical debates in art from the late 1960s to the present day, exploring the influence of photographic theory and technique in contemporary art. Key genres are explored including documentary photography, serial photography, performance photography and the manipulation of the photographic image. Artists include Julie Rrap, Ed Ruscha, Tracey Moffatt, Ricky Maynard, Rosemary Laing and Barbara Kruger."--Publisher's website -
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, [2014] 
72 pages : illustrations (some colour)
photography collection Museum of Contemporary Art view full entry
Reference: Remain in light : photography from the MCA Collections / foreword by Elizabeth Ann McGregor ; curated by and essay by Glenn Barkley. "Remain in Light: Photography from the MCA Collections is a MCA Australia touring exhibition of over 70 artworks by Australian and international artists collected by the University of Sydney and the Museum of Contemporary Art during a period spanning more than 50 years. The exhibition provides a broad overview of photographic practice by artists, many who have been recognised as contributing significantly to critical debates in art from the late 1960s to the present day, exploring the influence of photographic theory and technique in contemporary art. Key genres are explored including documentary photography, serial photography, performance photography and the manipulation of the photographic image. Artists include Julie Rrap, Ed Ruscha, Tracey Moffatt, Ricky Maynard, Rosemary Laing and Barbara Kruger."--Publisher's website -
Publishing details: Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, [2014] 
72 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Ah Kee Vernonview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Angas George Frenchview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Apuatimi Declanview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Apuatimi Declanview full entry
Reference: see Declan, a Tiwi artist / Margaret K.C. West ; with an appreciation of Tiwi art by R. Berndt. Life and work of Tiwi artist Declan from Bathurst Island; burial posts (tutiri), barbed ceremonial spears, carved animals, bark paintings; pukamani ceremony; kulama ceremony; myuthological context of ceremonies; from touring memorial exhibition.
Notes "A touring exhibition sponsored by Australian City Properties Ltd.'.
Available from The Manager, Australian City Properties, Bishops House, 90 Mounts Bay Road, Perth, W.A. 6000.
Bibliography: p. 39.
Publishing details: Perth, W.A. : Australian City Properties, 1987 
39 p. : ill. (some col.), map, ports
Arkley Howardview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Barak Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Beard Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Becker Ludwigview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Beckett Clariceview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Bennett Gordonview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Black Dorritview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Blanchflower Brianview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Booth Peterview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Bot G Wview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Brack Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Brierly Oswald 1817-94view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Britten Jack c1922-2002view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Buvelot Louisview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Caire Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Campbell Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Fox Ethel Carrickview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Carter Jeff 1928-2010view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Cazneaux Haroldview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Crooks Daniel b1973view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Cummings Elisabethview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Cumpston Niciview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Daintree Richardview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Dale Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Davies Davidview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
de Maistre Royview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Dombrovskis Peterview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Evans G Wview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Fairweather Ianview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Feint Adrianview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Foley Fionaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Frome E C 1802-1890view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Gascoigne Rosalieview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Gill S Tview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Gill Simrynview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Gladwell Shaunview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Glover Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Gruner Eliothview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Hall Fionaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Henderson Edmund 1821-96view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Henson Billview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Heysen Hansview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Hilder J Jview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Jaminji Paddy c1919-2010view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Johnson Timview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Johnstone H J 1835-1907view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Jungurrayi Larry Spencerview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Jururrurla Paddy Nelsonview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Nelson Paddy Jururrurlaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Spencer Larry Jungurrayiview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Gabori Sally view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Kngwarreye Emily Kameview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Laing Rosemaryview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Lambert George Wview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjapaltjarri Tim Leuraview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Lewin John Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Linton James W R 1869-1947view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Long Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Lycett Josephview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
McCubbin Frederickview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
McKenzie Queenieview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Macpherson Robertview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Macqueen Kennethview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
McRae Tommy c1842-1901view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Maddock Beaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Maminyamanja Nandabittaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Marawili Djambawaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Marika Mawalanview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Martens Conradview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Mawurndjul Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Maynard Rickyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Meere Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Mellor Danieview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Micky of Ulladullaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Moffatt Traceyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Morton Callumview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Nadjamerrek Bardayalview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Nakamarra Doreen Reidview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjapaltjarri Mick Namarari view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Namatjira Albertview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Napangardi Dorothyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Nona Dennisview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Pareroultja Ottoview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Parr Mikeview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjapangarti Timmy Payungkaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjakamarra Long Jack Phillipusview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Piguenit W Cview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Poignant Axelview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjapaltjarri Clifford Possumview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Possum Cliffordview full entry
Reference: see Tjapaltjarri Clifford Possum
Preston Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Prout John Skinnerview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Punmu Cooperativeview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Robinson Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Schomburgk Julius 1819-1893view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Schramm Alexanderview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Senbergs Janview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Stacey Lesleyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Steiner Henry 1835-1914view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Stephenson Davidview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Taylor Howard 1918-2001view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Temin Kathyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Thake Eric 1904-1982view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Thomas Roverview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Thompson Christianview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjampitjinpa Anatjariview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjangali Uta Utaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjupurrula Turkey Tolsonview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Trenerry Horaceview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Traill Jessieview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tuckson Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Valamanesh Hosseinview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
von Guerard Eugeneview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Wakelin Eugeneview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Wakelin Rolandview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Wamba Aliceview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Tjupurrula Johnny Warangkulaview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Watling Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Watson Judyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Westall Williamview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Whisson Kenview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Whitehead Isaac 1819-1881view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Withers Walterview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Wolfhagen Philipview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Yirawala 1897-1976view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Young Blamire 1862-1935view full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Yunupingu Gulumbuview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Yunupingu Munggurrawuyview full entry
Reference: see Australia. Royal Academy of Arts, exhibition catalogue, 2014. Essays by Wally Caruana, Franchesca Cubillo, Anne Gray, Deborah Hart, Ron Radford, Kathleen Soriano and Daniel Thomas. Exhibition at the Royal Academy London. Fully illustrated. Includes artists’ biographies, bibliography and index.

