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The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

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Deirmendjian Garyview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Draper Lyndaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Earl Helenview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Fieldsend Stevoieview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Fieldsend Stevieview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Frame Kymview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Green Jennyview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Harvey Georgiaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
King Stephenview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Lampert Sophieview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Lynch Johnview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Lucas Damienview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
MacNeill Jessview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Mahoney Kerryview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Mills Georginaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Bonney James Ngwarrayeview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Nicholson Clareview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Nicol Grayview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Payes Soniaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Peterson Sadhanaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Schoer Fionaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Shevarenkova Tatsianaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Snell Annview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Stolz Bronteview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Thompson Jonathanview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Toole Brendanview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Trefry Paulview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
van Nunan Johannesview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Villari Willeminaview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Williams Martinview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Wohlfahrt Elkeview full entry
Reference: see Tom Bass Prize for Figurative Sculpture, catalogue fr exhibition at Juniper Hall, Paddington, 11-27 March, 2022, 37 finalists exhibiting. Works illustrated. Includes biography of and illustrations of 5 works by Tom Bass. Includes brief comment on each finalists’ work.
Publishing details: Tom Bass Prize, 2022, pb, 25pp
Stainforth Martinview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books press release 28.3.22: STAINFORTH, Martin (1866-1957)
The Shepherd’s surprise, Watercolour on card, 252 x 352 mm, signed lower left; small area of loss to lower right corner (10 x 20 mm) with infill, framed in timber with textured silver finish.
A fine romantic watercolour depicting the moment a lone shepherd happens upon a young maiden lost in the woods.
Martin Stainforth was an English-born artist who resided in North Queensland and Sydney for many years. He enjoyed success in Australia, New Zealand, New York, Paris and London. Stainforth is best known for his equine portraiture (a monograph on this aspect of his oeuvre, Racehorses in Australia, was published in Sydney by Art in Australia 1922); but he was also a talented genre painter who completed many illustrations for books, especially in his early career.
This monochrome watercolour is pre-Raphaelite in style, yet was painted in the Art Nouveau era. Its completion en grisaille enhances its dream-like quality.
 

Ngal Angelina aka Angelina Pwerl,view full entry
Reference: see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art exhibition, 6 April - 14 May, 2022. A joint exhibition with Cooee Art, Sydney focussing on the paintings of Angelina Ngal. Includes essay ‘Utopian Pleasures’ by Ruth Lovell
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art.
‘Angelina Ngal, sometimes known by her husband's name Angelina Pwerl, is a leading artist from the renowned region of Utopia in Cental Australia.  Along with her sisters, Kathleen and Poly, she is a senior custodians of country at Utopia, involved in the arts movement from batiks in the 1980s through to international recognition today. Angelina's work is held in major collections including the National Gallery of Australia; the National Gallery of Victoria; Art Gallery of New South Wales; Art Gallery of South Australia and the Metropolitan of Art, New York. According to Dan F Stapleton in the Financial Times (January 28 2022), Ngal remains ‘something of an insider’s secret whose work is tightly held.

Angelina paints her grandfather’s country, Aharlper. many of her paintings depict the Bush Plum with thousands of dots of pure colour raining down across her canvas. Angelina has extended her practice, producing a range of exquisitely coloured compositions that stand as contemporary abstract paintings on the international stage but are infused with layers of meaning related to country and culture, including geographic locations; knowledge of sacred landmarks; and memories of hunting or ceremonial business. The result is a subtle and textured surface that hints to the viewer of an ethereal numinous landscape.’
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, 2022, 20pp
Pwerl Angelina aka Angelina Ngalview full entry
Reference: see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art exhibition, 6 April - 14 May, 2022. A joint exhibition with Cooee Art, Sydney focussing on the paintings of Angelina Ngal. Includes essay ‘Utopian Pleasures’ by Ruth Lovell
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art.
‘Angelina Ngal, sometimes known by her husband's name Angelina Pwerl, is a leading artist from the renowned region of Utopia in Cental Australia.  Along with her sisters, Kathleen and Poly, she is a senior custodians of country at Utopia, involved in the arts movement from batiks in the 1980s through to international recognition today. Angelina's work is held in major collections including the National Gallery of Australia; the National Gallery of Victoria; Art Gallery of New South Wales; Art Gallery of South Australia and the Metropolitan of Art, New York. According to Dan F Stapleton in the Financial Times (January 28 2022), Ngal remains ‘something of an insider’s secret whose work is tightly held.

Angelina paints her grandfather’s country, Aharlper. many of her paintings depict the Bush Plum with thousands of dots of pure colour raining down across her canvas. Angelina has extended her practice, producing a range of exquisitely coloured compositions that stand as contemporary abstract paintings on the international stage but are infused with layers of meaning related to country and culture, including geographic locations; knowledge of sacred landmarks; and memories of hunting or ceremonial business. The result is a subtle and textured surface that hints to the viewer of an ethereal numinous landscape.’
Publishing details: Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, 2022, 20pp
Powditch Peter 1942-2022view full entry
Reference: obituary in Sydney Morning Herald, 30.3.2022, p33. By John McDonald
Publishing details: SMH, 2022.
Ref: 145
Geil William Edgar view full entry
Reference: see Book Merchant Jenkins catalogue, 30.3.2022: William Edgar Geil, No date.
.
12cm x 17cm. Silver gelatin photograph.
Original Queensland photograph from American evangelist, explorer, lecturer, photographer, and author William Edgar Geil (1865-1925). Stamped to the verso indicating that is from Geil's photographic archive. Geil is best known for his evangelistic travels, which took him to China, the Middle East, Africa, the Pacific Rim and the South Seas. Geil wrote a number of books about his travels, including, The Isle that is Called Patmos, Ocean and Isle, A Yankee on the Yangtze, A Yankee in Pigmy Land, and The Great Wall of China. He is considered to be one of the most important explorers of his generation and also documented his travels through photography. In addition to his writings and photography, Geil lectured extensively. He married later in life and had no children. His widow, Constance, survived him until the late 1950s. In 1959 his estate was sold at public auction including the contents of his library, which was purchased by a Bucks County book dealer "Gus" Gustafson. It remained in his possession until shortly after his death in February of 2008. This stereo view of a South Sea Islander worker standing beside stacked cane near Bundaberg, Queensland.
AND
WILLIAM EDGAR GEIL WITH LOCALS, CASTLE HILL, TOWNSVILLE 1901
William Edgar Geil
: William Edgar Geil, [1901].
.
12cm x 17cm. Silver gelatin photograph.
Original Queensland photograph from American evangelist, explorer, lecturer, photographer, and author William Edgar Geil (1865-1925). Stamped to the verso indicating that is from Geil's photographic archive. Geil is best known for his evangelistic travels, which took him to China, the Middle East, Africa, the Pacific Rim and the South Seas. Geil wrote a number of books about his travels, including, The Isle that is Called Patmos, Ocean and Isle, A Yankee on the Yangtze, A Yankee in Pigmy Land, and The Great Wall of China. He is considered to be one of the most important explorers of his generation and also documented his travels through photography. In addition to his writings and photography, Geil lectured extensively. He married later in life and had no children. His widow, Constance, survived him until the late 1950s. In 1959 his estate was sold at public auction including the contents of his library, which was purchased by a Bucks County book dealer "Gus" Gustafson. It remained in his possession until shortly after his death in February of 2008. This stereo view depicting Geil posing with locals atop Castle Hill and shows a number of gentlemen posing with a young girl high on a rock behind them. Upon his return from New Guinea, Geil expected to catch a boat from Cooktown to the Philippine Islands, before arriving in Melbourne. However, the boat had left Sydney four days early, and consequently had already gone when he arrived in Cooktown. Unexpectedly, he had to fill in two weeks in Queensland before the next boat was available. This new connection would not be in Cooktown, but in Townsville, so Geil travelled down the coast. Geil describes his time in Queensland as follows: "When the pastors of Townsville heard of my presence in the city they united their forces and a special series of meetings was conducted. The first evangelistic service proved that the Wesleyan Church was too small for the crowds who desired to attend. The Presbyterian building was next used, but that also would not accommodate the crowds, so a committee of businessmen leased the School of Arts, and finally the theatre. Scores professed conversion in these meetings, and arrangements were made to vigorously work on for three months or until an evangelist they expect to assist them should arrive. This was all while I waited; then I found by wiring, two days still remained before I could get the steamer. These were spent at the gold-mining centre, Charters Towers. I gave one service the first day, and there was demand for three meetings the next, which were conducted in the Wesleyan Church No.1, which was the largest church building in the city. The Lord gave us favor with the people. There were scores of converts, and among them some prominent in society and business. At the last service a man and his wife and four sons professed conversion, one not knowing that the others were doing so. This was all done while I waited. The pastors in both cities appreciated the help greatly, and the fact that they were not permitted to remunerate me in any way for the work done, helped, I think, my influence with the mass of the people. Then there being still further delay, I was asked to deliver an address on my independent observation of missions, in the Presbyterian Church in Townsville. For one solid hour I spoke to a packed
house, and it was said that no such mission service had ever been held in the history of the city. I am thankful for the break in the journey, and consider it was the will of God that I should miss the ship and get in the blessed work in Queensland."
AND
SEA BATHS, TOWNSVILLE 1901
William Edgar Geil
: William Edgar Geil, [1901].
.
12cm x 17cm. Silver gelatin photograph.
Original Queensland photograph from American evangelist, explorer, lecturer, photographer, and author William Edgar Geil (1865-1925). Stamped to the verso indicating that is from Geil's photographic archive. Geil is best known for his evangelistic travels, which took him to China, the Middle East, Africa, the Pacific Rim and the South Seas. Geil wrote a number of books about his travels, including, The Isle that is Called Patmos, Ocean and Isle, A Yankee on the Yangtze, A Yankee in Pigmy Land, and The Great Wall of China. He is considered to be one of the most important explorers of his generation and also documented his travels through photography. In addition to his writings and photography, Geil lectured extensively. He married later in life and had no children. His widow, Constance, survived him until the late 1950s. In 1959 his estate was sold at public auction including the contents of his library, which was purchased by a Bucks County book dealer "Gus" Gustafson. It remained in his possession until shortly after his death in February of 2008. This stereo view depicting a man standing in front of the Townsville Sea Baths. Upon his return from New Guinea, Geil expected to catch a boat from Cooktown to the Philippine Islands, before arriving in Melbourne. However, the boat had left Sydney four days early, and consequently had already gone when he arrived in Cooktown. Unexpectedly, he had to fill in two weeks in Queensland before the next boat was available. This new connection would not be in Cooktown, but in Townsville, so Geil travelled down the coast. Geil describes his time in Queensland as follows: "When the pastors of Townsville heard of my presence in the city they united their forces and a special series of meetings was conducted. The first evangelistic service proved that the Wesleyan Church was too small for the crowds who desired to attend. The Presbyterian building was next used, but that also would not accommodate the crowds, so a committee of businessmen leased the School of Arts, and finally the theatre. Scores professed conversion in these meetings, and arrangements were made to vigorously work on for three months or until an evangelist they expect to assist them should arrive. This was all while I waited; then I found by wiring, two days still remained before I could get the steamer. These were spent at the gold-mining centre, Charters Towers. I gave one service the first day, and there was demand for three meetings the next, which were conducted in the Wesleyan Church No.1, which was the largest church building in the city. The Lord gave us favor with the people. There were scores of converts, and among them some prominent in society and business. At the last service a man and his wife and four sons professed conversion, one not knowing that the others were doing so. This was all done while I waited. The pastors in both cities appreciated the help greatly, and the fact that they were not permitted to
remunerate me in any way for the work done, helped, I think, my influence with the mass of the people. Then there being still further delay, I was asked to deliver an address on my independent observation of missions, in the Presbyterian Church in Townsville. For one solid hour I spoke to a packed house, and it was said that no such mission service had ever been held in the history of the city. I am thankful for the break in the journey, and consider it was the will of God that I should miss the ship and get in the blessed work in Queensland."
Oblique Shadows - Asian Influences in Australian Sculpturview full entry
Reference: OBLIQUE SHADOWS: ASIAN INFLUENCE IN AUSTRALIAN SCULPTURE, by Sian E. Jay; Richard Stringer
Catalogue for an exhibition of Australian sculptors in Singapore. Exhibiting artists: Jock Clutterbuck, Greg Deftereos, Kate Ellis, Carolyn Eskdale, Philip Faulks, Adrian Mauriks, Louise Paramor, Elizabeth Presa, and Richard Stringer. Essay by Sian E. Jay and Richard Stringer.
Publishing details: Singapore: Sculpture Square Limited, No date. First Edition.
29.5cm x 21cm. [6] pages. Trifold.

Art from Arnhem Land view full entry
Reference: Art from Arnhem Land - A story of the Australian Aborigine. Qantas House Hunter Street Sydney 16th October to 3rd November 1961. Accompanying material for an exhibition. Folded card 19cm tall. An expedition led by Dr Stuart Scougall spent two months in Arnhem Land to gather objects for this Qantas exhibition.
Publishing details: Qantas, 1961
Ref: 1000
Arnhem Land artview full entry
Reference: Art from Arnhem Land - A story of the Australian Aborigine. Qantas House Hunter Street Sydney 16th October to 3rd November 1961. Accompanying material for an exhibition. Folded card 19cm tall. An expedition led by Dr Stuart Scougall spent two months in Arnhem Land to gather objects for this Qantas exhibition.
Publishing details: Qantas, 1961
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Art from Arnhem Land - A story of the Australian Aborigine. Qantas House Hunter Street Sydney 16th October to 3rd November 1961. Accompanying material for an exhibition. Folded card 19cm tall. An expedition led by Dr Stuart Scougall spent two months in Arnhem Land to gather objects for this Qantas exhibition.
Publishing details: Qantas, 1961
Richardson Elvisview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article ‘The Art that Made Me’, p19-21
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Andrew Brookview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article ‘Toms of Thought 2017-18’ p22-25
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Bates Uncle Badgerview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article ‘Down River’ p26-7
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Bundanonview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article by Elizabeth Fortescue, p32-5 on curator Rachel Kent.
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Rothwell Carolineview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article by Elizabeth Fortescue, p56-60
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Fusinato Marcoview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article on Australia’s representation at the Venice Biennale, p62.
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Glass-Kantor Alexieview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article on Australia’s representation at the Venice Biennale, p62.
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Carrick Ethel - A market in Kairouan c1919-20view full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article on new acquisition p65-7, by Wayne Tunnicliffe
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022 [a copy inserted in Art, Love & Life - Ethel Carrick & E Phillips Fox by Angela Goddard]
Mukeba Pierreview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article on new acquisition ‘Baby folklored dragon, 2021’ p 72-3
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Yang Luview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine , Art Gallery of NSW Society magazine, April-May, 2022, article on new acquisition ‘The great adventure of material world’ p 74-5
Publishing details: Look, April-May, 2022
Carrick Ethelview full entry
Reference: see also Fox Ethel Carrick
Fox Ethel Carrick view full entry
Reference: see also Carrick Ethel
Harrison Eleanor Ritchieview full entry
Reference: see DAAO - Biography (1290 words)
painter, was the eldest daughter of John Millar Ritchie and Frances Anne (Fanny), née Chrisp, of Blythevale, Streatham, Victoria, a pioneering Western District family. During her early childhood the family spent some years in Europe (a younger sister, Florence, was born in Paris in 1861). Eleanor was always keen on drawing and attended Melbourne’s National Gallery School for about six months under Eugene von Guérard, mainly copying paintings – uninspiringly, by her own later account. She decided on a career as an artist while revisiting Europe with her family in 1876.After nine months at the South Kensington Schools in 1878 Eleanor Ritchie enrolled at Heatherley’s. With her sisters – Florence Elizabeth (d.1879), Agnes Margaret (b.1863) and Lilias Linton (1855-1929), all painters – she visited Paris and the plein-air artists’ colony at Pont Aven in Brittany. Then, while sketching in the countryside near Paris, she met the American plein-airist (Lowell) Birge Harrison. They were married not long afterwards.Birge Harrison had been ill with malaria and in 1883 he and Eleanor set out for New Mexico, apparently with the intention of settling in Santa Fe. The expedition became a nine-month tour of New Mexico, Colorado and the Rio Grande, camping out for weeks in the Rocky Mountains 'among the cowboys, the Mexicans, and the Indians’. Next the young couple travelled northwards, Harrison bringing home his bride and, more urgently, seeking further medical treatment in New Plymouth. By March 1885 they were living in Philadelphia, his birthplace, at 108 Queen Street, Germantown, but decided to return to Europe later that year.Birge Harrison’s doctors must have done a good job, for he and Eleanor now travelled to Holland ('wandering through the famous Frans Hals Gallery was like being welcomed home after a long absence’, she wrote) and Italy; then back to Paris; visited his brother, Alexander, at Concarneau on the Brittany coast and stayed for a time at Etaples in Normandy. Then they were on the road again: to Germany, Switzerland, northern Italy and Corsica. They evidently spent some months in Provence before embarking on a donkey-riding tour of the Rhone valley. Somewhere between whistle-stops, Eleanor continued her art studies in Paris under Benjamin Constant and Jules Lefebvre. In 1886 she had a painting accepted by the Paris Salon ( La Mère Honoré ).In 1887 the Harrisons settled for eighteen months in Etaples. They rented a house, built an 'enormous studio’ in the garden, and Eleanor unpacked her Australian books and decorated the rooms with gumleaves. She presumably accompanied her husband to Paris to visit the great Exposition Universelle of 1889 where he was awarded a silver medal; in December they arrived at Melbourne aboard the Valetta . Delighted by the sunshine and fresh air and planning to stay at least two years, they joined the Victorian Artists’ Society, took a studio in New Zealand Chambers, Collins Street and a house at Sandringham. By 1891 they were preparing for yet another move. On 20 May they held an exhibition at Gemmell, Tuckett & Co.'s rooms and two days later an auction sale of about forty works. Soon afterwards, they departed for California. On 27 April 1895, their son Linton Robert was born and died. Eleanor died less than a week later, on 1 May 1895. The place of her death is given variously as Santa Barbara or, less likely, Colorado Plains.Eleanor Ritchie Harrison is a classic example of the 'forgotten’ Australian woman artist. She was professionally trained in Melbourne, London and Paris and her paintings were hung on the line at the Paris Salon and highly praised in Melbourne in the 1880s and ’90s. Yet where are they now? Where is her Home of the Gippsland Pioneer of 1891, showing 'an interior of a bush home’ and praised by Table Talk as one of her most striking efforts? Or The Selector’s Family , or her copies after Velasquez and Antoine Vollon (1833-1900) and the numerous French subjects she sent home from Paris or brought back with her to Australia? She sent two French subjects home for exhibition at the Victorian Academy of Arts in 1882 and three more followed in March 1883. She sent Etaples subjects, not only to the Paris Salons of 1887 and 1888, but also to the Victorian Artists’ Society (VAS).The Poacher’s Daughter ( La Fille de Braconnier ) was one of the paintings sent out by the artist for the Melbourne Centennial International Exhibition of 1888-89; it was shown in the Ladies’ Court of the Victorian Artists’ Gallery along with her An Interior, Brittany and A Breton Peasant . The Fine Arts jury awarded her a second order of merit (along with Tom Roberts and Alice Chapman) for the last- Ellis Rowan was the only Victorian artist to receive a first-while both other works won a third order of merit. The painting was shown again in a private view to mark the opening of her new Melbourne studio in April 1890 and at Gemmell Tuckett’s in May 1891. Recently rediscovered by a private collector in Adelaide, it was by then truly a 'forgotten painting’. Battered and grubby, somewhat repaired and overpainted, it had lost its frame-but not the original label with its title on the back of the stretcher: ’17./the poachers daughter’. Presumably it was sold in the Harrisons’ auction just before they left Australia in 1891. Then the artist’s identity was soon forgotten. Even though the work is clearly signed and dated, it seems that Eleanor Harrison was not even a memory in Australia-and she was never heard of as an artist in America, despite her husband’s later success.During her lifetime Eleanor Harrison’s work was very well received in Melbourne. Even before her return from Europe, a collection of her paintings was shown in Tom Roberts’s Collins Street studio (in April 1889). Charles Conder wrote enthusiastically to Roberts:I think you have a strong pair in the Harrisons, you know Mrs Harrison has a very good [picture] in the exhibition & I saw some impressions by her husband after your own heart …Table Talk 's critic attributed the correctness of the drawing in her exhibits at the VAS in 1890 to her French training and her 'years and years of experience and persevering study’. Her use of light was also frequently noted.The visiting American art critic Sidney Dickinson, a friend and admirer, praised Eleanor’s art for demonstrating the 'French system of landscape painting’. He lamented the lack of French art available for study in Melbourne at that time and drew the attention of his readers to a painting by her in a loan exhibition at the Exhibition Buildings in December 1890 to illustrate 'the elements which make French landscape art so influential and important’. The Melbourne Sun described The Poacher’s Daughter -'a poem in rich harmonious colouring’-at length. The pensive young peasant woman is keeping guard for her father while he poaches game in the Forest of Compiegne (which Eleanor Harrison had evidently painted on the spot, with snow on the ground amongst the lingering autumn leaves, in the winter of 1886). The Argus admired the 'influences of the contemporary school of French art’, i.e. the peasant subjects and tonal naturalism of Jules Bastien-Lepage and his followers.Her work was comparatively highly priced, especially for a woman artist (130 guineas for A Winter Morning on the Coast of France ), and perhaps for that reason did not sell well before the auction in 1891. On this occasion not only the Harrisons’ paintings were offered but also their studio effects and a collection of 'curios’, which included a sketch of Lucerne by Gustave Courbet. In later years Birge Harrison seems never to have mentioned Eleanor. He may even have destroyed some of their Australian work after her tragically early death in 1895.
Writers:
Clark, Jane
Date written:
1995
Last updated:
2011
Armfield David Edward 1923-2010view full entry
Reference: see Caza Sikes auction, April 20, 2022,
Cincinnati, OH, US, lot 268: David Edward Armfield (Australian, 1923-2010). A fine oil on canvas stark landscape of Tibooburra, in New South Wales, Australia. Present are foliage and copper red landscape typical of the area, with hills in the distance. Signed l.r. and titled to verso stretcher, with "The Winegrass Gallery" label to verso. 29.5" x 39.5" (sight), 38.5" x 47.5" (framed).