[’This landmark book charts the development of Australian art, from early Aboriginal work to that of the first colonial settlers, immigrant artists of the twentieth century and the culturally diverse inhabitants of the country today. Exploring this eclectic 300-year history, the book also celebrates key moments in the Australian canon, such as Sidney Nolan's iconic paintings about the outlaw Ned Kelly, begun in the 1940s.’]
Publishing details: National Gallery of Australi , 2013, 320 pages, card covers, colour illustrations
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue November, 2021: DOBELL, William (1899 - 1970) Study for Portrait (Peter Burns) 1943. Oil on card, signed and titled centre right W. Dobell / Study / for Portrait, 38 x 30 cm, finely framed in period style.
After several formative years spent in London, the mid-career Dobell returned to Sydney in 1938, just prior to the war. The next few years saw him produce some of his finest and most memorable portraits; The Cypriot (1940), The Strapper (1941), The Billy Boy (1943), and Portrait of a boy (for which this is the study) being recognised as innovative and insightful examples. His Archibald Prize entry the same year, Portrait of an artist (Joshua Smith) would see Dobell’s fortunes change, his exaggerated stylisation of Smith’s portrait deemed a grotesquery of portraiture. Today, Dobell is regarded as one of Australia’s greatest portrait painters, his rejected prize entry instantly recognisable as of of the most distinctive images in Australian art.
Having appeared at auction on at least two occasions, Study for Portrait and its related work Portrait of a Boy have suffered from anonymity when previously offered for sale. It is by reference to Dobell’s major retrospective at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1964, the sitter’s identity is revealed. Catalogue number 101, Portrait of a Boy is identified as Peter Burns (born 1924), painted at the age of nineteen. Burns would go on to enjoy a successful career as an artist, architect and designer, holding a number of solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art (Heide) in 1958 and 1959. The following year, Burns would design the exhibition catalogue for William Dobell at Heide, Dobell’s first solo exhibition in Melbourne, where this work was also exhibited under the title Study of a boy. Possibly Burns requested he was not identified as the sitter in the catalogue, given his close connection to the gallery. The portrait was commissioned by Mrs. Gregory Blaxland (Helen Blaxland, née Anderson, 1907-1989), who had previously commissioned Dobell to paint a fine portrait of herself and her daughter Antonia in 1941 at their residence in Woollahra. Study for Portrait (this work) left the Blaxland collection some time in the 1960s, with the Blaxland’s also selling their portrait of Helen and Antonia in 1972, and the major work  Portrait of a Boy in 1974. The Study went to Barry Stern’s gallery in Sydney, and has since passed through private hands, its auction appearance without any identification of sitter.
Portrait of a boy (Peter Burns) and Portrait of an artist (Joshua Smith) were both painted in 1943, a critical year in Dobell’s career with his prize winning portrait of Smith critically ravaged in the press and subject to litigation. Now, the portrait is regarded as an Australian masterpiece, with its study (measuring a mere 36 x 25 cms) selling for a record breaking AUD $915,000 in 2019 (Bonhams Sydney, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, lot 215).
A fine and handsome portrait by William Dobell of Peter Burns, a fellow painter in the prime of youth, and a figure whose connection to Dobell’s life and career would be ongoing.
 