Snow Norburyview full entry
Reference: see ADVANCED AUCTIONEERS, UK, 7.4.2022, lot 28: English School (early 20thC) Sailor Girl, watercolour,19x25cm. Framed. Label to verso inscribed Artist - Norbury Snow, Melbourne
Wrobel Elinor view full entry
Reference: Elinor Wrobel
(Community Recognition Statement, 24 February 2022, Legislative Assembly, NSW Parliament)
On behalf of the Sydney electorate, I wish to put on record outstanding contribution of Elinor Wrobel OAM, nurse, curator, art collector and 'serial nuisance'. 
Elinor remains a fierce advocate and activist, and continues to use her voice to speak out for the community and for the environment, particularly on health and the arts. Elinor helped establish the Powerhouse Museum and went on to set up the John Passmore Museum of Art convinced Passmore not to burn his artworks, with her husband Fred. She's threatened to chain herself to the Domain Moreton Bay figs to save them, and hunger strikes to get action on the Lucy Osburn-Nightingale Museum. A former nurse, Elinor established the museum at Sydney Hospital in 2001, recognising the links with early NSW nursing history and Florence Nightingale's nursing methods. She recovered and restored the unique rare morbid specimen collection of body parts, even threatening a hunger strike to defend it. I thank Elinor for her lifetime of commitment to nursing and health, and to Australian art. She has contributed much to Sydney and our community that is much valued and appreciated.’ Alex Greenwich MP.
Passmore John - Wrobel Collectionview full entry
Reference: Elinor Wrobel
(Community Recognition Statement, 24 February 2022, Legislative Assembly, NSW Parliament)
On behalf of the Sydney electorate, I wish to put on record outstanding contribution of Elinor Wrobel OAM, nurse, curator, art collector and 'serial nuisance'. 
Elinor remains a fierce advocate and activist, and continues to use her voice to speak out for the community and for the environment, particularly on health and the arts. Elinor helped establish the Powerhouse Museum and went on to set up the John Passmore Museum of Art convinced Passmore not to burn his artworks, with her husband Fred. She's threatened to chain herself to the Domain Moreton Bay figs to save them, and hunger strikes to get action on the Lucy Osburn-Nightingale Museum. A former nurse, Elinor established the museum at Sydney Hospital in 2001, recognising the links with early NSW nursing history and Florence Nightingale's nursing methods. She recovered and restored the unique rare morbid specimen collection of body parts, even threatening a hunger strike to defend it. I thank Elinor for her lifetime of commitment to nursing and health, and to Australian art. She has contributed much to Sydney and our community that is much valued and appreciated.’ Alex Greenwich MP.
Wilson Johnview full entry
Reference: see District Auction, Seattle, US, 11.4.22, lot 94: Original oil on canvas laid on board of Undolya Creek, Alice Springs by New South Wales artist John Wilson. Label on reverse reads: Original painting by Autralian artist John Wilson. Undolya Creek Alice Springs, Oil on Canvas on Board $1250.00. Wilson Studios 46 Narrow Neck Road, Katoomba New South Wales. Excellent condition. 43.5 x 31.5" Board 35.75 x 24"
Barton Emily Mary 1817-1909view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue 5.4.22: Portrait of Montague J. W. Battye, son of Captain Edward Montague Battye, when 13 years old. Bathurst, New South Wales, 3 May 1855.
Conte on card, 100 x 62 mm; verso inscribed in ink (probably by either Captain Battye, or his wife, Kate): ‘Montague Jn. W. Battye by Mrs Barton. 3/5/55, when 13 years old’; and an inscription in the hand of the artist, partially cut when the card was trimmed by the family to fit into an album window mount: ‘J. W. Battye, 13 years of [age] 3/5/[55] Mrs E. M. [Barton]’; in fine condition, with no foxing or other blemishes.
A small but highly significant work by Emily Mary Barton (Darvall) (1817-1909). According to the DAAO, ‘[Barton] was said to be an accomplished portrait painter, although no works survive’. Emily was also a published poet, who fostered a love of poetry in her grandson, A. B. “Banjo” Paterson.
This miniature conte portrait of young Montague Battye was done at Bathurst in 1855, when Captain Edward Montague Battye (1817-1898), the boy’s father, was Superintendent of Mounted Police in that district. Captain Battye evidently commissioned Emily, wife of Robert Barton of Boree Nyrang, near Molong, to draw his son’s portrait in “carte de visite” format, so as to match three family portraits with identical dimensions which he had brought with him from England. (This trio of fine watercolour portraits, each with an identifying caption in faded pencil verso, was made in England around 1836 by an unknown artist; the sitters are Captain Battye’s father, George Battye, aged 50, and his brothers Montague J. Battye, aged 13, and Arthur F. Battye, aged 12. The English portraits were sourced together with the Emily Mary Barton conte portrait, and have been kept together with the latter as a group). 
Emily Mary Barton (Darvall) (1817-1909)
‘Emily Mary Barton (Darvall), portrait painter and poet, was born in England and received a classical education in England and France, learning both Greek and Latin from a tutor. She came to New South Wales in 1839 with her parents Major Edward Darvall and his first wife, Emily Godshall, née Johnson, two of her three brothers, sister Eliza (Kater) and another sister. The following year she married Robert Johnstone Barton in a dual ceremony, Eliza marrying Herman Henry Kater. Emily and Robert spent the next 30 years on their 66,000-acre property, Boree Nyrang, near Molong, with their children. After her husband died in 1863, she sold Boree Nyrang and moved to ‘Rockend’ at Gladesville, Sydney.
Emily Barton is best known as a poet. She published poems in the Illustrated Sydney News from 1853, including several prize-winning poems during the 1880s. Her earliest known poem, ‘Song of Christmas to the Australian Emigrant’, dated 1839, was published posthumously (Sydney 1910). The anonymous preface to this collection of 89 works stated: ‘French and Italian were as familiar to her as her mother tongue; she was a fair Latin scholar and knew enough Greek and German to teach the rudiments [to her sons]’. She was also said to be an accomplished portrait painter, although no works in any public collections are known. In 1870, as an amateur, Mrs Barton exhibited a watercolour Half Figure at the Sydney Intercolonial Exhibition. She died on 24 August 1909, aged 91.’ (DAAO)
Edward Montague Battye (1817-1898)
‘Battye came to NSW in 1848 as aide-de-camp to his uncle Major-General Edward Wynyard. He had begun his working life as a page in the royal household of Queen Adelaide and later served as an officer in the British Army in Canada. He joined the NSW police in 1851 and earned a reputation as a ‘noted thief catcher’. He was known as a brave and tenacious hunter of bushrangers and was popular with the men he commanded in the Western Region Mounted Police and Gold Escort. He was forced to leave the police in 1861 after irregularities were discovered in his police accounts but was re-employed in 1862 in response to public pressure. Colonial newspapers reported that he was “a terror to evil doers in the Western district” and that since his removal the country had been “a prey to unchecked violence”. Battye remained in the police until his retirement in 1893.’ (Justice and Police Museum, Sydney; Edward Battye’s Mounted Police cap is held in the Museum’s collection)

Bruford Frederick Horatio (1846-1920)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue 5.4.22: GIBSON, Lavinia (née Featherstone) (1823-1888)
Commonplace book of Lavinia Gibson (Featherstone), wife of Hugh Gibson of Glenample Station, southwest Victoria, containing important ephemera relating to the Loch Ard shipwreck, including the earliest known eyewitness sketch of the disaster scene (by F. H. Bruford, customs officer) and an autograph signed note by Eva Carmichael (Townshend), one of the only two survivors.
a Helen Gibson (later Sloane), her future sister-in-law, dated 1 January 1855: ‘Give me as token of affection / Some passing thought, some recollection / On which to muse in future years / A Talisman for smiles or tears: / Smiles shoulds’t thou live and happy be, / Tears o’er thy grief or memory’ (at the time Annabella wrote this dedication, both young women were engaged and were shortly to depart for Port Phillip, where they would marry their respective husbands); approximately [100] pp, filled with manuscript entries (mostly poems dedicated to Lavinia by her friends and family), pasted-in ephemera (mourning cards, newspaper cuttings including obituaries, death notices and articles relating to family and acquaintances in Victoria, England and Scotland), portrait photographs of Lavinia Gibson, her husband Hugh Hamilton Gibson, Hugh’s sister Annabella Helen Sloane (the latter two added from another family album, loosely inserted) and her husband Alexander Sloane, several pencil sketches (including a coastal view at Glenample dated 1871), and pressed botanical specimens; the earliest entries date from 1855, just prior to Lavinia’s departure from England for Port Phillip. The single-most important item – one of enormous historical significance, and never before published – is a pencil sketch of the Loch Ard shipwreck, drawn directly onto a page in Lavinia’s album by the Customs Officer Frederick Horatio Bruford (1846-1920), who had been dispatched from Warrnambool to investigate the wreck and take charge of any salvageable cargo; signed and dated June 1878, the drawing is undoubtedly the earliest eyewitness view of the scene, and it shows the flotsam and jetsam still floating in the water around the wreck in the gorge. Bruford, an accomplished marine artist, would later produce a large oil painting, The Scene of the Wreck of the Loch Ard (Warrnambool Art Gallery). In 1887 Hugh and Lavinia Gibson left Glenample to live with Hugh’s sister, Annabella, and her husband Alexander Sloane, owner of Mulwala and Savernake Stations on the River Murray. On Lavinia’s death in March 1888, her commonplace album passed into the possession of Annabella, who continued to add to it – starting with Lavinia’s own obituary. An autograph note signed by Loch Ard survivor Eva Townshend (formerly Carmichael), sent from England to Hugh Gibson in Mulwala at Christmas, 1907, reads: ‘We do not forget you, and we were very glad to hear that you were well, from Eva Townshend’. (Hugh and Lavinia had helped Eva to recuperate at Glenample after her rescue from the shipwreck – see below). Accompanying this note is a signed photograph of Professor Walter Skeat and his wife Bertha, whose brother Reginald Jones drowned in the Loch Ard. The Skeats also added their best wishes to Hugh Gibson on Eva’s note. This is remarkable evidence that three decades on from the Loch Ard tragedy, the trauma of that event could still bring together a survivor, a rescuer and a bereaved family member. (Eva, who died in 1934, also kept up a lifetime correspondence with Jane Shields, who had been a companion to her at Glenample while she was being cared for by Lavinia Gibson). Condition: Lavinia’s album – the entire contents as well as the binding – have been extremely well preserved, with only some occasional (but insignificant) spotting to the leaves.
 
THE LOCH ARD DISASTER
The wreck of the Loch Ard was one of the most infamous events in Australia’s maritime history, and the story quickly entered Australian folklore. On 1 June 1878, en route from England to Melbourne, the Loch Ard was wrecked on rocks in a storm off Victoria’s southwest coast. Of the 17 crew and 37 passengers, there were only two survivors: young apprentice crewman Tom Pearce and 18-year old Eva Carmichael, whose family all drowned in the catastrophe. Pearce brought Eva ashore and sheltered her in a cave, reviving her with whiskey found amongst items washed up from the wreck. He climbed the cliffs and came across two riders from Glenample Station. Hugh Hamilton Gibson and his wife Lavinia took Pearce and Eva in at their Glenample homestead; Eva remained in Lavinia’s care for about six weeks while she slowly recovered, both physically and emotionally, from her ordeal. Pearce was awarded a medal and a financial reward for saving Eva from the heavy surf after she had stayed alive by clinging to one of the ship’s spars for several hours. After returning to England, Eva would marry a relative of one of the young men who drowned in the Loch Ard, G. Arthur Townshend Mitchell.
 
LAVINIA GIBSON (FEATHERSTONE)
Lavinia was born in Wiveliscombe, Somerset, in 1830, and died at Mulwala, in the New South Wales Riverina, in 1888. She married Hugh Hamilton Gibson (1829-1911) at All Saints, St. Kilda (Melbourne) on 4 December 1855. Hugh and his brothers, James and Thomas, had all emigrated to Port Phillip from Ayrshire between 1847 and 1852. The Gibson boys’ sister, Annabella Helen, married Scotsman Alexander Sloane (1829-1907) – who had met and befriended her brother Hugh on a return visit to Scotland from Port Phillip in 1854 – at All Saints, St. Kilda, on 20 March 1856.
In Port Phillip, Hugh Gibson became a squatter in the Western District, initially taking up 3000 acres of land near Mortlake. This run, named Myrnong, later became Shadwell Park Estate. In 1862, in partnership with Peter McArthur, he took up land near Port Campbell, on which he built Glenample homestead, a magnificent Georgian-style sandstone residence, in 1869. The Gibsons had no children.
Alexander Sloane was, like his brother-in-law Hugh Gibson, a very successful grazier. He established Mulwala and Savernake Stations on the River Murray, where he lived with Annabella for many decades. The couple had 11 children.
When Hugh Gibson sold Glenample in 1887, he and Lavinia went to live with the Sloanes at Mulwala. Not long after their move, however, Lavinia died at Mulwala, on 20 March 1888.
 
Provenance: Lavinia Gibson (née Featherstone, 1823-1888), Glenample (later Mulwala Station); Annabella Helen Sloane (née Gibson, 1836-1920), Mulwala Station; thence by descent though the Sloane family.

Pulie Elizabethview full entry
Reference: ELIZABETH PULIE #117 Survey, 6 April, 2022, UNSW Galleries, curator: James Gatt. Since 1988 Pulie been concerned with art’s ontology or definition, which she attempts to investigate via her practice. Until 2002, a sense of art as decoration and commodity informed her decorative painting project, while from 2002 until 2006 Pulie focussed on relational projects. Upon commencing her PhD research in 2012 she began her current ‘end of art’ project, opening her practice to a variety of media including weaving, sculpture, and video work, alongside concurrent theoretical and discursive investigations. In collaboration with curator James Gatt, Pulie’s current exhibition at UNSW Galleries, #117 (Survey), investigates a sense of art’s definition as existing within artistic practice and thought over its objects. The survey includes works from each of Pulie’s selfdefined projects, as well as a major new video work funded by the UNSW Galleries Commissioner’s Circle.

Recent exhibitions include The National 2017: New Australian Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney (2017); Unfinished Business: Perspectives on Art and Feminism, Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne (2017); The Conspiracy of Art by Jean Baudrillard, Sarah Cottier Gallery, Sydney (2018); Bauhaus Now!, Buxton Contemporary, Melbourne (2019); On Hessian, Sarah Cottier Gallery, Sydney (2020); and Transplant, SCA Gallery and Knulp, Sydney (2021). Pulie is a lecturer at the National Art School and is represented by Sarah Cottier Gallery, Sydney, where she currently has a solo exhibition, New Old Paintings.
Publishing details: [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
linocutsview full entry
Reference: see Eileen Mayo, by Sara Cooper. Modewrn Women Artists series. ‘An introduction to the artist Eileen Mayo (1906 - 1994) who worked in almost every available medium - drawings, woodcuts, lithographs, tapestry and silk screening. In addition to being a printmaker, illustrator, calligrapher and muralist, she designed coins, stamps, tapestry and posters, and wrote and illustrated eight books on natural science.’
Publishing details: Eiderdown Books, 2022, hc, 60pp
Claude Flight Schoolview full entry
Reference: see Eileen Mayo, by Sara Cooper. Modewrn Women Artists series. ‘An introduction to the artist Eileen Mayo (1906 - 1994) who worked in almost every available medium - drawings, woodcuts, lithographs, tapestry and silk screening. In addition to being a printmaker, illustrator, calligrapher and muralist, she designed coins, stamps, tapestry and posters, and wrote and illustrated eight books on natural science.’
Publishing details: Eiderdown Books, 2022, hc, 60pp
Flight Claude Schoolview full entry
Reference: see Eileen Mayo, by Sara Cooper. Modewrn Women Artists series. ‘An introduction to the artist Eileen Mayo (1906 - 1994) who worked in almost every available medium - drawings, woodcuts, lithographs, tapestry and silk screening. In addition to being a printmaker, illustrator, calligrapher and muralist, she designed coins, stamps, tapestry and posters, and wrote and illustrated eight books on natural science.’
Publishing details: Eiderdown Books, 2022, hc, 60pp
Mayo Eileenview full entry
Reference: Shifting Boundaries - The Art of Eileen Mayo, PhD thesis by Margaret Jillian Cassidy, University of Canterbury, NZ, 2000
Mayo Eileenview full entry
Reference: Eileen Mayo - Nature, Art and Poetry,
Publishing details: Christchurch Art Gallery, 2019
Ref: 1000
Freycinetview full entry
Reference: A WOMAN OF COURAGE: THE JOURNAL OF ROSE DE FREYCINET ON HER VOYAGE AROUND THE WORLD, 1817-1820, by Marc Serge Riviere.
Publishing details: National Library of Australia, 2003.
Reprint.
24cm x 20cm. xxvi, 189 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Ref: 1000
de Freycinetview full entry
Reference: see Freycinet de
ENGAGEMENT: ART + ARCHITECTURE: ART BUILT-IN BRISBANE MAGISTRATES COURTview full entry
Reference: ENGAGEMENT: ART + ARCHITECTURE: ART BUILT-IN BRISBANE MAGISTRATES COURT.
Publishing details: Queensland Government, [2004].
First Edition.
28cm x 22cm. 42 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Queensland artview full entry
Reference: see ENGAGEMENT: ART + ARCHITECTURE: ART BUILT-IN BRISBANE MAGISTRATES COURT.
Publishing details: Queensland Government, [2004].
First Edition.
28cm x 22cm. 42 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Queensland architectureview full entry
Reference: see ENGAGEMENT: ART + ARCHITECTURE: ART BUILT-IN BRISBANE MAGISTRATES COURT.
Publishing details: Queensland Government, [2004].
First Edition.
28cm x 22cm. 42 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
History of the Arts in the Wynnum and manly area, 1900 to 2003view full entry
Reference: The History of the Arts in the Wynnum and manly area, 1900 to 2003, by Betty Nock. Includes brief essays on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: J & B Nock, 2005, 128 pages, black and white illustrations. Pictorial wrappers.
Brisbane artview full entry
Reference: see THE HISTORY OF THE ARTS IN THE WYNNUM AND MANLY AREA, 1900 TO 2003
Publishing details: Brisbane: J & B Nock, 2005.
First Edition.
29.5cm x 21cm. 128pages, black and white illustrations. Pictorial wrappers.
Newton Helmut view full entry
Reference: HELMUT NEWTON: SPECIAL COLLECTION, 24 PHOTO LITHOS. ‘Naked, erotic, at times fetishistic, always stylish. From the blurb by Brion Gyson: "Gathered here are 24 lithographs, his own choice of the pictures which have made him one the most acclaimed photographers of our time.”’
Publishing details: Helmut Newton
New York: Congreve Publishing Co., 1979.
First Edition.
40cm x 28cm. [50] pages, black and white photographs. Lettered wrappers.
Full page black and white photographs printed recto only with a title on the verso from Newton's Parisian period. Naked, erotic, at times fetishistic, always stylish. From the blurb by Brion Gyson: "Gathered here are 24 lithographs, his own choice of the pictures which have made him one the most acclaimed photographers of our time."

Ref: 1000
Hoy Graceview full entry
Reference: see Friends Review, (magazine of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums), March. 2022, article: ‘Hidden Lives - Discovering Women’s Lives in Local and Regional Museums’, summary of a talk by Roslyn Russell at the AFFM Annual General Meeting online, 18 January 2022. The full talk available on the AFFM website. ‘... A small artwork by Newtown artist Grace Hoy, painted in 1910, was discovered inside an autograph album in the collection of Coffs Harbour Regional Museum.The album had been compiled by journalist and novelist Arthur Crocker, one of the founders of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.
Grace Hoy was a finalist several times in the Archibald and Sulman Prizes in the 1920s, and is mentioned in key references for Australian women artists, but the story of her connection to Arthur Crocker – her 1922 Archibald Prize entry was a portrait of Crocker – and the reason why the album itself came to Coffs Harbour are as yet unknown...’
Pardey Eileen view full entry
Reference: see Friends Review, (magazine of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums), March. 2022, article: ‘Hidden Lives - Discovering Women’s Lives in Local and Regional Museums’, summary of a talk by Roslyn Russell at the AFFM Annual General Meeting online, 18 January 2022. The full talk available on the AFFM website.
‘Eileen Pardey, after her father Herbert’s
early death in 1932, took over the running of Pardey’s Photographic Studio in Cowra, NSW until her death in 1971. She was responsible for the vast volume of photographic portraits produced by the studio, including over 4000 images of soldiers from all over Australia who came to Cowra for training at the military camp or acted as garrison troops guarding the Prisoner of War Camp.
The studio photographed an average
of twenty soldiers a day throughout
the war years. Eileen Pardey personally supervised the quality of each portrait before it went to the client. She also taught other local women a skill at
which she was adept – hand colouring portrait photos. The verdict in Cowra
is that Pardey’s Studio owed its survival to Eileen Pardey’s dedicated stewardship.’
Pardey Herbert view full entry
Reference: see Friends Review, (magazine of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums), March. 2022, article: ‘Hidden Lives - Discovering Women’s Lives in Local and Regional Museums’, summary of a talk by Roslyn Russell at the AFFM Annual General Meeting online, 18 January 2022. The full talk available on the AFFM website.
‘Eileen Pardey, after her father Herbert’s
early death in 1932, took over the running of Pardey’s Photographic Studio in Cowra, NSW until her death in 1971. She was responsible for the vast volume of photographic portraits produced by the studio, including over 4000 images of soldiers from all over Australia who came to Cowra for training at the military camp or acted as garrison troops guarding the Prisoner of War Camp.
The studio photographed an average
of twenty soldiers a day throughout
the war years. Eileen Pardey personally supervised the quality of each portrait before it went to the client. She also taught other local women a skill at
which she was adept – hand colouring portrait photos. The verdict in Cowra
is that Pardey’s Studio owed its survival to Eileen Pardey’s dedicated stewardship.’
Brendorah aka Dore Hawthorneview full entry
Reference: see Friends Review, (magazine of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums), March. 2022, article: ‘Hidden Lives - Discovering Women’s Lives in Local and Regional Museums’, summary of a talk by Roslyn Russell at the AFFM Annual General Meeting online, 18 January 2022. The full talk available on the AFFM website. Illustrated in article: ‘The Verticals’ image by ‘Brendorah’ (Dore Hawthorne) at Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum. ‘Sydney artist Dore Hawthorne is celebrated at Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum for her series of artworks,‘Factory Folk’. Using the name ‘Brendorah’, a reference to the Bren guns that she assembled whilst working at the Lithgow Small Arms Factory between 1942 and 1945, Dore Hawthorne produced works depicting manufacturing processes at the factory, and her fellow workers.While the ‘Factory Folk’ series is in the collection of the Australian War Memorial, the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum’s archive provides an important context for her artworks which are celebrated there as well.’
Hawthorne Dore aka Brendorah view full entry
Reference: see Friends Review, (magazine of the Australian Federation of Friends of Museums), March. 2022, article: ‘Hidden Lives - Discovering Women’s Lives in Local and Regional Museums’, summary of a talk by Roslyn Russell at the AFFM Annual General Meeting online, 18 January 2022. The full talk available on the AFFM website. Illustrated in article: ‘The Verticals’ image by ‘Brendorah’ (Dore Hawthorne) at Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum. ‘Sydney artist Dore Hawthorne is celebrated at Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum for her series of artworks,‘Factory Folk’. Using the name ‘Brendorah’, a reference to the Bren guns that she assembled whilst working at the Lithgow Small Arms Factory between 1942 and 1945, Dore Hawthorne produced works depicting manufacturing processes at the factory, and her fellow workers.While the ‘Factory Folk’ series is in the collection of the Australian War Memorial, the Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum’s archive provides an important context for her artworks which are celebrated there as well.’
Green Julieview full entry
Reference: GILGAMESH  - New Drawings by Julie Green, 20-30 April 2022. ‘Please join us on Saturday 23 April between 2-5pm to celebrate with Julie Green and Nicholas Pounder. “A great project assembled from the scattered fragments of a story that belongs to the roots of all our common poetries. Julie Green metabolizes these experiences and mysteries in painted works that repay attention, and that make you be and know and grow and intensify your sensuality.” (George Alexander, exhibition catalogue)
We are thrilled to present Julie Green: New Drawings 2020-22, an exhibition of works by the artist accompanied by The Buried Book published by Nicholas Pounder at Polar Bear Press. 
For this exhibition Green draws inspiration from the world’s oldest extant work of literature, the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh, an epic poem written and compiled over centuries between roughly 2100 and 1200BCE. From a trove of thousands of cuneiform tablets discovered in the Library of Ashurbanipal, Nineveh (modern-day Iraq) and stored at the British Museum, the Epic of Gilgamesh was translated in the nineteenth century by self-taught Assyriologist George Smith.
Green’s drawings respond to the archaic, poetic force of this ancient tale as well as the historic journey that the words themselves have taken to reach modern audiences. The exhibition features works on paper that draw on episodes within the all too human and timeless story.
Enthused in turn by Green’s work, Pounder has produced The Buried Book. Published by Polar Bear Press in a limited edition of 5 copies, The Buried Book evolved as a record of Green’s drawings and the fragmentary history of the epic’s translation. In this way, the collaboration between Green and Pounder strongly mirrors the relationship between objects and words reflected in the Epic of Gilgamesh itself.
Julie Green is Sydney-based artist and a qualified art psychotherapist who for several years ran the Julie Green Gallery in Surry Hills.
Nicholas Pounder has over five decades of experience in the book trade and is one Australia’s most respected book dealers and experts. 
Images will be online from Tuesday 19 April and the exhibition continues until Saturday 30 April 2022’
Publishing details: Annette Larkin Fine Art, 2022. [Catalogue details to be entered]


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Green Julieview full entry
Reference: The Buried Book. The Buried Book evolved as a record of Green’s drawings and the fragmentary history of the epic’s translation.
Publishing details: Published by Polar Bear Press, 2022, in a limited edition of 5 copies.
Ref: 1000
Hartt Cecil Lview full entry
Reference: Humorosities by an Australian Soldier, Corpl. Cecil L. Hartt.
[’Drawings by an Australian Infantryman who served with the 18th Battalion, he was a regular contributor to 'The Bulletin'
Dimensions’] [’the sketches include Australian soldier looking very miserable smoking a cigarette in an overcoat titled Summer in England, another of an Australian soldier and a woman, one shows a sergeant with his feet up on a desk and titled Work. Others appear to be sketches of figures etc. Accompanied by a copy of, Humorosities by an Australian Soldier which has cartoons produced by Cecil L Hartt. The book is in worn condition and some pages are loose. Larger sketches 33.5cm x 21.5cm approx. Sketches show some wear to the edges and have fold marks. (7 items) Cecil Lawrence Hartt was an Australian cartoonist who was born in Prahran, Victoria in 1884. He enlisted in the 18th Battalion AIF during the First World War. He served at Gallipoli with the regiment and was wounded at Hill 60. He was a cartoonist pre-war and continued when invalided to the UK in 1916. After the war he worked for various publications. In May 1930 he committed suicide on the remote road near Moruya, New South Wales. His son was killed in action during WW2.’]


Publishing details: Published by The Australian Trading & Agencies Co Ltd, London (1917), 32pp, illustrated,
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Patterson Ambroseview full entry
Reference: see Swann Auction Galleries, April 28, 2022, New York, NY, US, lot 328: AMBROSE PATTERSON
Native Swimmers, Hawaii.

Woodcut, circa 1925. 265x198 mm; 10 1/2x7 7/8 inches, full margins. Signed, titled and numbered 1/25 in pencil, lower margin. A very good impression.

Patterson (1877-1966) arrived in Hawaii in 1916 while traveling from his native Australia to New York. Enamored with the beauty of the islands, he decided to stay with a friend in Honolulu rather than continue his trip. He lived and worked in Hawaii for 18 months, creating numerous prints and paintings of the landscape. His works were included in the Hawaiian Society of Artists Annual in 1917. Prior to his time in Hawaii, Patterson had studied in Melbourne at the National Gallery Art School and in Paris at the Académie Julian and the Académie Colarossi. While in Paris, he exhibited at the first Salon d'Automne in 1905. He eventually settled in Seattle and established the University of Washington School of Painting and Design.
Hornel Edward Atkinson 1864-1933view full entry
Reference: see MCTEAR'S Glasgow, auction 27.4.22, lot 212: EDWARD ATKINSON HORNEL (SCOTTISH 1864 - 1933),
THE GEISHA & THE ORANGE TREE
oil on canvas, signed
image size 60cm x 50cm, overall size 74cm x 64cm
Framed.
Note: Born in Bacchus Marsh, Victoria Australia, on 17 July 1864 of Scottish parents, and he was brought up and lived practically all his life in Scotland after his family moved back to Kirkcudbright in 1866. He studied for three years at the art school at Edinburgh, and for two years at Antwerp under Professor Verlat with his friend William Stewart MacGeorge. Returning from Antwerp in 1885, he met George Henry and associated himself with the Glasgow Boys. Hornel and Henry collaborated upon "The Druids Bringing in the Mistletoe" (1890), a procession of druidic priests bringing in the sacred mistletoe, gorgeous with polychrome and gold. The two worked side by side to achieve decorative splendour of colour, Hornel boldly and freely employing texture effects produced by loading and scraping, roughening, smoothing, and staining. In 1893-94 the two artists spent a year and a half in Japan, where Hornel learned much about decorative design and spacing. Towards the close of the nineties his colours, while preserving their glow and richness, became more refined and more atmospheric, and his drawing more naturalistic, combining sensuous appeal with emotional and poetic significance. In 1901 he declined election to the Royal Scottish Academy. A member of Glasgow Art Club, Hornel exhibited in the club's annual exhibitions. In 1901 he acquired Broughton House, a townhouse and garden in Kirkcudbright, which was his main residence for the rest of his life with his sister Elizabeth. There he made several modifications to the house and designed a garden taking inspiration from his travels in Japan. He also made an addition of a gallery for his paintings. On his death the house and library were gifted to the town "for the benefit of the citizens of Kirkcudbright" and Broughton House (the Hornel Museum) is now administered by the National Trust for Scotland. There are examples of his works in the museums of Aberdeen, Buffalo, Bradford, St. Louis, Toronto, Montreal, Glasgow, Edinburgh, London, Leeds, Manchester, Hull, Bath, and Liverpool. In UK public collections alone there are 186 documented examples of Hornel's work.
Whisson Kenview full entry
Reference: see LYON & TURNBULL, London, 29.4.22, lot 322: Kenneth (Ken) Ronald Whisson (Australian 1927-) Modern City Seen From A Great Distance, 1995 inscribed, titled and dated 'Perugia 23/6/95 +21/12/95' (to reverse), oil on canvas

(111cm x 121cm (43.6in x 47.6in))

Provenance: Richard Salmon Gallery, London.

Footnote: Exhibited: Richard Salmon Galleries, London, Ken Whisson: Paintings and Drawings, May-July 1997. Kenneth (Ken) Whisson has been at the forefront of Australian contemporary art for over 60 years, producing paintings that hold a unique place in the history of Australian art built around his own inner reality and the world at large. Born in Lilydale, outside Melbourne in 1927, Whisson emerged from the influential school of figurative expressionism after studying under the Russian émigré artist Danila Vassilieff (1897-1958). Since then his paintings have evolved, combining influences from this formative period, whilst looking forward to an increasing interaction between solid shapes and linear descriptions as in Modern City Seen From A Great Distance. In explanation of his work, Whisson described: "The best, perhaps only, way to relate to my paintings and in general to the kind of modern paintings that move between being and non-being or better, and more exactly, between what sees and what is seen, is to not look for what is not there. To put it more simply, perhaps, my paintings succeed in their intention when the images, that which is clearly intended as image, is also meaningful as form, but fail if that which is intended only as form is seen also as image.... I should add that there is sometimes only a fairly oblique relationship between my works and their titles. The titles, even in these cases, are intended as a lead into understanding the work." (Kenneth Whisson, 19 September 2000). In Modern City Seen From A Great Distance the scene is broken down into numerous viewpoints scattered across the canvas, with landscape elements drawn in paint. It is not meant to be one particular place, but rather an imaginary landscape with the intention of re-counting a series of architectural shapes, including components that might stand in for bushes or trees. The current work is in a classic later Whisson style, where the white canvas has become an important element of the whole composition. Memory also plays a large part in Whisson’s work, and his retreat into his own childhood in rural Lilydale and artistic past, provide rich motifs for his paintings. These ideas and experiences of displacement, following his relocation to Perugia in Italy in the late 1970s, continue throughout his work and help to elaborate on his personal and unconventional aesthetic that alludes to a heightened and perhaps even sometimes a hallucinogenic reality.
Jerrems Carol 1949 - 1980view full entry
Reference: Living in the 70s : photographs by Carol Jerrems.  Exhibition curators: Helen Ellis, Bob Jenyns. Catalogue of an exhibition held at University of Tasmania, Plimsoll Gallery, Hobart, 20 July-12 August 1990; Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney, New South Wales, 24 August-29 September 1990 ; Australian National Gallery, Canberra, ACT, 23 February-12 May 1991 ; Albury Regional Centre, Albury, New South Wales, 24 May-23 June 1991 ; Shepparton Art Gallery, Shepparton, Victoria, 29 June-28 July 1991 ; The Exhibition Gallery, The Waverley Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, 4 August-15 September 1991.
Rare exhibition catalogue on the photographer Carol Jerrems. ‘This is the first exhibition to survey Carol Jerrems short but extremely productive photographic career. It has been mounted on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the artist’s death.’ – DAAO website


Publishing details: Hobart : Art Exhibitions Committee, University of Tasmania, 1990. Quarto, illustrated wrappers (lightly foxed), pp. [28], photographic illustrations.
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Parr Mikeview full entry
Reference: Mike Parr : brain coral
Publishing details: Sydney : National Art School Gallery, 2012. Quarto, illustrated gatefold wrappers, pp. 104, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: Shipwreck. A poetic Drama. By Douglas Stewart. With 23 black and white drawings and 5 colour plates by Norman Lindsay.
Publishing details: Sydney: The Shepherd Press, 1948. Quarto, gilt-lettered imitation leather, Lindsay illustrations throughout. The deluxe edition, limited to 100 copies, signed by Stewart and Lindsay.
Ref: 1000
Timberview full entry
Reference: Timber. With two linocuts by Inge King, two lithographs by Graeme King, and two etchings by Bruno Leti, each signed and numbered. ‘A magnificent large format artist’s book with contributions by some of Australia’s most significant contemporary artists.  The colophon reads: ‘Timber by Chris Wallace-Crabbe was written in Melbourne, Australia, and designed by Noah Ross in New York. Raphael Fodde printed the text in his Officina in Woodmere, New York and at the Canberra School of Arts. The linocuts by Inge King were printed by Raphael Fodde in the studios of the Art Department at Brooklyn College. Graeme King pulled his lithographs in Warrandyte, Victoria. Bruno Leti printed his etchings, engravings, and monotypes on his press in Melbourne. This edition of 45 copies as printed on Magnani paper and signed by the poet and the artists. August 1998’.

Publishing details: New York and Melbourne : Raphael Fodde Editions, 1998. Folio, 515mm tall, spraypainted hessian over boards, pp. 34, five folded sections of eight leaves,
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King Inge view full entry
Reference: see Timber. With two linocuts by Inge King, two lithographs by Graeme King, and two etchings by Bruno Leti, each signed and numbered. ‘A magnificent large format artist’s book with contributions by some of Australia’s most significant contemporary artists.  The colophon reads: ‘Timber by Chris Wallace-Crabbe was written in Melbourne, Australia, and designed by Noah Ross in New York. Raphael Fodde printed the text in his Officina in Woodmere, New York and at the Canberra School of Arts. The linocuts by Inge King were printed by Raphael Fodde in the studios of the Art Department at Brooklyn College. Graeme King pulled his lithographs in Warrandyte, Victoria. Bruno Leti printed his etchings, engravings, and monotypes on his press in Melbourne. This edition of 45 copies as printed on Magnani paper and signed by the poet and the artists. August 1998’.

Publishing details: New York and Melbourne : Raphael Fodde Editions, 1998. Folio, 515mm tall, spraypainted hessian over boards, pp. 34, five folded sections of eight leaves,
King Graeme view full entry
Reference: see Timber. With two linocuts by Inge King, two lithographs by Graeme King, and two etchings by Bruno Leti, each signed and numbered. ‘A magnificent large format artist’s book with contributions by some of Australia’s most significant contemporary artists.  The colophon reads: ‘Timber by Chris Wallace-Crabbe was written in Melbourne, Australia, and designed by Noah Ross in New York. Raphael Fodde printed the text in his Officina in Woodmere, New York and at the Canberra School of Arts. The linocuts by Inge King were printed by Raphael Fodde in the studios of the Art Department at Brooklyn College. Graeme King pulled his lithographs in Warrandyte, Victoria. Bruno Leti printed his etchings, engravings, and monotypes on his press in Melbourne. This edition of 45 copies as printed on Magnani paper and signed by the poet and the artists. August 1998’.

Publishing details: New York and Melbourne : Raphael Fodde Editions, 1998. Folio, 515mm tall, spraypainted hessian over boards, pp. 34, five folded sections of eight leaves,
Leti Bruno view full entry
Reference: see Timber. With two linocuts by Inge King, two lithographs by Graeme King, and two etchings by Bruno Leti, each signed and numbered. ‘A magnificent large format artist’s book with contributions by some of Australia’s most significant contemporary artists.  The colophon reads: ‘Timber by Chris Wallace-Crabbe was written in Melbourne, Australia, and designed by Noah Ross in New York. Raphael Fodde printed the text in his Officina in Woodmere, New York and at the Canberra School of Arts. The linocuts by Inge King were printed by Raphael Fodde in the studios of the Art Department at Brooklyn College. Graeme King pulled his lithographs in Warrandyte, Victoria. Bruno Leti printed his etchings, engravings, and monotypes on his press in Melbourne. This edition of 45 copies as printed on Magnani paper and signed by the poet and the artists. August 1998’.