Related work:
Portrait of a Boy, oil, 72 x 53 cm, Geoff K. Gray, Australian Paintings, Sydney, 13 February 1974, lot 27 (originally in the possession of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Blaxland)
Illustrated: GLEESON, James. William Dobell. London : Thames & Hudson, 1964, plate 45
Illustrated: The art of William Dobell, Sydney : Ure Smith, 1946, p. 113
 
Exhibited:
William Dobell. Museum of Modern Art of Australia, Melbourne, May 17 to June 10, 1960, catalogue no. 15, ‘Study of a Boy’, 1945, Collection of Mrs. Gregory Blaxland, Sydney
 
Provenance:
Barry Stern Gallery, Sydney.
Private collection, Sydney (purchased from the above in 1968).
Fine Australian Art, Sothebys, Sydney, 28 June, 2005, lot no. 471 (illustrated)
Private collection, Hobart.
Mossgreen Auctions, Fine Art, Melbourne, 27/11/2017, Lot No. 31
Peter Arnold, Melbourne
acquired from the above

Burns Peterview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue November, 2021: DOBELL, William (1899 - 1970) Study for Portrait [of artist Peter Burns] 1943. Oil on card, signed and titled centre right W. Dobell / Study / for Portrait, 38 x 30 cm, finely framed in period style.
After several formative years spent in London, the mid-career Dobell returned to Sydney in 1938, just prior to the war. The next few years saw him produce some of his finest and most memorable portraits; The Cypriot (1940), The Strapper (1941), The Billy Boy (1943), and Portrait of a boy (for which this is the study) being recognised as innovative and insightful examples. His Archibald Prize entry the same year, Portrait of an artist (Joshua Smith) would see Dobell’s fortunes change, his exaggerated stylisation of Smith’s portrait deemed a grotesquery of portraiture. Today, Dobell is regarded as one of Australia’s greatest portrait painters, his rejected prize entry instantly recognisable as of of the most distinctive images in Australian art.
Having appeared at auction on at least two occasions, Study for Portrait and its related work Portrait of a Boy have suffered from anonymity when previously offered for sale. It is by reference to Dobell’s major retrospective at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 1964, the sitter’s identity is revealed. Catalogue number 101, Portrait of a Boy is identified as Peter Burns (born 1924), painted at the age of nineteen. Burns would go on to enjoy a successful career as an artist, architect and designer, holding a number of solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art (Heide) in 1958 and 1959. The following year, Burns would design the exhibition catalogue for William Dobell at Heide, Dobell’s first solo exhibition in Melbourne, where this work was also exhibited under the title Study of a boy. Possibly Burns requested he was not identified as the sitter in the catalogue, given his close connection to the gallery. The portrait was commissioned by Mrs. Gregory Blaxland (Helen Blaxland, née Anderson, 1907-1989), who had previously commissioned Dobell to paint a fine portrait of herself and her daughter Antonia in 1941 at their residence in Woollahra. Study for Portrait (this work) left the Blaxland collection some time in the 1960s, with the Blaxland’s also selling their portrait of Helen and Antonia in 1972, and the major work  Portrait of a Boy in 1974. The Study went to Barry Stern’s gallery in Sydney, and has since passed through private hands, its auction appearance without any identification of sitter.
Portrait of a boy (Peter Burns) and Portrait of an artist (Joshua Smith) were both painted in 1943, a critical year in Dobell’s career with his prize winning portrait of Smith critically ravaged in the press and subject to litigation. Now, the portrait is regarded as an Australian masterpiece, with its study (measuring a mere 36 x 25 cms) selling for a record breaking AUD $915,000 in 2019 (Bonhams Sydney, Fairwater: The Collection of Sir Warwick and Lady Fairfax AC OBE, 22 Sep 2019, lot 215).
A fine and handsome portrait by William Dobell of Peter Burns, a fellow painter in the prime of youth, and a figure whose connection to Dobell’s life and career would be ongoing.
 