Publishing details: New York and Melbourne : Raphael Fodde Editions, 1998. Folio, 515mm tall, spraypainted hessian over boards, pp. 34, five folded sections of eight leaves,
Marrison Marionview full entry
Reference: Marion Marrison. Read & wrapped, viewed & banned : photographs 1974-1995. Includes essay by the artist
Publishing details: Adelaide : Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia, 1995. Quarto, self wrappers, pp. [4],
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Lost Tabletsview full entry
Reference: Lost Tablets, by Jan van Schaik : Limited edition box set.
Designed by Yanni Florence.
This limited edition box set includes the Lost Tablets book and 50 postcard images of the ‘dynamic’ face of each Lost Tablet featured in the book. The book includes images of the mute sides of the 50 featured Lost Tablets. Available in a limited edition of 20, signed by the author, Jan van Schaik.
The Lost Tablets are a series of works by Jan van Schaik that explore the geometric language of architecture through the medium of children’s building blocks. Constructed by van Schaik from found blocks (many bearing the teeth marks of their former owners), each tablet flickers with strange resonances that point to a shared but deeply subjective symbolism of building.
From the buttresses of Gothic cathedrals and the blue ceilings of the Shah Mosque of Isfahan, to the inhabited machines and weightless engineering of the Space Age, the genetic lineage of the Lost Tablets is impossible to unpick, even while the potential connections to architectural history are hard to ignore.
The Lost Tablets book continues this exploration of the tension between the ideal of a shared architectural language, and the intrinsically personal nature of architectural interpretation.
Within the book, 50 authors respond to the first 50 works in the Lost Tablets series, with each author articulating their perception of one work, in their own language, and in a form corresponding to their own interests. The authors come from diverse fields. They are economists, songwriters, comedians, artists, curators, architects, linguists, sex workers, journalists, historians, lawyers, writers, philosophers, designers, poets, jewellers, educators, cyberneticians, students, and therapists. Their readings are equally diverse.
Contributors
Adam Nathaniel Furman, Alonso Gaxiola, Amy Rudder, Anna Johnson, Annacaterina Piras, Anusha Kenny, Audrey Schmidt, Beth George, Caitlin Blanchfield, Caitlin Fraser, Cameron Bruhn, Catherine Pierce, Conrad Hamann, Ellen Broad, Ellie Rennie, Esther Anatolitis, Fleur Watson, Genevieve Bell, Giles Fielke, Giselle Stanborough, Jaxon Waterhouse, Johan Michalove, Julien Leyre, June Jones, Leon van Schaik, Léuli Eshrāghi, Lisa Sullivan, Liss Fenwick, Lucinda Price, Lucy Van, Mykaela Saunders, Nikos Papastergiadis, Perry Kulper, Peter Atkins, Queenie Bon Bon, Ray Edgar, Robin Cohen, Robyn Stonehouse, Rory Hyde, Sarah Jamieson, Shona Stark, Sofi and Ehsan, Su san Cohn, Tilda Njoo, Tim Johannessen, Tohru Horiguchi, Tom McIlroy, Vivian Gerrand, Wendy Radford
About the author
Based in Melbourne Australia, Jan van Schaik is an architect at MvS Architects, a researcher and senior lecturer at RMIT Architecture & Urban Design, and a creative sector consultant at Future Tense.
Jan is the founder and producer of the WRITING & CONCEPTS public lecture and publication series, which reflects on the role that writing plays in the development of contemporary creative practice.
 
 

Publishing details: Melbourne : Uro Publications, 2022. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. 108, illustrated, limited to 20 copies, housed in publisher’s box with accompanying set of postcards.
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McKenna Noelview full entry
Reference: End Street. ‘Noel McKenna’s paintings do a lot with a little. The senior Australian artist’s suburban interiors, solitary male inhabitants, and the various domesticated animals that keep them company, fit adroitly into the wider motif of the poetics of the banal. But it’s via his work’s quiet humour, tenderness and workaday melancholy that McKenna has fashioned such a unique, likeable and subtly emotive visual language. Put simply, his paintings just are.
Spanning various decades, the works that populate End Street – McKenna’s first book for Perimeter Editions – speak in the same humble, meandering cadence as the best of his output. Unimposing in their scale and spare in their information, these paintings, drawings, painted ceramic tiles and sculptures offer vantages on a life lived alone (bar the cat or the dog). Here, our silent protagonist smokes a pipe while reading his book, and subsists on a diet of sausages, eggs, toast and tea. Out the window, the night is still and clear, and from time to time a crescent moon gently casts its cool light.’
Publishing details: Melbourne : Perimeter Editions, 2019. Quarto, illustrated boards, pp. 90, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Pettifer Drewview full entry
Reference: Less than Lovers.
‘Following hot on the heels of his playfully provocative 2011 publication I keep mine hidden, Drew Pettifer presents a more languid, more moody and delicate collection of images in his latest book from M.33. Once again taking its name from a song title; this one from the Japanese band, Hoahio’s Less Than Lovers, More than Friends, the new book is beautifully designed and laid out by Joseph Johnson.
Edited by Melbourne curator Kyla Mcfarlane from a vast collection of Pettifer’s visual diaries, the resulting body of work – which McFarlane describes in her accompanying essay ‘Heatwave’ as ‘a complex party Pettifer is inviting us to’ – traverses a somewhat different terrain for Pettifer. As opposed to the exclusively male, sexually charged queer universe of his previous work, here we see a more open and varied world – more reflective of the wider milieu Pettifer moves in. Photographs of heterosexual couples and young women sit alongside ones of male couples, images of Mount Fuji, and young men isolated in natural locations. That is not to say that sex and nudity are absent in this book, as for Pettifer these aspects are central and in some ways animate the collection of often-disparate images.’
Publishing details: Melbourne : M.33, 2014. Quarto, lettered wrappers,  unpaginated, photographically illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Lovett Daneview full entry
Reference: Flowers.
‘Dane Lovett’s flower paintings both embrace and eschew their historical, thematic and allegorical roots. Dark, often monochromatic and subtly tonal in their palette, the scores of works that populate the Melbourne-based artist’s debut book Flowers gesture towards the syntaxes of minimalism and seriality as resolutely as they do the still life. It’s an intriguing dynamic, which expands and further articulates Lovett’s culturally savvy, reference-rich painting practice.
Where earlier works saw the artist construct still life arrangements from indoor plants and pop-cultural ephemera – VHS cassettes, vinyl records, CDs, ageing tech and the like – Lovett’s recent practice has seen him embrace repetition and delicate variation, with an unmistakably reductionist and art historical bent. Here, he recasts French artist Henri Fantin-Latour’s 1864 still life Flowers: Tulips, Camellias, Hyacinths in countless murky, monochromatic iterations – a single vase of flowers becoming a site for sustained painterly exploration, variation and rhythm. Extended series of foxgloves and waterlilies in various unnatural tones follow.
As the curator and academic Rosemary Forde writes in her essay for the book, Lovett’s repetitions ‘each seem to emote uniquely’, his dark and muddy images allowing us to project ‘our own familiar scenes, moments, memories, aspirations, sorrows’. More than many others in the art world, Lovett seems to recognise the fundamentally democratic nature of meaning. His subjects are everything and nothing, laden and null. He offers us a rich framework, only to leave us to our own devices.
Dane Lovett (b. 1984, Sydney) lives and works in Melbourne. He completed a Bachelor of Fine Art at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, in 2004 and received a Bachelor of Fine Art Honours (First Class) from Victorian College of Art, University of Melbourne, in 2007, and a Masters of Fine Art from Victorian College of Art, University of Melbourne, in 2016. He has exhibited extensively in Australia and internationally – including solo shows at Colette, Paris, and group shows at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney – and his work is held in public and private collections in Australia and Europe.’
Publishing details: Melbourne : Perimeter Editions, 2021. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 104, illustrated.
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Phillips Emmaview full entry
Reference: Send me a lullaby.
‘Send me a lullaby is a love letter to a city undergoing immense change, created during a period of both urban transformation and global upheaval. Emma Phillips was commissioned by Photo Australia to make a photographic portrait of Melbourne in the lead up to PHOTO 2021 International Festival of Photography. The resulting project – published as the first book in the PHOTO Editions series and launching at PHOTO 2021 – is a reflection on connection, navigation and time, and the constantly evolving relationship between people and place.
Phillips’ photographs contemplate urban, domestic and psychological space. Weaving into this series are portraits of people Phillips has come across in Melbourne, capturing a living, breathing city as it responds to the fallout of bushfires and a pandemic. These disparate photographs taken across different seasons construct a dialogue between some of the city’s component parts – homes, shops, parks, streets – with archaeological objects from beneath the city, offering myriad stories to uncover and tell..
Publishing details: Melbourne : Photo Australia x Perimeter Editions (Melbourne), 2021. Quarto, illustrated  boards, pp. 48, photographically illustrated.


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Wadelton Davidview full entry
Reference: Small Business
‘Small Business is a companion volume to David Wadelton’s Suburban Baroque – with the focus this time on work rather than domestic spaces. Designed once again by Yanni Florence and with an accompanying essay by Professor Natalie King OAM, Small Business looks at the small but enduring family-run businesses-often tucked away on suburban streets-that are now rapidly fading away. David Wadelton has gathered a considerable photographic archive of these interiors from all over Melbourne and regional Victoria over the last ten years with a couple of side excursions to iconic interstate locations. Many of the businesses have traded for decades, and continue to do so even as multi-storey developments and multi-nationals overshadow or consume them. One third of the shops featured in the book have already closed since they were photographed. Many of the interiors depicted are family businesses started by post-war migrants who came to Australia to start a new life and in so doing enriched and transformed our culture. The layouts featured are often pragmatic and utilitarian, arranged decades ago – often without regard for conventional design trends – and left that way. Some were on trend in their day but now look like museum settings. Still others fall on a wide spectrum from spartan, all the way to a tangled disorder that makes sense only to the proprietor. Whatever form taken they are a time-capsule of a generation who toiled in their shop for decades.
This collection is an ode to the overlooked, the obsolete – to those who march to a different drum.’
Publishing details: Melbourne : M.33, 2020. Quarto, illustrated boards, pp. 171, illustrated. printed in an edition of 500 copies.
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Marlow Jesseview full entry
Reference: Jesse Marlow – Second City.
‘When I was at photography school, every few weeks our photojournalism teacher would send the class off into the city on “Citywalks”. With an otherwise open brief, our only task was to keep an eye out for interesting scenes or moments. The aim was for students to open their minds visually by exploring our home town. I was instantly hooked by the freedom and unpredictability of shooting in this style. After studying, I spent the next five years exploring the Melbourne CBD thoroughfares and surrounding suburbs, slowly compiling the body of work Second City. I would often start and finish my day by sitting on the steps of Flinders Street Station, observing people as they moved in and around the iconic entrance and out onto the streets. The station steps were a wonderful backdrop for a street photographer. The scope and simplicity of being in and around the city with only a camera and a pocket full of film, is essentially something I continue to enjoy 20 years later.’
Second City is a collection of 44 black and white candid street photographs from Jesse Marlow’s hometown Melbourne. Photographed between the years 1998-2004 the book depicts the city as it was before the boom of the mid 2000s. The book features a foreword by Melbourne author Tony Birch and has been designed by Yanni Florence.’

Publishing details: Melbourne : Sling Shot Press, 2021. Quarto, illustrated boards, pp. 96, illustrated. Printed in an edition of 900 copies.
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Nangara : the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes Collectionview full entry
Reference: Nangara : the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes Collection. Complete in one volume.
Introductory essays by Geoffrey Bardon, Robert Edwards and Richard Kimber.
‘This catalogue was published for Nangara, the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes collection at Stichting Sint-Jan, Brugge March 9-June 23,1996 (180 works). Nangara is a collection of outstanding Australian Aboriginal art representing over 170 of the most important artists. A few hundred early works were the source to create the foundation stock for a commercial art gallery in Melbourne, the Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, those considered irreplaceable were chosen to form a personal collection not be sold but for exhibition, education and visual pleasure only. The late ’80’s proved to be the perfect timing and the Ebes Collection grew rapidly resulting in the first overseas exhibitions in the early ’90’s.’ – Trove.

Publishing details: Brugge : Stichting Sint-Jan for Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, [1996. Quarto, gilt-lettered black cloth (rubbed), pp. 100; [2]; 315, extensively illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Ebes Hank collectionview full entry
Reference: see Nangara : the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes Collection. Complete in one volume.
Introductory essays by Geoffrey Bardon, Robert Edwards and Richard Kimber.
‘This catalogue was published for Nangara, the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes collection at Stichting Sint-Jan, Brugge March 9-June 23,1996 (180 works). Nangara is a collection of outstanding Australian Aboriginal art representing over 170 of the most important artists. A few hundred early works were the source to create the foundation stock for a commercial art gallery in Melbourne, the Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, those considered irreplaceable were chosen to form a personal collection not be sold but for exhibition, education and visual pleasure only. The late ’80’s proved to be the perfect timing and the Ebes Collection grew rapidly resulting in the first overseas exhibitions in the early ’90’s.’ – Trove.

Publishing details: Brugge : Stichting Sint-Jan for Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, [1996. Quarto, gilt-lettered black cloth (rubbed), pp. 100; [2]; 315, extensively illustrated.
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Nangara : the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes Collection. Complete in one volume.
Introductory essays by Geoffrey Bardon, Robert Edwards and Richard Kimber.
‘This catalogue was published for Nangara, the Australian Aboriginal art exhibition from the Ebes collection at Stichting Sint-Jan, Brugge March 9-June 23,1996 (180 works). Nangara is a collection of outstanding Australian Aboriginal art representing over 170 of the most important artists. A few hundred early works were the source to create the foundation stock for a commercial art gallery in Melbourne, the Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, those considered irreplaceable were chosen to form a personal collection not be sold but for exhibition, education and visual pleasure only. The late ’80’s proved to be the perfect timing and the Ebes Collection grew rapidly resulting in the first overseas exhibitions in the early ’90’s.’ – Trove.

Publishing details: Brugge : Stichting Sint-Jan for Aboriginal Gallery of Dreamings, [1996. Quarto, gilt-lettered black cloth (rubbed), pp. 100; [2]; 315, extensively illustrated.
Graham Lorrie view full entry
Reference: Lorrie Graham : photojournalist
Publishing details: Sydney : Stills Gallery, 1992. Quarto, exhibition catalogue, folded sheet, pp. [4], illustrated, essay.
Ref: 1000
Cotton Oliveview full entry
Reference: Olive Cotton, essay by Helen Ennis, price list enclosed.
‘The australian Girls Own Gallery (aGOG) was a commercial gallery that operated in Leichhardt Street, Kingston in Canberra from 1989 to 1998. The gallery was owned and operated by former National Gallery of Australia curator Helen Maxwell.
The gallery was significant because it only represented women artists (although towards the end of its operations the work of men would be very rarely exhibited). Maxwell started the gallery because she felt as that there was a bias against women artists within the art world and she ‘felt strongly that women didn’t get enough of a voice’.’ – Wikipedia

Publishing details: Canberra : Australian Girls Own Gallery (aGOG), 1992. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. [16], illustrated
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australian Girls Own Gallery view full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton, essay by Helen Ennis, price list enclosed. Scarce.
‘The australian Girls Own Gallery (aGOG) was a commercial gallery that operated in Leichhardt Street, Kingston in Canberra from 1989 to 1998. The gallery was owned and operated by former National Gallery of Australia curator Helen Maxwell.
The gallery was significant because it only represented women artists (although towards the end of its operations the work of men would be very rarely exhibited). Maxwell started the gallery because she felt as that there was a bias against women artists within the art world and she ‘felt strongly that women didn’t get enough of a voice’.’ – Wikipedia

Publishing details: Canberra : australian Girls Own Gallery (aGOG), 1992. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. [16], illustrated
Michaelis Margaretview full entry
Reference: Michaelis Margaret. Exhibition of photographs by Margaret Michaelis (1902 – 1985), an Austrian born Jewish artist who fled Austria upon the rise of Hitler, moving to Barcelona and settling in Australia in 1939, where she lived in Sydney and then Melbourne. Her work draws upon the inspiration of Brassai.
Publishing details: Canberra : Australian National Gallery, 1987. Quarto, self-wrappers, punched holes, pp. [8], illustrated.


Ref: 1000
In Focusview full entry
Reference: In focus : 5 contemporary women photo-artists : 3 April – 30 May 2004. Reproductions of works by Brenda Croft, Tracey Moffatt, Anne Ferran, Robyn Stacey and Pat Brassington, essay by Renee Porter
Publishing details: Campbelltown, [N.S.W.] : Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, [2004]. Quarto, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Ref: 1000
Croft Brenda view full entry
Reference: see In focus : 5 contemporary women photo-artists : 3 April – 30 May 2004. Reproductions of works by Brenda Croft, Tracey Moffatt, Anne Ferran, Robyn Stacey and Pat Brassington, essay by Renee Porter
Publishing details: Campbelltown, [N.S.W.] : Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, [2004]. Quarto, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Moffatt Tracey view full entry
Reference: see In focus : 5 contemporary women photo-artists : 3 April – 30 May 2004. Reproductions of works by Brenda Croft, Tracey Moffatt, Anne Ferran, Robyn Stacey and Pat Brassington, essay by Renee Porter
Publishing details: Campbelltown, [N.S.W.] : Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, [2004]. Quarto, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Ferran Anne view full entry
Reference: see In focus : 5 contemporary women photo-artists : 3 April – 30 May 2004. Reproductions of works by Brenda Croft, Tracey Moffatt, Anne Ferran, Robyn Stacey and Pat Brassington, essay by Renee Porter
Publishing details: Campbelltown, [N.S.W.] : Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, [2004]. Quarto, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Stacey Robyn view full entry
Reference: see In focus : 5 contemporary women photo-artists : 3 April – 30 May 2004. Reproductions of works by Brenda Croft, Tracey Moffatt, Anne Ferran, Robyn Stacey and Pat Brassington, essay by Renee Porter
Publishing details: Campbelltown, [N.S.W.] : Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, [2004]. Quarto, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Brassington Pat view full entry
Reference: see In focus : 5 contemporary women photo-artists : 3 April – 30 May 2004. Reproductions of works by Brenda Croft, Tracey Moffatt, Anne Ferran, Robyn Stacey and Pat Brassington, essay by Renee Porter
Publishing details: Campbelltown, [N.S.W.] : Campbelltown City Bicentennial Art Gallery, [2004]. Quarto, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Garden of Edenview full entry
Reference: see Garden of Eden - landscape photography in Australia. illustrated with photographs of New South Wales landscapes. Symons took these photopgraphs of Australian landscapes between 2012 & 2014.
Publishing details: [Redfern, New South Wales] : [Suellen Symons], [2014]. Oblong quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 26,
photography landscapeview full entry
Reference: see Garden of Eden - landscape photography in Australia. illustrated with photographs of New South Wales landscapes.
Publishing details: [Redfern, New South Wales] : [Suellen Symons], [2014]. Oblong quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 26,
Stacey Robyn view full entry
Reference: Robyn Stacey : beau monde, exhibition catalogue, essay by Dr. Jacqueline Millner,
Publishing details: Sydney : Stills Gallery, 2006. Oblong octavo, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Ref: 1000
Stacey Robyn view full entry
Reference: Robyn Stacey : All the sounds of fear
exhibition catalogue, essay by Anna Johnson, Catalogue of exhibition held at Mori Gallery, October 2 – 21, 1990.
Publishing details: Sydney : Mori Gallery, 1990. Octavo, printed wrappers, pp. [16. Printed in an edition of 1000 copies.
Ref: 1000
Stacey Robyn view full entry
Reference: Robyn Stacey : Tell Tales and True
exhibition catalogue, essay by Peter Timms,
Publishing details: Sydney : Stills Gallery, 2011. Octavo, self-wrappers, pp. [6],
Ref: 1000
Gosper Linsey view full entry
Reference: Linsey Gosper : object love
exhibition catalogue, essay by Laura Castignini,
Publishing details: Sydney : Stills Gallery, 2012. Oblong octavo, self-wrappers, pp. [4],
Ref: 1000
Images of Aboriginal Australiaview full entry
Reference: Images of Aboriginal Australia. ‘An important catalogue of the collection assembled by anthropologists Emeritus Professor R. M. and Dr C. H. Berndt during their fieldwork in various parts of Aboriginal Australia (primarily Arnhem Land, Central Australia and Western Australia), brought from the University of Sydney to the University of Western Australia, and now on permanent display at the Berndt Museum of Anthropology at UWA.
The catalogue describes and illustrates bark paintings, message boards, ornaments, weapons, a significant number of sculptural works, Papunya paintings, etc. The text is, as one would expect, scholarly and detailed.’
Publishing details: Nedlands, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 1988. Series: University of Western Australia Anthropology Research Museum Occasional Paper no. 2. Large octavo (250 x 175 mm), pictorial wrappers (front wrapper stapled, pp 68, with b/w photographic illustrations throughout, maps;

Ref: 1000
Aboriginal art view full entry
Reference: see Images of Aboriginal Australia. ‘An important catalogue of the collection assembled by anthropologists Emeritus Professor R. M. and Dr C. H. Berndt during their fieldwork in various parts of Aboriginal Australia (primarily Arnhem Land, Central Australia and Western Australia), brought from the University of Sydney to the University of Western Australia, and now on permanent display at the Berndt Museum of Anthropology at UWA.
The catalogue describes and illustrates bark paintings, message boards, ornaments, weapons, a significant number of sculptural works, Papunya paintings, etc. The text is, as one would expect, scholarly and detailed.’
Publishing details: Nedlands, W.A. : University of Western Australia Press, 1988. Series: University of Western Australia Anthropology Research Museum Occasional Paper no. 2. Large octavo (250 x 175 mm), pictorial wrappers (front wrapper stapled, pp 68, with b/w photographic illustrations throughout, maps;

Leti Brunoview full entry
Reference: Dream walls. Images of Roman walls at Herculaneum and Pompeii
Publishing details: Melbourne : the artist, 2018. Octavo, printed gatefold wrappers, pp. 114, photographs and images by Bruno Leti. Printed in a small run of unnumbered copies. Signed by the artist.
Ref: 1000
Trusler Peterview full entry
Reference: ONLINE AUCTION Thurs 14 April, 2022: This week, the Auction Salon features 77 watercolours by Peter Trusler, previously held in the NAB Art Collection. Peter Trusler (born 1954) is an Australian artist known for his paintings of wildlife and his scientific reconstructions of prehistoric fauna. This collection is part of a series of 80 works purchased by NAB and illustrated in the book, 'Birds of Australian Gardens'.
Publishing details: Joels auction, 14.4.2022
Ref: 1000
Herel Petr 1943-2022view full entry
Reference: see obituary, Australian Galleries, 14.4.2022: Vale Petr Herel 1943-2022.
‘All at Australian Galleries are deeply saddened to hear of the death of celebrated printmaker and artist book maker, Petr Herel.

‘Every now and again an artist comes across your boughs with no school except for their own unique vision and ability. Petr Herel was one such artist. One is left wondering where inspiration for such spooky and weird images – sometimes worrying and always wonderful – came from. Maybe the disasters of Europe. These were youthful images, of experiences lived and never quite able to run away from. Such extraordinary times inspired tough and beautiful art making. Vale Petr Herel 1943-2022All at Australian Galleries are deeply saddened to hear of the death of celebrated printmaker and artist book maker, Petr Herel.
Petr Herel was born before the digital age, of mobile communication and instant knowledge; this was not his world and thank goodness for it. Only quality, quality, quality, unable to pretend, he lived with the truth of angels. He never chased popularity, but his vision took us to another place and his contribution to the art world was indelible.’ 
– Stuart Purves, 2 April 2022

Petr Herel was born before the digital age, of mobile communication and instant knowledge; this was not his world and thank goodness for it. Only quality, quality, quality, unable to pretend, he lived with the truth of angels. He never chased popularity, but his vision took us to another place and his contribution to the art world was indelible.’ 
– Stuart Purves, 2 April 2022.
Vale Petr Herel 1943-2022: All at Australian Galleries are deeply saddened to hear of the death of celebrated printmaker and artist book maker, Petr Herel.

‘Every now and again an artist comes across your boughs with no school except for their own unique vision and ability. Petr Herel was one such artist. One is left wondering where inspiration for such spooky and weird images – sometimes worrying and always wonderful – came from. Maybe the disasters of Europe. These were youthful images, of experiences lived and never quite able to run away from. Such extraordinary times inspired tough and beautiful art making. 

Petr Herel was born before the digital age, of mobile communication and instant knowledge; this was not his world and thank goodness for it. Only quality, quality, quality, unable to pretend, he lived with the truth of angels. He never chased popularity, but his vision took us to another place and his contribution to the art world was indelible.’ 
– Stuart Purves, 2 April 2022Vale Petr Herel 1943-2022All at Australian Galleries are deeply saddened to hear of the death of celebrated printmaker and artist book maker, Petr Herel.

‘Every now and again an artist comes across your boughs with no school except for their own unique vision and ability. Petr Herel was one such artist. One is left wondering where inspiration for such spooky and weird images – sometimes worrying and always wonderful – came from. Maybe the disasters of Europe. These were youthful images, of experiences lived and never quite able to run away from. Such extraordinary times inspired tough and beautiful art making. 

Petr Herel was born before the digital age, of mobile communication and instant knowledge; this was not his world and thank goodness for it. Only quality, quality, quality, unable to pretend, he lived with the truth of angels. He never chased popularity, but his vision took us to another place and his contribution to the art world was indelible.’ 
– Stuart Purves, 2 April 2022.
Vale Petr Herel 1943-2022All at Australian Galleries are deeply saddened to hear of the death of celebrated printmaker and artist book maker, Petr Herel.

‘Every now and again an artist comes across your boughs with no school except for their own unique vision and ability. Petr Herel was one such artist. One is left wondering where inspiration for such spooky and weird images – sometimes worrying and always wonderful – came from. Maybe the disasters of Europe. These were youthful images, of experiences lived and never quite able to run away from. Such extraordinary times inspired tough and beautiful art making. 

Petr Herel was born before the digital age, of mobile communication and instant knowledge; this was not his world and thank goodness for it. Only quality, quality, quality, unable to pretend, he lived with the truth of angels. He never chased popularity, but his vision took us to another place and his contribution to the art world was indelible.’ 
– Stuart Purves, 2 April 2022
Southern Claraview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 12: CLARA SOUTHERN
(1860 - 1940)
THE CHRISTMAS CAMP
oil on canvas
25.5 x 41.0 cm
signed lower right: C. Southern
inscribed with title on stretcher bar verso: The Christmas Camp.
bears inscription verso: By Clara Southern / C Southern 
bears inscription on frame verso: Mr G P Cooper / … / 6 Waltham St. / Richmond

PROVENANCE
Mr George Page Cooper, Melbourne (bears inscription verso)
Private collection
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 4 November 1987, lot 65
Earl Gallery, Victoria
Private collection, Victoria, acquired from the above in November 1987

EXHIBITED 
Exhibition of Australian Paintings, Earl Gallery, Victoria, nd, cat. 6 (illus. in exhibition catalogue)

ESSAY 
We are grateful to Brenda Martin Thomas, wife of the late David Thomas AM, for kindly allowing us to reproduce David's research and writing in this catalogue entry.

Clara Southern is widely regarded as one of the leading women artists of Australian Impressionism. During this Golden Age of Australian art, she and her colleagues Jane Sutherland and Jane Price were considered to be the three leading female figures. While Sutherland is usually given prime position, many would agree with arts writer and historian John McDonald who stated that '...one could make a credible case for Clara Southern... as the most significant woman artist of the era.’1 Perhaps this is an honour that will be achieved when her achievements, such as The Christmas Camp, become wider known. 

Southern studied under Madame Mouchette at the National Gallery School, and under Walter Withers at his home in Heidelberg. Her fellow students at the Gallery included Arthur Streeton, Sutherland and Emanuel Phillips Fox. Although she worked in the open air directly from the motif, and made weekend painting trips to Eaglemont artists' camp, her view of the landscape is as if seen through women's eyes. In her more lyrical approach to the Australian scene she reflected the beneficial influence of her teachers Frederick McCubbin and Withers, avoiding the heat and blinding light of the noonday sun for quieter moods of nature. Like her fellow women artists, she preferred a more domesticated bush to one populated by male heroics. Moreover, her settled countryside is often peopled with women as in An Old Bee Farm, c.1900, acquired by the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, through the Felton Bequest in 1942. An Old Bee Farm and other major works were included in her exhibition at the Athenaeum Hall in 1914. The exhibition confirmed that her best landscapes were painted at Warrandyte. Following her marriage to John Flinn in 1905, they moved to Blythebank at Warrandyte. She lived and painted there for the remainder of her long life. Here Southern became a central figure in a growing community of artists who at times included Louis McCubbin, Penleigh Boyd, and Harold Herbert. Clearly a leader of her time, she exhibited with the Victorian Artists' Society from 1889 – 1917 and was not only the first female member of the Australian Art Association but the first to serve on its committee. Memberships included the Lyceum Club and the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Southern’s love of the Warrandyte countryside is readily apparent in The Christmas Camp through its soft, magical blues, mauves, fresh greens, and the relaxed charm of the artist’s camp nestled within the landscape. Enveloped in an atmosphere that is palpable, the work encapsulates her close identification with the scene, passionately embraced on first sight and maintained throughout her life; as elucidated by one contemporary critic at the time of the Athenaeum exhibition in 1914,

‘Miss Clara Southern (Mrs J. Flinn) is a sweet and original singer of the Australian bush in colour, which, by the most skilful use of her pigments, she realises in all its beauty and charm, its majestic silences, its harmonies, and those mysterious distances we all know and feel when in its midst. We can almost hear the wind sighing and sobbing through her trees and that furtive movement of life beneath the beautiful undergrowth that trembles in her foregrounds. Her landscapes are truly poems, full of sentiment and feeling, and that artistic reticence so seldom met with, which never allows nature to be for one moment oppressed or overstepped, or the note forced under any pretence.’2

1. McDonald, J., Art of Australia, Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Limited, Sydney, 2008, vol. 1, p. 606
2. ‘A Lyrical Painter’, Kyneton Guardian, Victoria, 14 March 1914
de Maistre Royview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 3:
ROY DE MAISTRE
(1894 - 1968)
THE PINES, 1921
oil on cardboard
29.0 x 27.0 cm
signed and dated lower left: R. de Mestre / 1921

PROVENANCE
Mrs Ronnie Dangar, Sydney (bears inscription verso)
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney
Christie’s, Sydney, 3 – 4 October 1972, lot 266
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Mr Alan Greenway, Australia and USA, acquired from the above
Thence by descent
Private collection, California, USA

ESSAY
In August 1919, Roy de Maistre (then known as Roi de Mestre) and his colleague Roland Wakelin held Australia’s first modernist exhibition at Gayfield Shaw’s Art Salon in Sydney. It was a show full of vibrant colour matched to a musical scale of the artists’ devising. Of the fourteen works shown, eleven were Cubist-informed scenes of the harbour’s foreshores and boatsheds, but the remainder were non-objective abstractions, a genre never seen before in this country. Titled Colour in Art, the event still generates fascination and comment over a century later but it needs to be emphasised that this was only a starting point for both artists, and their subsequent careers took many divergent paths as the years progressed. Indeed, within a year Wakelin and de Maistre began studying the controversial ‘tonalist’ theories presented by the Scottish-born artist Max Meldrum, an approach in apparent opposition to the ideas proposed through Colour in Art.
 
In December 1919, Meldrum’s student Colin Colahan published a book entitled Max Meldrum: his art and views, centred around a key lecture from 1917 which argued that ‘tone and proportion gives us what is generally called ‘a perfect work of art’, without any relation to the actual amount of time which the Artist has bestowed upon his picture.’1 Meldrum believed that the careful perception and analysis of tone and tonal relationships would produce an exact appearance of the thing seen. The gallerist and framer John Young purchased several copies of the book which he gave to his artist-friends, including de Maistre, who subsequently attended a lecture when Meldrum visited Sydney for six weeks in 1921. Such was his powers of persuasion that other Sydney artists were also intrigued by his theories, including Wakelin, Grace Cossington Smith, Elioth Gruner, and Lloyd Rees. The Pines, 1921, is one of a small number of Meldrum-esque works painted by de Maistre and it most likely depicts a scene near his family home in Sutton Forest in the southern highlands of New South Wales. It is a testament to his strong self-belief that de Maistre’s does not completely abandon colour, as evidenced by the deep green of the two pines counterbalanced by patches of soft violet within the shadows and the surface of the road, strategies which give greater intensity to the more muted tonal phrasing championed by Meldrum.
 
Related paintings that fall within this sequence depict Government House in Sydney, other views of Sutton Forest and floral bunches of which Still life (also known as White Roses), 1922 in the Art Gallery of New South Wales became his winning entry into the Society of Artists’ Travelling Scholarship, allowing for his first overseas journey in 1923. Despite its assured touch and pleasing subject, it appears that The Pines was never exhibited by de Maistre and only came to light when the famed dealer, Joseph Brown, was given access to the artist’s Estate after his death in London in 1968. Subsequently sold at auction in 1972, the painting has not been seen publicly during the interceding five decades and represents an exciting re-appearance for the artist’s catalogue.
                                                                                                                                      
1. Meldrum, M., ‘The invariable truths of depictive art’, 1917, in Colahan, C. (ed.), Max Meldrum: his art and views, McCubbin, Melbourne, 1919, p. 43
 
ANDREW GAYNOR

Beckett Clariceview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lots 4 and 5:
CLARICE BECKETT
(1887 - 1935)
THE RED BUS
oil on canvas on compressed card
37.5 x 45.5 cm
bears inscriptions verso: Athenaeum / A / 45/ 75
bears inscriptions verso on backing paper: 5. "THE RED BUS" / Exhibited Solo Exhibition / 
David Sumner Gallery, Adelaide, 1973
bears label verso with statement of authenticity signed by the artist's sister Mrs Hilda Mangan

PROVENANCE
Rosalind Humphries Galleries, Melbourne (label attached verso) 
Private collection 
Peter Walker Fine Art, Adelaide 
Sandra Powell and Andrew King, Melbourne
Mossgreen, Melbourne, 19 March 2014, lot 1 
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne (label attached verso) 
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 2015 

EXHIBITED
Probably: Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, cat. 45 
Homage to Clarice Beckett (1887 – 1935): Idylls of Melbourne and Beaumaris, Rosalind Humphries Galleries, Melbourne, 12 November – 1 December 1972, cat. 14 
Homage to Clarice Beckett (1887 – 1935): Idylls of Melbourne and Beaumaris, David Sumner Gallery, Adelaide, 25 July – 19 August 1973, cat. 5 
Australian Women Artists Between the Wars, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 3 March – 30 April 2015 (illus. in exhibition catalogue) 

ESSAY 
We are grateful to Olivia Abbay, Sandringham and District Historical Society, for her assistance with this catalogue entry.

On an invitingly sunny day, a red bus trundles through a quiet bayside street south of Melbourne whilst stray pedestrians walk the other way. It is a simple moment from a simpler time, but one made manifest – and therefore significant – through the unparalleled aesthetic eye of Clarice Beckett. She is best known for her paintings of Beaumaris and the city, each infused with her trademark ‘blur and haze’, suggestive of an alternate world informed by Theosophy and allied spiritual philosophies. Beckett was deeply interested in such views and actively attended seminars and socialised with other advocates, including the family of Colquhoun artists. In line with Theosophic and Buddhist principles, Beckett saw each painting as ‘a self-renewing act’ akin to that of devotion.1 She was also a prodigious reader, with the famed modernist Gino Nibbi, owner of the Leonardo Bookshop in Little Collins Street, once proclaiming her ‘the best read woman in Melbourne.’2 Whilst the painterly technique Beckett developed was informed strongly by the ‘tonalist’ theories of Max Meldrum, it was also built upon her own nascent talent and her training between 1914 and 1916 under Frederick McCubbin at the National Gallery Art School. Indeed, Beckett only studied under Meldrum for nine months after she had attended one of his lectures in 1917, but ultimately transcended all these influences to become the distinctive artist whose work is so treasured today.

A distracting part of the reason for this eminence is the tragic elements of her story including her premature death at forty-eight and the disastrous loss of so many of her paintings due to exposure to the elements, but such perspectives undermine the strength of her achievements. One of her best known statements reinforces her belief that ‘[my aim is] 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 and set forth in correct tones so as to give nearly as possible an exact illusion of reality.’3 In paintings such as The Red Bus, this ambition is evident through a marvellous interplay of colour, design, armature and technique. The white vertical dashes, indicative of telegraph poles or trees, provide a balanced counterpoint to the visual weight of the bus’ red, and leads the eye effortlessly to the pedestrians. The juxtaposition of the forward-facing vehicle and the retreating figures creates a duality of force that emphasises the snap-shot immediacy of the scene, whilst the feathered edges increase the sense of ephemerality. The bus itself is hard to identify specifically as a number of services operated in the area from as early as 1912, with ‘Mr Boyd’s service’ to Black Rock, and many used vehicles with a similar front cowling to Beckett’s. However, it is her inclusion of the bus as a central motif, as with cars, telegraph poles and motor bikes in related paintings, that marks Beckett for all time as a painterly herald for modernism in life as well as art.

1. Hollinrake, R., ‘Behind the scenes’ in Clarice Beckett biography, unpublished, cited in Lock, T., Clarice Beckett: The present moment, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 2021, p. 32, fn. 5
2. Hollinrake, R., Clarice Beckett: politically incorrect, Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, 1999, p. 12, fn. 6
3. Clarice Beckett, (catalogue entry), Twenty Melbourne painters: 6th annual exhibition, Atheneum Gallery, Melbourne, 1924

ANDREW GAYNOR
and

CLARICE BECKETT
(1887 - 1935)
THE SOLITARY BATHING BOX, c.1932
oil on canvas on board
38.5 x 45.5 cm
signed lower left: C Beckett
bears inscription verso: “THE SOLITARY BATHING BOX” / BY CLARICE BECKETT. 10 guineas – / THE MELDRUM GALLERY / (J. H. MINOGUE) / 127 QUEEN ST / MELBOURNE

PROVENANCE
Private collection
L.J. Cook and Company Pty. Ltd., Melbourne
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above on 30 June 1998

EXHIBITED
Probably: Exhibition of Paintings by Clarice Beckett, The Meldrum Gallery, Melbourne, 28 November – 9 December 1933 
Clarice Beckett: Politically Incorrect, The Ian Potter Museum of Art, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne; SH Ervin Gallery (National Trust of Australia), Sydney; Orange Regional Gallery, New South Wales; Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide; Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria; Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart; Burnie Regional Art Gallery, Tasmania, 5 February 1999 – 22 May 2000 (label attached verso)

LITERATURE
Hollinrake, R., Clarice Beckett: Politically Incorrect, The Ian Potter Museum of Art, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, 1999, cat. 65, p. 76


We are grateful to Rosalind Hollinrake for her assistance with this catalogue entry.

ESSAY
For nearly four decades, the paintings of Clarice Beckett vanished from public view and it was not until the gallerist, Ros Hollinrake, mounted a series of ground-breaking exhibitions from 1971 that this omission began to change. An early visitor to the first show was the painter Fred Williams, who then encouraged the National Gallery of Australia’s inaugural director James Mollison to follow suit. Equally impressed by what he saw, Mollison purchased eight paintings for the national collection, and Beckett’s fame has since increased to such an extent that almost every one of the country’s major institutions now owns examples of her work. She was, in the words of Germaine Greer, ‘the first artist to paint the suburbs of Australia… Australia as it really is, as we know it’;1 whilst the artist Sir William Dargie considered her to be ‘a pure and perfect artist in her own way, one of the finest ever to work in Australia.’2 

Beckett famously studied for a short period under the theorist Max Meldrum who expounded his theory of the ‘Science of Appearances’, but hers was a talent which would not be shackled to such rigid rules. She read widely and was a committed attendee to lectures regarding Theosophy and Buddhism. On top of her prior training at the National Gallery School under Fred McCubbin, Beckett’s combined talents saw her transcend the work of Meldrum who, for example, abhorred too much colour, an opinion in stark contrast to the radiant hues in paintings by Beckett such as The Solitary Bathing Box, c.1932. She was a prolific artist who used flat brushwork and thin paint that was smoothed into the canvas, a technique Hollinrake once described as being ‘really healthy. It’s paint you want to touch… They have that glow.’3 Others recognised a moody haze akin to Whistler, whilst Beckett herself talked of the ‘musicality’ her works projected. In all her paintings – undeniably – is an enveloping atmosphere of tranquillity that underscores an equal sense of spontaneity, of a snapshot quickly taken before the subject is even aware.