Related work:
Portrait of a Boy, oil, 72 x 53 cm, Geoff K. Gray, Australian Paintings, Sydney, 13 February 1974, lot 27 (originally in the possession of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Blaxland)
Illustrated: GLEESON, James. William Dobell. London : Thames & Hudson, 1964, plate 45
Illustrated: The art of William Dobell, Sydney : Ure Smith, 1946, p. 113
 
Exhibited:
William Dobell. Museum of Modern Art of Australia, Melbourne, May 17 to June 10, 1960, catalogue no. 15, ‘Study of a Boy’, 1945, Collection of Mrs. Gregory Blaxland, Sydney
 
Provenance:
Barry Stern Gallery, Sydney.
Private collection, Sydney (purchased from the above in 1968).
Fine Australian Art, Sothebys, Sydney, 28 June, 2005, lot no. 471 (illustrated)
Private collection, Hobart.
Mossgreen Auctions, Fine Art, Melbourne, 27/11/2017, Lot No. 31
Peter Arnold, Melbourne
acquired from the above

Eldershaw Johnview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue November, 2021: ‘Ross Bridge, Tasmania’, m (sheet), titled and signed in lower margin ‘Ross Bridge, Tasmania / John Eldershaw’; in good condition, unframed.
The NGA holds three other examples of Eldershaw’s woodcuts in similar format: Old Treasury Steps, Hobart; G.P.O. Hobart; and Mill near the Gorge in Launceston.
‘John Roy Eldershaw (1892–1973), was a landscape painter in watercolour and oils. He studied in Sydney under Julian Ashton and at the J S Watkins School, then worked as an architect and became a full-time artist in 1919. His work was exhibited in Sydney, then he moved to Tasmania, lived in a renovated old mill in Richmond, and was vice-president of the Art Society. In 1927 he studied in London, Southampton and Paris and travelled in Europe, and on returning to Australia, was elected president of the Australian Watercolour Institute. He won many prizes and commissions, some from royalty. From 1920 he held yearly exhibitions and joint commissions until his death. He is represented in all Australian capital city and regional galleries and overseas.’ (DAAO)
 

Spence Percyview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue November, 2021:
Original pen drawing on card, 220 x 240 mm, signed lower left, blue pencil editorial markings from publication.
An original work by the noted illustrator and artist, showing a gentleman standing in the doorway of an office, the work ‘Solicitor’ is written in faint blue pencil on the window. Probably created as an illustration for The Bulletin, Sydney.
‘Percy Spence, born in Balmain, grew up in Fiji and began art classes in Sydney in about 1888. Spence built his reputation on black and white drawings for the Bulletin and other publications. He was a founding member of the Sydney Sketch Club of the Art Society of New South Wales, with which he exhibited. He was an accomplished portraitist; his portrait drawing of Robert Louis Stevenson, made while Spence was living with Streeton and Roberts at Balmoral, is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, London, as is his portrait of Phil May. In 1895 Spence moved to London, illustrating Ernest Favenc’s Tales of Young Australia that year and going on to forge a successful career as an illustrator for magazines including the Graphic and Punch. Between 1878 and 1904 he made many portraits of politicians, which were subsequently engraved. He was a member of the Chelsea Arts Club and a well-regarded exhibitor at the Royal Academy.’ – National Portrait Gallery https://www.portrait.gov.au/people/percy-spence-1868

Richards Raeview full entry
Reference: Rae Richards - catalogue of 13 works with prices.


Publishing details: Sydney : Macquarie Galleries, 1972. Octavo, folded card,
Ref: 1000
Scarlett Ken list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Aarons Anita list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Abrahams Charles list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Adams Margaret Ruth list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Tindale Margaret see Adams Margaret Ruth list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Allen George Henry list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Anderson Wallace list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Andersson Jan Anders list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,
Angwin Robin Dale list of the sculptor’s exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australian Sculptors Exhibition Lists, by Ken Scarlett. Occasional Papers No. 3 December 1979. Lists the exhibitions of over 300 Australian sculptors. This publication should be seen as a companion to Australian Sculptors, published by Thomas Nelson Australia, in 1980.
Publishing details: Melbourne State College, ., 1979
Publisher: Melbourne State College, 1979. First Edition; Lge. 8vo; pp. (xii), 233; 1 b/w full page illustration; original spiral bound illustrated wrapper,


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