Although she travelled much within Victoria, Beckett’s home base was Beaumaris on Port Phillip Bay and she painted the region ceaselessly. Resisting her colleague’s suggestions that she should travel abroad, she argued that ‘I have only just got the hang of painting Beaumaris after all these years, why should I go somewhere else strange to paint?’4 Numbers of these bathing huts were clustered on the foreshore during Beckett’s lifetime, but many were destroyed through a series of tremendous storms starting at the end of 1934. As such, it is hard to exactly situate the subject of The Solitary Bathing Box but its outlook on the long expanse of the Mentone cliffs with the hint of a headland to the left suggests that it may have been sited at her local beach on Watkin’s Bay. The hazy summer sky and the jaunty red bathing suit of the striding figure indicates a hot, sunny day - the colours of which radiate through the waters to the right of the hut, painted by Beckett in striking bands of violet, blue and soft ochre. 

1. Germaine Greer, quoted in Smee, S., ‘Painter put her soul into suburbia’, Sydney Morning Herald, 24 April 1999, p. 5 
2. Dargie, Sir W., ‘Introduction’ in Homage to Clarice Beckett (1887-1935): idylls of Melbourne and Beaumaris, Rosalind Humphries Galleries, Melbourne, 1971
3. Rosalind Hollinrake, quoted in Smee, S., ibid.
4. Clarice Beckett, quoted in Hollinrake, R., Clarice Beckett: the artist and her circle, Macmillan, Melbourne, 1979, p.21 

ANDREW GAYNOR
Grey-Smith Guyview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 6:
GUY GREY-SMITH
(1916 - 1981)
BUNKER BAY, 1958
oil on canvas
51.5 x 67.0 cm
signed and dated lower right: G Grey Smith/58

PROVENANCE
Gallery 52, Perth
Private collection, Perth, acquired from the above on 16 March 1982
Thence by descent
Private collection, Sydney 

EXHIBITED
Gallery 52, Perth, 1982

ESSAY
Bunker Bay is a favourite and secluded destination for holiday makers in Western Australia. Located 260 kilometres south of Perth, it is the last beach before Cape Naturaliste, at the western edge of Geographe Bay. Now braced by resorts and expensive homes, it was a pristine experience in the 1950s when Guy Grey-Smith painted this scene of the iridescent waters lapping the sands, anchored at either end by jagged rocks. It is possible that the artist visited the area for holidays with his own parents in the 1920s and 1930s, but he was now accompanied by his own family, and it is likely that the picnic group on the shore includes his wife and children. Distinctively, Grey-Smith has chosen to paint the scene from a small boat off-shore, a viewpoint which emphasises the quietude of the scene.


Bunker Bay, 1958, is one of a number of his paintings of the locale and sits at the mid-point of his development from a post-impressionist technique to his mature ‘slab form’ paintings from 1960 onwards. Grey-Smith first studied art as a convalescent former-prisoner of war at a sanitorium in southern England where he was treated for tuberculosis in 1944. He then trained for two years at the Chelsea School of Arts before returning to Western Australia in late 1947, visiting the forests of Fontainebleau en route in homage to his hero Cézanne. In 1952, he painted his first view of Bunker Bay (untraced) and the following year, he and his artist-wife Helen returned to London where he studied fresco techniques. Whilst there, he was mesmerised by an exhibition of the high-colour works of the French Fauves and his subsequent paintings exhibit his attempts to unite these disparate influences. For Bunker Bay, Winter, 1956 (private collection), Grey-Smith stood at the eastern edge and fills the scene with radiant colour – jarring in its contrast – contained within bold outlines, set against solid patches of pigment, indicative of similar results achieved consecutively in his frescos. For the painting on offer here, a similar approach is present but there is also greater fragmentation as he allows his brush to dictate the passage. His treatment of the tree canopies as self-contained entities is distinctly his own and can be seen in works as early as Dongara Flats, 1950 (Edith Cowan University) and Jarrahs, 1953 (Art Gallery of Western Australia). The contrasting cadmium yellow of the boulders in this lot illuminates the foreground and gives the sense of a sun-drenched whole, indicating that it was the summer school holidays when the journey was undertaken.

Although this painting was not exhibited during the artist’s lifetime, it was painted in a pivotal period for the artist, with his major work Gascoigne River Country purchased that year by the Art Gallery of New South Wales. 

ANDREW GAYNOR
Ref: 145
Hawkins Weaverview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 7:
WEAVER HAWKINS
(1893 - 1977)
GONDOLAS, 1958
oil on composition board 
60.5 x 77.5 cm
signed and dated lower right: Raokin 58

PROVENANCE
Scheding Berry Fine Art, Sydney
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above on 23 August 1986

EXHIBITED 
H.F. Weaver-Hawkins (Raokin) 1893 – 1977, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 5-24 April 1978, cat 37

LITERATURE 
H.F. Weaver-Hawkins (Raokin) 1893 – 1977, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney 1978, exhibition invitation, colour illustration inside cover
McIntyre, A., ‘Weaver Hawkins – a tribute to a pioneer’, The Australian, Sydney, 15 April 1978

ESSAY
Australia has produced a small number of artists whose technique is undeniably their own, including individuals such as Brett Whiteley and John Olsen. A further name is Weaver Hawkins whose bold colours and rhythmic pictorial compositions built on his early training in England at a time of great artistic revolt, fanned spectacularly by the Vorticists, whose Cubist-inspired ideas left a lasting legacy within Hawkins’ work. He was also drawn to ‘compositional theories as Dynamic Symmetry, Platonic Solids, Magic Squares and the Modular’;1 which resulted in him becoming ‘one of the finest and most original mid-century painters working in Sydney (painting and exhibiting) for forty years.’2 In Gondolas, 1958, Hawkins’ love of vorticist design turns the otherwise touristy motif of gondolas into a charged mandala of pattern within pattern which speaks directly to the lively movement of the gondoliers and their craft. 

Underscoring Hawkins’ meticulous work is the devastating knowledge of his physical disabilities. A soldier during World War One, he was severely maimed by shrapnel and shot several times before enduring a two-day crawl back to safety. More than twenty operations were then undertaken on his arms – both elbow joints were removed – leaving him with a withered right and a barely functional left. A natural right-hander, he trained himself to use his left, supported by the right, first by mastering drawing and then, unbelievably, etching with beautifully and sensitively drawn results. His poignant Self portrait, 1920 (Art Gallery of New South Wales) is an exquisite early example. He held his first solo exhibition in 1923, but due to press notices which emphasised his disability, he adopted the art-name 'Raokin' to divert attention. After some years living the expatriate life in Europe, Hawkins migrated to Australia with his young family in 1935, moving to Mona Vale, one of Sydney’s northern beach suburbs. Their precinct became known as the ‘mad half mile’ for its high concentration of artists, theatre directors and writers, including Rah Fizelle and Arthur Murch, who lived next door. 

He loved Mona Vale so much that his wife Rene had to force Hawkins to travel back overseas for an eleven-month journey through Europe over 1956 – 57 where he sketched the inspiration for Gondolas en route. Due to his arms, each painting was a slow process, supported by ‘a number of quick sketches… followed by a more detailed ink and wash sketch, then a full watercolour study... he also sometimes painted a small oil sketch before beginning the final work.’3 One such study of Gondolas was included in his posthumous 1978 exhibition at Macquarie Galleries and in a review of this exhibition, the painting (this lot) was singled out by one newspaper critic who was impressed by Hawkins’ ‘dominating concern for areas of flat bright colour with hard edged shapes (where) spiralling linear patterns carry the eye in, out and around the compositions.’4 The Art Gallery of New South Wales owns another work from the European journey, In Lisbon, 1958, which features a birds-eye view of a descending staircase. In a similar manner, Hawkins’ pronounced use of directional lines in Gondolas draws the eye ceaselessly through the interlocking patterns and design anchored at their centre by the pair of bold, red-striped poles.

1. Thomas, D., ‘Weaver Hawkins’, Project 11: Weaver Hawkins, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 7 February – 14 March 1976
2. Radford, R., ‘Foreword note’, Weaver Hawkins 1893-1977: Memorial retrospective exhibition 1977 – 1979, Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Victoria, 1977 (n.p.)
3. Chanin, E. & Miller, S., The art and life of Weaver Hawkins, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1995, p. 59 
4. McIntyre, A., ‘Weaver Hawkins – a tribute to a pioneer’, The Australian, Sydney, 15 – 16 April 1978

ANDREW GAYNOR
Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 13:
TOM ROBERTS
(1856 - 1931)
PORTRAIT OF FLORENCE GREAVES, 1898
pastel on paper on compressed card
89.0 x 53.5 cm
signed and dated lower left: Tom Roberts / 1898 .

PROVENANCE
Private collection
Dalia Stanley & Co., Sydney, 3 December 1995, lot 25
Deutscher Fine Art, Melbourne
Private collection, New South Wales

EXHIBITED 
Tom Roberts: Retrospective, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 4 October – 17 November 1996; Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart, 29 November 1996 – 27 January 1997; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 11 February – 6 April 1997; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 18 April – 1 June 1997; Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, 11 June – 27 July 1997, cat. 63 (label attached verso)

LITERATURE
Radford, R., Tom Roberts: Retrospective, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 1996, p. 210 (illus., as ‘Portrait of a standing woman’)
Cotter, J., Tom Roberts & The Art of Portraiture, Thames and Hudson, Melbourne, 2015, fig. 6.5, pp. 278, 280 (illus., as ‘Portrait of a Standing Woman’) 

RELATED WORK 
Miss Florence Greaves, 1898, pastel on paper, 41.0 x 34.5 cm, in the collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney 
Portrait of Florence, c.1898, oil on canvas on paperboard, 66.6 x 38.7 cm, in the collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney

ESSAY
Hailed as the father of Australian landscape painting, Tom Roberts holds an important place in the history of Australian art, particularly renowned for great nationalistic pictures painted in the years leading up to Federation, including Shearing the Rams, 1888 – 90 (National Gallery of Victoria) and A Break Away!, 1891 (Art Gallery of South Australia). Signifiers of national identity centred on nineteenth century rural life and activity, these paintings still resonate with contemporary audiences and remain on permanent display in the public galleries that house them.

The fact that portraiture makes up around a third of Roberts’ painted oeuvre comes as something of a surprise, but he was a skilled painter of people, able to capture the mood and character of his subjects in addition to accurately describing their physical likeness. His motivation was often practical – as he once explained to a friend, ‘Portraits pay, … my boy’1 – with commissions of politicians and other public figures easier to secure than patronage for large and time-consuming subject and history pictures.2 Roberts’ was also attuned to the potential historical significance of portraiture however, and in 1896 he embarked on a series of small paintings on timber panels titled ‘Familiar Faces and Figures’ – depicting fellow artists, musicians, journalists and public officials, among others – which he hoped would be kept together for posterity.3 

Roberts particularly excelled in the depiction of female subjects and, as Helen Topliss has noted, portraits such as Madame Pfund, c. 1887 (National Gallery of Victoria) and Eileen, 1892 (Art Gallery of New South Wales), reveal his love of female personalities and companionship, as well as his aesthetic response to the decorative elements of women’s dress.4 This full-length pastel of Florence Greaves (1873 – 1959) exemplifies this aspect of his work, making a feature of the flowers on her hat, the delicately-speckled veil and ruffled white petticoats glimpsed beneath the hem of her skirt – highlighting ornamental details in what is otherwise a plain, although very stylish outfit. Depicting his subject in profile, Roberts emphasises her fine features, as well as creating a strong sense of diagonal movement through the composition, leading the eye from her jawbone through to the tip of the umbrella. He adopted a similar view in two other portraits of Greaves made around the same time, a pastel head study dated 1898 and the beautiful bust in oil, Florence Greaves, c.1898, both of which she bequeathed to the Art Gallery of New South Wales. 

Greaves was an early student at Julian Ashton’s Sydney Art School, also studying at London’s Slade School in the late 1920s, and it is likely that it was Ashton who introduced her to Roberts.5 In 1894, Roberts visited the Greaves’ family cattle station, Newbold, located on the Clarence River in northern New South Wales. Returning three years later, he began work on A Mountain Muster, 1897 – 1920s (National Gallery of Victoria) there, painting the portraits of Florence the year after, and another of her mother in 1899.6 

1. Roberts quoted in Taylor, G., Those Were the Days, Sydney, 1918, p. 100 quoted in Topliss, H., Tom Roberts 1856-1931, A Catalogue Raisonné, vol. 1, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1985, p. 20
2. See Topliss, ibid.
3. See Topliss, ibid., pp. 21-22
4. Topliss, H., ‘Portraiture and Nationalism’ in Radford, R., Tom Roberts, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, 1996, p. 154
5. Kolenberg, H., Ryan, A. and James, P., 19th century Australian Watercolours, Drawings & Pastels from the Gallery’s Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2005, p. 120
6. Mrs W. A. B Greaves, 1899, oil on canvas, 77.5 x 60.0 cm (oval), Art Gallery of New South Wales

KIRSTY GRANT
Fox Carrickview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 14:
ETHEL CARRICK FOX
(1872 - 1952)
BY THE SEA, c.1912
oil on panel
26.0 x 33.5 cm
signed lower right: CARRICK

PROVENANCE
Private collection
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 11 May 1977, lot 25 (as ‘Mother and Child on Beach’)
Private collection, Melbourne

EXHIBITED
Possibly: Paintings by Mrs E Phillips Fox, The Guildhall, Melbourne, 11 – 26 July 1913, cat. 83 
E. Phillips Fox & Ethel Carrick, Deutscher Fine Art, Melbourne, 13 November – 6 December 1997, cat. 44 (illus. in exhibition catalogue, p. 48)

ESSAY
Marrying in 1905, Ethel Carrick and Emanuel Phillips Fox shared a rich, creative life, supporting each other in their respective artistic endeavours and ambitions. Before meeting at the artists’ colony of St Ives in Cornwall, both had undertaken formal artistic training – Fox at Melbourne’s National Gallery School, alongside Rupert Bunny and Fred McCubbin, and Carrick, at the Slade School of Fine Art in London. As newlyweds they moved to Paris, living in a studio apartment at the Cité Fleurie in Montparnasse, described by Carrick as ‘quite a cosmopolitan little colony of hard working artists … thirty different nationalities being represented.’1

As well as being a mecca for artists, Paris was well-positioned as a launching place for the couple’s frequent travels. Like many of their peers, the Foxes ‘travelled to paint and painted to travel’, and their works read like a visual itinerary, ‘in the summer… to artist colonies, such as… St Ives, or Pont Aven and Étaples in France, and sometimes to society beaches, such as Royan and Dinard. Destinations like Venice, Spain and Morocco were scheduled in the spring and autumn months.’2 They ‘followed the light’, typically spending winters in Paris where they would work in the studio, completing paintings based on outdoor oil sketches made during their travels the previous year, in preparation for submission to the Salons. 3 

On occasion, the couple also travelled to Australia and it is likely that this charming work was made during one of these visits. In Sydney in 1913 and 1914, Carrick Fox painted a number of beach scenes including Manly Beach – Summer is Here, 1913 (Manly Art Gallery and Museum), which reflects the Australian enthusiasm for the beach, as well as the brilliant summer sunshine. In this painting, a woman watches two young children playing by the water’s edge. Elegantly attired in the manner of the day, she wears a long white dress and a hat adorned with colourful flowers. Presumably the children’s mother, she looks on tenderly, and the intimacy of the scene is highlighted by the younger child’s nudity. Although not surprising to a contemporary viewer, this was highly unusual in the early twentieth century when social mores decried public nakedness of any kind. Artistic precedents exist for this subject however, most significantly in this context, Emanuel Phillips Fox’s large-scale painting, Bathing Hour, 1909 (Castlemaine Art Gallery and Historical Museum).4 In this well-known painting, a mother dries her naked daughter on the sand against a backdrop of women and children on the shore and in the water, all of whom wear full-length dresses or neck-to-knee bathing costumes.  
 
Light and the representation of its effects remained a constant preoccupation for Carrick Fox and this is evident here, in the depiction of the mother whose figure is a study of deep shadows and bright white highlights. Similarly, the ocean, which features prominently, vivid blue in the distance and paler close to the shore, is painted in a series of expressive horizontal brushstrokes emphasising the movement of the water and the play of light across its surface. As a French critic wrote, ‘Mlle Ethel Carrick fires the enthusiasm of art lover … The quiet modesty of the artist conceals real knowledge about how to see, how to place the strokes side by side and to understand’.5

1. Carrick Fox quoted in Goddard, A., ‘An Artistic Marriage’ in Art, Love & Life: Ethel Carrick and E Phillips Fox, Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, 2011, p. 18
2. Downey, G., ‘Cosmopolitans and Expatriates’ in Love & Life: Ethel Carrick and E Phillips Fox, ibid., p.57 
3. Ibid.
4. Fox produced two almost identical versions of this painting. The second, dated c.1909, is in the collection of the Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art. See Spate, V., ‘Nature and Artifice – Emanuel Phillips Fox Bathing hour’ in Seear, L., and Ewington, J., (eds.), Brought to Light: Australian Art 1850 – 1965 from the Queensland Art Gallery Collection, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, 1998, pp. 108 – 111
5. Breuil, H., ‘Promenade travers les Salons de Salon d’Automne’ in Les Tendances Nouvelles, Paris, vol. 30, no. 39, December 1908, quoted in Goddard, op. cit., p.24

KIRSTY GRANT

Davidson Bessieview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 15 and 21:
BESSIE DAVIDSON
(1879 - 1965)
LA ROBE BLEUE, 1911
oil on canvas
92.5 x 65.0 cm
signed and dated lower left: Bessie Davidson 11
bears inscription on label verso: 191 

PROVENANCE
Beaussant – Lefevre, Paris, 11 December 2009, lot 217
Private collection
Sotheby’s, London, 13 July 2010, lot 139
Private collection, New South Wales

EXHIBITED 
Salon de la Société National des Beaux Arts, Grand Palais, Paris, 16 April – 30 June 1911, cat. 372 (as ‘Dame en robe bleue’) 
Bessie Davidson & Sally Smart – Two artists and the Parisian avant–garde, Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 20 March – 26 July 2020

LITERATURE
‘Australasians at Paris Salons’, The Argus, Melbourne, 17 June 1911, p. 7 (as ‘Lady in the Blue Dress’) 
Curtin, P., (ed.), Bessie Davidson: An Australian Impressionist in Paris, Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 2020, p. 63

ESSAY
In her catalogue essay accompanying the recent, long-overdue survey of Bessie Davidson’s achievements at the Bendigo Art Gallery, curator Tansy Curtain suggested the artist’s ‘depictions of women at leisure are perhaps the most intriguing and revealing of all her works’1 – and certainly, the magnificent La Robe Bleue, 1911 featured here would seem no exception. As the Argus critic, reviewing the representation of Australian artists at the 1911 Paris Salon, enthusiastically exclaimed of the painting (albeit with a touch of gender-prejudice typical of the era): ‘The city of Adelaide has produced an artist of rare and dainty talent in Miss Bessie Davidson. Her two pictures possess a charm special to the best painting of her sex. Considered as the work of a woman too much praise cannot be given to Miss Davidson’s “Lady in the Blue Dress”. Refinement, grace of execution, and rare colour are among its qualities.’2

An important work dating from her early life in Paris, La Robe Bleue captures exquisitely Davidson’s predilection for the subject of a woman alone in a domestic space, and the variety of states – loneliness, introversion, or pleasured independence – that might imply. In the present case, the figure appears in contemplation of some treasured possession (perhaps a photograph in a frame) and the mood is contented, with her elegant costume and surrounds conveying an air of genteel and cultured respectability. As with her depictions of women at leisure elsewhere, the figure is passive and does not meet our gaze; rather the viewer sneaks a furtive glimpse of her in a private moment of reflection or nostalgia. 

With its delicate pastel palette, mastery of tonalism and pensive subject, the composition unmistakably betrays the influence of American-born, British-based post-impressionist painter, James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834 – 1903) in masterpieces such as his Symphony in White, No. 2: The Little White Girl, 1864 (Tate Gallery, London) and Symphony in Flesh Colour and Pink: Portrait of Mrs Frances Leyland, 1871 – 74 (The Frick Collection, New York). Also discernible are striking affinities with the oeuvre of prominent American artist, Richard Miller (1875 – 1943) who was working and teaching in Paris at the same time as Davidson, and with whom she took classes at the Académie Colarossi. Described by fellow Australian female expatriate, Hilda Rix Nicholas, as causing ‘a stir in Paris’3, Miller was renowned for his distinctive, highly decorative brand of impression, famously declaring in 1912 that that ‘Art’s mission is not literary, the telling of a story, but decorative, the conveying of a pleasant optical sensation.’4 Invariably depicting stylish Parisian women at leisure in luxurious, domestic settings or sunny, brilliantly-lit gardens, he frequently used his wife as a model and, given her profile resemblance to the figure in La Robe Bleue, it may well be that she is featured here.

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. ‘Australasians at Paris Salons’, The Argus, 17 June 1911 p. 7 (as ‘Lady in the Blue Dress’)
3. Hilda Rix Nicholas, ‘In search of beauty’, 14 May 1908, in ‘Annotated scrapbook’, Hilda Rix Nicholas Papers, National Library of Australia, Canberra.
4. Richard Miller, quoted at https://www.nadatabase.org/2018/07/17/richard-edward-miller/

VERONICA ANGELATOS

BESSIE DAVIDSON
(1879 - 1965)
TULIPS WITH WHITE POT, c.1935
oil on board
31.5 x 98.5 cm
signed lower right: Bessie Davidson
signed and inscribed with title on backing paper verso: Tulips with White Pot / Bessie Davidson

PROVENANCE
The artist’s studio, until 1965
The Osborne Art Gallery, Adelaide (label attached verso)
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Private collection, Victoria, acquired from the above in September 1981 

EXHIBITED 
Exhibition of Paintings by Bessie Davidson, The Osborne Art Gallery, Adelaide, 31 May – 13 June 1967, cat. 10 
Spring Exhibition, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 10 – 24 September 1981, cat. 112 (illus. in exhibition catalogue)

RELATED WORK 
Still life with pot and gladioli, c.1935, oil on board, 57.0 x 105.0 cm, in the collection of Kaye McKellar, South Australia

ESSAY 
We are grateful to Brenda Martin Thomas, wife of the late David Thomas AO, for kindly allowing us to reproduce David's research and writing in this catalogue entry.

Adelaide-born Bessie Davidson spent most of her creative life in Paris, absorbing the elegance and sophistication which we associate with the French capital and manifesting it in her art. Such qualities imbue her landscapes, and especially the interiors and still life paintings in which she excels – Tulips with White Pot, c.1935 being a fine example. Her excellence in this genre was inevitably influenced by her earlier association with Margaret Preston (then Rose McPherson), in whose studio she studied from 1899 to 1904. Together, they travelled abroad, Davidson continuing her studies at the Munich Künstlerinner Verein, and in Paris at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Although Davidson returned to Adelaide in 1906 and taught for a number of years with Preston, her home became Paris where, from 1910 onwards, she would remain for the rest of her life. Significantly while Davidson loved France, like her friend and fellow-Australian expatriate artist resident in Paris, Rupert Bunny, she never gave up her Australian citizenship.

In 1914, at the beginning of World War I, Davidson joined the French Red Cross and worked voluntarily as a nurse. Afterwards, her involvement in French life and art led to her being the first Australian woman to be elected to the Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts. She was also a founder-member of the Salon des Tuileries, and vice president of the Société Nationale des Femmes Artistes Modernes. Her contribution to French art and to the nation resulted in the 1931 award of Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur. She exhibited regularly in Paris and London, being included in the 1938 L'Exposition du Groupe Feminin at the Petit Palais and, the following year, in the exhibition of French art that toured the U.S.A. Internationally, she is represented in the Musée d'Art Moderne, Musée d'Orsay, and Musée du Petit Palais, Paris, as well as in collections in The Netherlands, Edinburgh, and Fife. In 1999, the exhibition Bessie Davidson: Une Australienne en France, 1880 – 1965 was held at the Australian Embassy, Paris, May – July 1999 and more recently, the Bendigo Art Gallery staged the exhibition Bessie Davidson: An Australian Impressionist in Paris. 

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 closer aligned 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’1 – that is celebrated in Tulips with White Pot. Featuring the rich textural appeal and subtle sophistication that distinguishes Davidson as an artist of outstanding ability, her brushwork here is full of variety, with both vertical and horizontal strokes creating a fascinating picture surface where the various still life objects morph into the formal elements of painting itself – composition, colour, form and texture. Moreover, the unusual horizontal format and close-range viewpoint creates an overwhelming feeling of intimacy, of having the privilege of being alone with the still life which no doubt derives from its setting – most likely having been painted in the artist’s Paris studio at Rue Boissonade, Montparnasse, where Davidson lived from 1910 until her death.

1. Little, P., A Studio in Montparnasse; Bessie Davidson: An Australian in Paris, Craftsman House, Melbourne, 2003, p. 87


Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 18:
TOM ROBERTS
(1856 - 1931)
RIVER OMEGA, NEW SOUTH WALES, 1901
oil on wood panel
19.5 x 35.5 cm
signed lower left: Tom Roberts
signed and dated lower centre: Roberts [illeg.] 1901
bears inscription on label verso: RUBIN COLLECTION / Roberts Tom / River Omega

PROVENANCE
Major Harold de Vahl Rubin, Sydney
Christie’s, Sydney, 4 October 1972, lot 416
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Mr Alan Greenway, Australia and USA, acquired from the above
Thence by descent
Private collection, California, USA

EXHIBITED 
Spring Exhibition 1972: Recent Acquisitions, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 8 – 24 November 1972, cat. 19 (illus. in exhibition catalogue)

LITERATURE
Topliss, H., Tom Roberts, 1856 – 1931: A Catalogue Raisonné, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1985, vol. I, p. 168, cat. 365, vol. II (illus.)

ESSAY
Tom Roberts is renowned in Australian art for his grand vistas of national life, full of the blazing light akin to his fellow Heidelberg artists. However, on closer examination, his palette is more muted than the glare so beloved by Arthur Streeton and in Robert’s smaller works, this becomes even more apparent. Paintings such as Trafalgar Square, c.1884 (Art Gallery of South Australia); Cloud study, c.1889/1901 (National Gallery of Victoria); and Saplings, 1889 (Art Gallery of South Australia) are extremely low key, even foggy, and clearly indicate why he later became so enthusiastic about Clarice Beckett’s paintings which he encountered in in the late 1920s.1 In River Omega, 1901, this delicate sensibility is pronounced in a composition dominated by soft blues and creamy ochre. It is also one of the very few landscapes painted by Roberts during these years.

The Omega Headland is a small promontory 130 kilometres south of Sydney and is near the junction of the Werri Creek where it spills into the Pacific Ocean on the traditional lands of the Dharawal people. Stretching back inland is low-lying alluvial land enriched by ancient eruptions from Saddleback Mountain which rises in the distance. The native cedar trees were rapidly logged by early European settlers who cleared much of the forest to establish dairy farms. Later residents further altered the land by blasting rocks near the headland to build a concrete channel to admit tidal waters into the creek.2 Another artist attracted to the area was Lloyd Rees who painted there from 1939 and some of his many views of the region bear a striking resemblance to Robert’s River Omega, including Omega pastoral, 1950 (Art Gallery of New South Wales), and Sea at Omega, 1957 (Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery). Like Rees, Roberts stood on the sands between the creek and ocean, looking inland, a view encompassing the sinuous twists of the creek, sand banks, sparse trees and the hills beyond. The modest scale of the wooden panel concentrates the detail and indicates that River Omega was probably started en plein air before being finished in the studio.

One reason for the small number of landscapes painted by Roberts at the time was the continuing effects of the 1890s depression and his major key to survival were portrait commissions. ‘“Portraits pay, George my boy,” the dear chap would say, as he would soften the red tint on the nose of a politician.’3 River Omega is the only landscape from 1901 recorded in Helen Topliss’ catalogue raisonné, but another of a slightly smaller size – Near Ballina, 1901, oil on wood panel, 19 x 35.5 cm, owned by Norman Schurek – was also recorded in the catalogue for the artist’s retrospective exhibition at the Art Gallery of South Australia in 1947. In spite of its scale, Roberts took great pride in these paintings and carried a number with him to London in 1903, where he wrote in 1909 that they ‘(hold) up with all my late stuff and they with it. A kind of touchstone and I didn’t know it.’4 For many years, River Omega was owned by the eccentric grazier, The Honourable Major Harold de Vahl, whose sprawling collection included other works by Roberts as well as examples by Picasso, Degas, Renoir, Dobell and Streeton amongst many others.

1. Robert’s Sunrise, Tasmania, c.1928 (Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery) is claimed to be his direct response to seeing Beckett’s paintings.
2. See Rees, L., & Free, R., Lloyd Rees: an artist remembers, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1987, p. 57
3. Taylor, G., Those were the days, Tyrell’s, Sydney, 1918, p. 100
4. Tom Roberts, letter to S.W. Pring, 11 February 1909, Mitchell Library, Sydney, MLMSS 1367/2

ANDREW GAYNOR
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 17 and 19:
ARTHUR STREETON
(1867 - 1943)
NORTHERN VIEW, OLINDA, 1933
oil on canvas
31.0 x 91.5 cm
signed lower left: A STREETON.
inscribed on frame verso: Streeton
framer's label attached verso: John Thallon, Melbourne

PROVENANCE
The Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne 
Mrs A. E. Ramsay, Victoria, acquired from the above in 1933
Thence by descent
Private collection, Victoria

EXHIBITED 
A Retrospective Exhibition of Paintings by Arthur Streeton, The Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, 15 – 26 August 1933, cat. 40 

LITERATURE
Streeton, A., The Arthur Streeton Catalogue, Melbourne, 1935, cat. 1076

ESSAY
After living in London for more than a decade, Arthur Streeton returned to Australia with his wife and young son in 1920. The following year, he purchased five acres of land at Olinda in the Dandenong Ranges east of Melbourne, fulfilling a long-held ambition to establish what he once described as his own ‘pastoral treasury’. Following the sale of Golden Summer, Eaglemont, 1889 (National Gallery of Australia) for the extraordinary sum of 1000 guineas, he built a house there several years later and enthusiastically began to develop a garden against the backdrop of mature native blackwoods and gum trees. Writing to Tom Roberts in 1924, he enthused, ‘And the garden and the trees, what a delight it is. All through the winter I’ve put in my week-ends up there… working at the bramble and bracken… and planting no end of trees… blackwoods… Lambertiana Cypress… Acacia Elata’.1

Typically spending summers at Olinda, as well as making regular visits throughout the year, Streeton came to know the area well, and both his garden and the surrounding landscape feature in paintings produced during the 1920s and 30s. Continuing the practice established in his youth, of painting outdoors and working directly from the subject – as well as in the studio – Streeton captured the essence and the actuality of the landscape, skilfully combining fleeting atmospheric effects with recognisable geographical features. At the time, his paintings were recognised as symbols of Australian life and land, and today, Streeton is still widely acknowledged as the creator of quintessentially national images. Writing in 1931, Harold Herbert noted that, ‘His unfailing sureness is a source of wonder. His unerring vision and sense of colour and atmosphere in Australian landscape are unique. His work vibrates with realism’2. While many works of this time reflect Streeton’s familiarity with the region and his celebrated ability to capture the beauty of the landscape in paint, his strong belief in the importance of protecting the natural environment also emerged as a significant theme during these years, motivated in part by the transformation he witnessed as a result of active logging and clearing. Addressing the Forest League in 1925, he said, ‘It seems an amazing thing to me that a community which spends thousands of pounds on hospitals and homes… and which is progressive and businesslike in so many ways, should suffer hundreds and hundreds of acres of valuable timber to be destroyed to facilitate some work of the moment when so little is gained from it.’3 

Presenting an expansive panoramic vista, Northern view, Olinda, 1933 looks from a high vantage point across to a nearby hill-top – densely treed, apart from a large central clearing – and the distant landscape beyond. Streeton places us in the landscape in this picture, and close to the sky, which is pale blue and scattered with clouds. Delicate vertical brushstrokes of purple on the right-hand side describe a rain shower in the distance, suggesting direct observation of the subject. The key to this image however, is the large felled tree in the right-hand corner. It is a subtle, yet powerful inclusion, the girth of the tree trunk signalling its age and symbolising the scale of the loss it represents. The strong environmental stance Streeton adopted in these works did not discourage serious collectors, indeed, it may well have encouraged buyers who both appreciated his artistic skill and shared his progressive opinions. The first owner of A mountain side, 1935 (Westpac Banking Corporation), for example, was Sir George Coles, founder of G. J. Coles & Co. retail stores. Similarly, Alfred Nicholas, who famously produced aspirin in Australia under the name Aspro, purchased The vanishing forest, 1934 (private collection) from its first exhibition. Northern view, Olinda was purchased from Streeton’s 1933 exhibition at the Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne by Mrs Annie Ramsay (1871 -1953) and has remained in the family ever since. While her name is comparatively little known in the context of early twentieth century business figures, from 1923 – 33, she was the chairwoman of the Kiwi Polish Company, which had been founded by her husband, William (1868 – 1914). Indeed, it was her New Zealand heritage and nickname, ‘Kiwi Annie’, which inspired the name of this iconic Australian brand.4

1. Streeton to Tom Roberts, 13 August 1924, quoted in Croll, R. H., Smike to Bulldog: Letters from Sir Arthur Streeton to Tom Roberts, Ure Smith Pty Ltd, Sydney, 1946, p. 119
2. Herbert, H., ‘Art of Arthur Streeton, Sunlit Landscapes, Beautiful Flower Pieces’, Argus, 17 March 1931, p. 8 quoted in Eagle, M., The Oil Paintings of Arthur Streeton in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1994, p. 154
3. Reported in the Argus, 27 November 1925, p. 23, quoted in Smith, G., Arthur Streeton 1867-1943, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 1995, p. 163
4. For more information about Annie Ramsay and the history of the Kiwi company, see Dunstan, K., Kiwi: the Australian Brand that Brought a Shine to the World, Allen and Unwin, Crows Nest, 2017. It is significant to note that the family was also directly associated with the art world through William’s brother, the distinguished painter, Hugh Ramsay (1877 – 1906).

KIRSTY GRANT
and
ARTHUR STREETON
(1867 - 1943)
OUT OF THE PURPLE MOUNTAINS IT GETS ITS WATERS, 1928
oil on canvas on composition board
50.0 x 76.0 cm
signed lower left: A STREETON.
bears inscription on label attached verso: ‘Out of the Purple Mountains / it gets its Waters’ / Arthur Streeton / The Property of …

PROVENANCE
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney
Mr Charles David Murray, Sydney
Thence by descent
Private collection
Lawsons, Sydney, 19 June 1984, lot 104 (as 'Out of the Purple Mountains It Gets Its Waters (Creek from Purple Hill)')
Earl Gallery, Victoria
Private collection, Victoria, acquired from the above in July 1984

EXHIBITED 
Exhibition of Recent Paintings: Arthur Streeton, Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 4 – 15 April 1929 (as ‘Drawing its Water from the Purple Hill’)

LITERATURE
‘Art Exhibitions: Mr. Streeton’s Paintings’, The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 4 April 1929, p. 8 (as ‘Drawing its Water from the Purple Hill’)
Tildesley, B., ‘Oil Paintings by Arthur Streeton’, Sydney Mail, Sydney, 10 April 1929, p. 29 (as ‘Drawing its Water from the Purple Hill’)
Streeton, A., The Arthur Streeton Catalogue, Melbourne, 1935, cat. 980 (as 'Creek, from Purple Hill')

ESSAY
‘Arthur Streeton has done for Australia what… Constable did for England, Claude for Italy, Daubigny and Corot for France. He has fixed the character of our landscape for all time... I attribute this to his mastery of the painting of light and a perfect colour sense, always faithful to the mood of the hour.’1  

So proclaimed Lionel Lindsay, well-known artist and arts commentator, in the special issue of Art in Australia that was published in 1931 to celebrate the art of Arthur Streeton. That same year, Streeton – then in his sixties and widely celebrated as one of Australia’s finest painters – was honoured with a retrospective exhibition at the National Art Gallery of New South Wales, the first Australian artist to be acknowledged in this way during his lifetime. He would receive the highest honour of the day some years later when, in 1937, he was knighted for his services to art.

As a young man in the 1880s and 90s, Streeton, along with his friends, Tom Roberts, Charles Conder and Frederick McCubbin, had transformed the depiction of the Australian landscape. Discarding traditional academic techniques and rules of representation, these so-called Australian Impressionists instead emphasised the naturalistic effects of light and colour, often painting outdoors, and producing atmospheric and painterly ‘impressions’ of their subjects.2 Streeton, in particular, became associated with images which cast the rural Australian landscape in shades of blue and gold, sun-bleached paddocks and golden plains glowing beneath vast blue skies. Exhibited at the Royal Academy, London in 1891 and awarded a Mention Honorable at the Paris Salon the following year, Golden summer, Eaglemont, 1899 (National Gallery of Australia) exemplifies this aspect of his oeuvre. Long recognised as a masterpiece of Australian art, this light-filled pastoral scene is at once romantic and yet, even to contemporary eyes, somehow also entirely realistic.

The poetically titled Out of the purple mountains it gets its waters, 1928, continues this theme but brings into view a majestic mountain that separates the blue sky, a puff of white cloud on the horizon, from the grassy golden foreground. Streeton’s mastery of his medium and facility with the brush is on full display in this painting, from the lively daubs of paint that make up the purple mountains to the reedy growth in the lower right, which is convincingly described in just a few fine brushstrokes. The composition leads the viewer through the landscape in a gentle zig-zag motion, following the contours of the mountains through the band of trees that makes up the middle ground, joining up with the stream which flows to the front of the picture plane. Displayed in Streeton’s solo exhibition at Macquarie Galleries, Sydney in 1929, this painting prompted the Sydney Mail critic to declare that ‘There is no Australian painter as yet who can surpass him in the representation of spacious landscapes… [ Out of the purple mountains it gets its waters] is joyously characteristic of Streeton in the rendering of the stream winding along the sandy flats.’3

This painting shares much in common with another major work of the time, Land of the Golden Fleece (Art Gallery of New South Wales), 1926, which depicts the dramatic landscape around the Grampians in Western Victoria, an area Streeton visited in November of that year.4 While this view is more expansive and takes in a broad vista, the palette is similar, as is the overall composition, which uses the flat-topped mountain as a backdrop for its pastoral scene, complete with dense stands of trees, the ubiquitous windmill and dam, and flock of grazing sheep. Such images served another significant purpose during these years, reinforcing a proud sense of national identity and a path towards recovery for a country that had suffered many losses in the First World War. As Ian Burn wrote, ‘In the postwar period, artists returned to the theme of the Australian landscape with a changed idea of its value and meaning… the war had imbued the landscape with a new power and authority… The masculine ideals of war were used to promote and validate a particular landscape of peace, an ideal of pastoral wealth and national potential’.5

1. Lindsay, L., ‘Arthur Streeton, Art in Australia, third series, no. 40, October 1931, p. 11
2. For an analysis of these artists’ work in relation to French Impressionism, see Vaughan, G., ‘Some Reflections on Defining Australian Impressionism’ in Lane, T., Australian Impressionism, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2007, pp. 16 – 19
3. Tildesley, B., ‘Oil Paintings by Arthur Streeton’, Sydney Mail, Sydney, 10 April 1929, p. 29
4. Streeton painted three versions of this subject. The Art Gallery of New South Wales version is illustrated here. For the other two, see Eagle, M., The Oil Paintings of Arthur Streeton in the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 1994, pp. 184 – 87, and Smith, G., Arthur Streeton 1867-1943, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 1995, pp. 170 – 171
5. Burn, I., National Life and Landscapes: Australian Painting 1900 – 1940, Bay Books, Sydney, 1991, pp.79 – 80, quoted in Eagle, ibid., pp. 186 – 87

KIRSTY GRANT
Preston Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 22:
MARGARET PRESTON
(1875 - 1963)
WARATAHS AND WILDFLOWERS, 1955
oil on canvas
50.0 x 45.0 cm
signed and dated lower right: M. PRESTON / 55

PROVENANCE
Private collection, South Australia 
John Martin Gallery, Adelaide
Private collection
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
Private collection, Victoria, acquired from the above in December 1983

EXHIBITED 
Exhibition of Past Australian Painters Lent From Private South Australian Collections, Adelaide Festival of Arts, John Martin & Co. Limited, Adelaide, 8 – 29 March 1974, cat. 91 (label attached verso, as 'Pultinea and Waratah')

ESSAY
For much of the twentieth century, Margaret Preston was a prominent and passionate advocate for a distinctly Australian form of modernism, one distanced from its European origins and synthesised instead through a fusion of Indigenous and Asian art. Her imagery, particularly when depicting Australian flora, has become embedded in the national consciousness with the result that her artworks are some of the most recognisable in this country. In 1953, Preston held her last solo exhibition at the Macquarie Galleries in Sydney. Opened by historian Bernard Smith, it was, she proclaimed, her final one ‘before the pearly gates.’1 However, she did not cease painting and two years later, created a powerful suite of still lifes harking back to her images of the 1920s, of which Waratahs and Wildflowers, 1955, is an excellent example from the sequence.
 
Preston’s passion for Australian native flora was such that it is somewhat surprising how rarely the waratah appears in her work, given that it is the State emblem for New South Wales. Apart from a handful of prints, she usually used the scarlet bloom as an accent within other mixed still lifes, making Waratahs and Wildflowers, 1955, significant for its painterly focus. Here, the clutch of waratahs is balanced by a bunch of yellow Pultenaea stipularis (commonly known as handsome bush-pea), each lot in their own vase, drawn from the artist’s personal collection of ceramics (both vases also appear in other Preston paintings from that year).2 Waratahs and Wildflowers was painted at Preston’s home studio in Killarney Street, Mosman, and she sourced the native flowers ‘from florists, or was given specimens by her friend T. G. B. Osborn, Professor of Botany at Sydney University.’3 Set upon a plain timber table, the flowers have as their backdrop a bold pattern inspired by the artist’s extensive knowledge of Indigenous motifs and symbols. Executed in earth colours, this staging presents an ‘authenticity’ for the presentation as a whole. Preston had first advocated the fine art qualities of Indigenous art in an article for Art in Australia in 1925 and many more essays followed.4 She consulted with museum officials, organised exhibitions, travelled extensively to remote rock art shelters and lectured widely on the subject. Her acts of appropriation regarding the original artists and their artworks have been criticised, but Preston acted with integrity within her chosen boundaries and undeniably widened the appreciation for Indigenous art in Australia.
 
Of the remaining paintings from 1955, three are in public collections: Fish and Black boys, 1955 (Art Gallery of New South Wales); Native flowers of Western Australia, c.1955 (Art Gallery of Western Australia); and Banksia and native flowers, 1955 (Dunedin Public Gallery, New Zealand). A fourth, Flowers in a jug, 1955, was sold through Deutscher and Hackett in 2017 ( Important Australian and International Art, 20 September 2017, lot. 4). Given that Preston was eighty years old in 1955, these late works form a powerful coda to her career and give substance to one critic’s comment from her solo show two years earlier that she was ‘obviously an artist whose brush gains in vitality, instead of losing it with the passage of time.’5
 
1. Margaret Preston, 1953, cited in Butler, R., The prints of Margaret Preston: a catalogue raisonné, Australian National Gallery, Canberra, 1987, p. 8
2. The ginger jar holding the waratahs also appears in Banksia, 1955 (Bonetti Collection) and Banksia and native flowers, 1955 (Dunedin Public Gallery), whilst the vase with the bush peas features in Christmas Bells, 1955 (private collection).
3. Butler, R., ibid., p. 18
4. Preston, M., ‘The Indigenous art of Australia’, Art in Australia, 3rd series, no. 11, March 1925, np.
5. The Daily Mirror, Sydney, 23 September 1953, p. 25
 
ANDREW GAYNOR

Webb Alexander (Scottish, 1813 - 1892) attribview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 80
ATTRIBUTED TO ALEXANDER WEBB
(Scottish, 1813 - 1892)
MALOP STREET, GEELONG AND THE PROVIDENT INSTITUTE, MELBOURNE, c.1860
watercolour on paper
i. 24.5 x 34.0 cm ii. 24.5 x 34.0 cm
each inscribed with title on mount

PROVENANCE
Private collection, Adelaide
Deutscher and Hackett, Melbourne, 3 August 2011, lot 114 (as 'Australian School')
Private collection, Sydney

RELATED WORK 
Malop Street, Geelong, looking East; and Provident Institute, Melbourne, steel engravings from Victoria Illustrated: Second Series, 1862, collection of the State Library of Victoria, Melbourne 
Malop Street from Johnstone Park, 1872, watercolour and pencil on paper, 46.0 x 66.2 cm, in the collection of Geelong Art Gallery, Victoria 

Boyd Penleighview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher & Hackett auction 4.5.22, lot 50:
PENLEIGH BOYD
(1890 - 1923)
NEAR KANGAROO GROUND, VICTORIA, 1920
oil on canvas
37.0 x 44.5 cm
signed and dated lower left: Penleigh Boyd / 1920

PROVENANCE
Private collection, Victoria
Thence by descent
Private collection, New South Wales

ESSAY
Penleigh Boyd was one the first Australian artists to serve in the battlefields of Europe, where he fulfilled the role of a sapper in WWI. A sapper’s expertise was engineering and he became responsible for tunnelling and establishing trenches. Tragically while in the trenches at Ypres, West Flanders in 1917, Boyd was gassed, causing permanent lung damage. He was evacuated back to England and eventually, back to Warrandyte, Victoria in 1918, where he continued to paint unhindered by his injury. Kangaroo Ground, Warrandyte, stems from this period and in the context of Penleigh Boyd’s wartime experience, the work could be considered as a pacifist, antiwar painting.

The cutting in the foreground of the work is not some arbitrary feature, it is something Boyd would have understood well and had great feeling for. But rather than rising from the trench to a battlefield scene, the artist takes us up to a landscape which is distant, lush and beautifully serene. The artist has chosen to exaggerate the horizon to suggest the arc of the earth, which hints at the world beyond and signals that the subject of the work has a worldly context beyond the idyllic landscape depicted.

The rolling hills of Warrandyte depicted here by Penleigh Boyd were a world away from Flanders fields. But the idea that Penleigh Boyd created this current work en plein air, immersed in the contented majesty of nature, while reflecting on his wartime experiences, leaves us with a profound feeling of empathy. It is a work modest in size, but the scale of its impetus is immeasurable. On 28 November 1922, Boyd made the fateful decision to take his new Hudson car for a drive to Sydney. On a sharp bend near Warragal he lost control of his car and died from his injuries at the scene aged 33.
 
HENRY MULHOLLAND
Little Kevinview full entry
Reference: see Lawsons auction, THE KEVIN LITTLE COLLECTION, PT II SALE ENDS 19 APRIL, 2022, 7PM, 328 lots, stained glass, paintings, tools, etc.
Bettison Gilesview full entry
Reference: see Heritage Auction Galleries, Dallas, United States, Wednesday 04 May 2022. lot 67146: Giles Bettison (Australian, b. 1966) Vase from 'Cell' Series, 2001 Glass 7-1/2 x 6-1/2 x 1-1/2 inches (19.1 x 16.5 x ...
Giles Bettison (Australian, b. 1966)
Vase from 'Cell' Series, 2001
Glass
7-1/2 x 6-1/2 x 1-1/2 inches (19.1 x 16.5 x 3.8 cm)
Signed to underside Giles Bettison, 2001; murrina initialed GEB to lower body
Property from a New York Collection
Baring William (1881-1961)view full entry
Reference: see Schloss Ahlden auction, Ahlden, Germany, Saturday 07 May, 2022, lot 507: Seltene Urstück-Vase mit Kängurus
Rare Urstück vase with kangaroos On round stand slightly swinging, high, conical body with wide mouth. On the wall full height surrounding depiction of an Australian landscape with five large kangaroos in blue underglaze painting. Form designed by Johannes Rudolf Hentschel. Design by William Baring (1881-1961). Designation; bottom inscribed "Kangaroo / I. Urstück"; unmarked rest; sword mark. H. 37 cm.
Painting design by William Baring (1881-1961), who worked for Meissen manufactory as a freelance painter on a fixed salary from 1911-1945. The artist himself executed, supervised or revised the shaping and painting of the so-called original pieces.
Cf. Marusch-Krohn 1993, p. 67 (further vessels with exotic animals by W. Baring); for the form see. Meissener Blaumalerei aus drei Jh., cat. 324.
A large underglaze-blue kangaroo porcelain vase by W. Baring from the Meissen series "Urstücke". Signed. Insignificantly restored. Crossed swords mark.
Meissen. Around 1920.





Elischer Johann Wview full entry
Reference: see Düsseldorfer Auktionshaus, Dusseldorf, Germany, Friday 20 May 2022, lot 740, Elischer, Johann W.
Elischer, Johann W. 1891 Vienna - 1966 Australia
Mythical creature.
Bronze on marble base. Signed. H 20,5 cm.
Uphues Joseph (German exhibited Melbourne in 1889view full entry
Reference: see Auktionshaus Stahl, Saturday 07 May, 2022, Germany, Germany, lot 686: Joseph Uphues (Sassenberg 1850 - Berlin 1911). An Archer.
Designed 1884. Signed 'J. Uphues', foundry stamp 'Aktien Gesellschaft Gladenbeck Friedrichshagen'. Patina worn, arrow missing. Figure: h. 37 cm, marbled bronze mounted base (replaced): h. 9,5 cm. - The sculptor created the antique-inspired subject of the archer in 1884 and received the gold medal for it in Melbourne in 1889. The Gladenbeck bronze foundry offered them in different sizes. - German sculptor. As a master student of Reinhold Begas, Uphues was an esteemed monument sculptor of the Wilhelminian era. From 1892 he had his own studio in Berlin and became a member of the Berlin Secession. Lit.: Thieme/Becker 33, S. 586.


Perks Davidview full entry
Reference: see Cooks Hill Gallery, Newcastle, website: CHG Director's Statement: David Perks was born in Sydney, studied art in the United Kingdom and Europe, returning to Australia in 1972 when he became a full time painter. He has exhibited his realist paintings throughout New South Wales and Australia.

Perks Davidview full entry
Reference: see Star Community article, 21.11.12, ‘Light the inspiration for Guyra painter’:
Capturing the unmistakable light of the New England region is what drew artist David Perks and his wife Bev to move from the coast and settle in Guyra in 2011. An exhibition of David’s paintings will open on Monday, November 26 at the Gala Centre in Guyra for two weeks, Monday to Fridays only.
David studied graphic art at the National Art School, East Sydney and later established his own graphic design studio in Sydney in 1959. Tired of the creative constraints of graphic design and, after an overseas tour with his family in 1971/72 visiting the great art galleries of Britain and Europe, he decided it was time to pursue painting as a career.
In 1972 his entry into the prestigious Wynne Landscape prize was selected to hang and his first one-man exhibition of 40 paintings at the Robert Wardrop Gallery, Roseville in 1973 sold out. Since this time, he has exhibited widely and won many arts awards. David’s works are represented in the Commonwealth Artbank, BHP, IBM, AWI, Newcastle Building Society, Skefco and Varley Engineering Art Collections in Australia, USA and Japan. He was commission by AMP to paint the Sydney Cove area and BHP and AWI have commissioned him to produce a group of in-plant paintings of their steel and cable making processes. In 1994 he was commissioned by the Royal Australian Navy to produce a painting of the Adelaide class frigate, HMAS Newcastle and later HMAS Canberra.
David describes his painting style as traditional/realist and predominately uses oils with an under painting of acrylic.
“The length of time a painting takes me varies a lot,” said David.
“One of the things I love is the actual painting process, not necessarily finishing and only when I am extremely happy with it will I say it is complete.”
His style has remained the same over many years with his greatest influence the master painter Rembrandt.
“He was such a classic, wonderful painter but there have been many influences, including some Australian artists,” said David.
“I just happened to go that way in my painting; it is the way I like to portray the landscape and my subjects.”
Light has been the most exciting part of what David paints and especially the combination of light and water. He began painting outside in the environment but would have so many people hanging over his shoulder and the ever changing weather, he decided to sketch first outside and then paint in the studio.
“I would take the odd photo as well and I did this mainly so that people would look at my paintings and recognise the scene.
“They became a reference for getting things exact.”
David’s exhibition runs for two weeks from Monday, November 26, on Monday to Friday. All paintings will be for sale. The Gala Centre is located at 136 Bradley Street, Guyra.’
Perks Davidview full entry
Reference: from The Armidale Express, Updated May 25 2015 - 9:18am, first published May 22 2015, ‘An Inspired Artist’: From Mosman Bay to Mother of Ducks, David Perks has a talent that captures the scenes around him with an eye for detail and a skill for recreating picture perfect scenes.
His most recent success was at the Bendemeer Art Show with his realistic depiction of Ryanda St in its full autumn glory. The work had previously won the section for a New England scene painting at the Guyra Show. Originally from Sydney, his artistic talent was nurtured by his uncle while growing up and it was a career he pursued despite the misgivings of his parents who urged him to get a "real job".

David made a career as a commercial artist, before pursuing his art full time with many successful one-man exhibitions.
He has won numerous art awards and his works hang in corporate and private collections in Australia and overseas. David and wife Bev have called Guyra home since 2011, and are enjoying the new opportunities of living at altitude.
The altitude brings with it new inspiration and "the wonderful New England light". Among the local scenes he has captured are the Mother of Ducks lagoon, Chandler?s peak and, of course, the autumn colours depicted in the Ryanda street painting. 
A visit to their home reveals some special works which adorn the walls, amidst an eclectic d'cor that leaves little doubt this is the home of an artist. An impressive scene of Mosman Bay dominates the dining nook and everywhere is evidence of the couple's love of colour. Art on the walls, a splash of red on cupboards, blue on the doors, treasured mementoes on display and the view to the multi-coloured outdoor area.
Generosity is in David's nature and he has chosen to share his works to brighten the walls if local buildings. They can be found hanging at the Guyra MPS, the Medical Centre and at the Guyra Council. He continues to find inspiration in the world around him and by sharing his works he hopes to brighten and inspire others.’
Burliuk David Davidovich view full entry
Reference: see Capsule Auctions, New York, NY, United States, 29.4.22, Lot 304
David Davidovich Burliuk
Russian/American (1882-1967)
Brisbane, Australia
oil on board
signed lower left
14 1/8 x 17 inches

Provenance:
From a Private NJ Estate
Hamilton Jeffrey view full entry
Reference: stained glass artist, see website: A Personal History
Randwick T.A.F.E.
In 1974 I graduated from the National Art School, Randwick College of T.A.F.E. with the Interior Design Diploma (Credit). It was a 4x year full time course at that stage and a gruelling one at that. But many of the tutors, including Lesley Penny, Roy Lewis, Nicholas Munster and Ken Reinhardt, among others, were truly inspiring pushing us all beyond what we imagined we were capable of.
People have said to me over the years they can see a "Randwick School" influence in my work and I can now see what they mean; not only in aesthetic terms but in the finish of an artwork- the attention to detail and fine craftsmanship that was drilled into us still comes through and is something I do subscribe to.
The foundation year was common to each of the three strands of Industrial, Interior and Graphic Design and it was the strength of the graphic design training that landed me a job at Taronga Zoo.
Taronga Zoo
1975-79
My first job out of College was the position of Staff Artist for Taronga Zoo, near Mosman on Sydney Harbour. It was a beautiful location in which to work and I thought that I was very lucky indeed. Most of my time was spent illustrating birds, fish and animals for identification labels, for education or for publicity. Naturally the illustrations were required to be as accurate as possible and the resource material was readily at hand so I made a point of getting out into the grounds as often as possible.
At one stage there were three graduates from Randwick College on staff: Louise Pinnock and Barbara Tap had joined the team.
Lettering and signage also formed a large part of the job description: this was graphic art in the days when 'cut and paste' meant exactly that! It was very hands-on and excellent for honing my painting skills. Eventually the Art Dept. did acquire a process camera but not until after I had moved on and not without much lobbying from Marina Bishop and Stanley, my replacement.
After 3yrs there the job was losing its excitement and I felt the need for something more challenging and which offered more of a future. We placed an ad in the Sydney Morning Herald for an artist to join the team and while checking that to see how it ran I noticed an adjacent advert looking for an artist to train in glass: I decided to take along my portfolio and give it a try. An interesting comment from Daryl Clements, PRO at that time: "It's like the fizz has gone out of the lemonade!" I would miss the community of the Zoo but it was an opportunity too good to pass up.
The Studio of Stephen Moor
1979-81
I received my training as a glass painter under Stephen Moor, at his Strathfield studio from 1979-82. His cutter, a semi-retired glazier named Clarie, taught me to cut glass (old school: no tungsten wheels, no grinders!) and Stephen instructed me in all the aspects of designing for a window, preparing a cartoon, translating that to a cutline, selecting glass, painting and firing. He was somewhat impressed with my graphic skills, remarking one day "At last! someone who can letter as good as I can!" (We restored a LOT of painted inscriptions).
Religious windows were our staple. I learnt a great deal about liturgical arts under Stephen and my early years as a junior Sunday School teacher at Georges Hall Baptist Church stood me in good stead.(At 14or 15 I set myself the task of reading the Bible from cover to cover!) Occasionally the studio received a domestic or a commercial commission and over time I gradually took on more responsibility, eventually taking a commission through to completion from Stephen's scale drawings.
However it wasn't until after I left Stephen Moor's studio mid-1982 that I learnt to lead up a window. All the construction, puttying and all the site work was carried out by the leadlighters next door, Bolton Glass. So thanks to a few quick lessons from my friend Steve Lancaster at Bolton's, I managed to stay ahead of my students at The Cottage.
The Cottage, Mosman
1982-1990
On leaving The Studio of Stephen Moor I took a teaching job at The Cottage, a community adult education centre in Hale Rd Mosman under the direction of Pam Kidney. I had been recommended for the job by Warren Langley, who was teaching there at the time. The Cottage was pivotal in my career and I learnt a great deal while teaching: both about the craft and about myself.
It was a place where one could expand one's ideas: they were about developing the tutor as much as developing the student. One particularly memorable weekend was a skills exchange between tutors where we each became students, learning completely new craft techniques and media from colleagues working at the top of their field, such as Audrey Simpson (fibre)
I had students from all walks of life, from politicians to plumbers, even a retired Headmistress. The artist Frank Hinder, who had become a friend around that time, joined my leadlight class for a term: a humbling and enriching experience. Frank was a truly great Australian artist and a wonderful human being, completely unaffected by fame.
The Cottage hosted regular exhibitions of teachers' and students' work and I struck up lasting friendships with two other teachers: Tanja Cunninghame (visual arts for young people), who later moved to Glenn Innes, and Owen Thompson (watercolour) who moved to Hazelbrook. I taught Colour and Design there as well as Leadlighting and on the encouragement of Beth Mazengarb and Bunty George, members of Altrusa, I eventually started running classes at my new shop in Lane Cove.
Lane Cove
1983-96
During these years I was living with my wife and two children at Riverview. It seemed a natural evolution to establish my business there, converting the garage to a studio. I registered the name Hamilton Design and in October 1982 launched my career with a solo exhibition "Pictures at an Exhibition" in that house. A mix of drawings, paintings and stained glass, it was a successful show with lots of people attending over the 10 day period and a total of 7x works sold, which I found encouraging.
As the business grew it became clear very quickly that my career was developing and I needed more space and also more exposure: a more commercial working environment. So we took the difficult step of selling that beautiful house on Tambourine Bay and acquiring a shop on Burns Bay Road: a small but established art gallery, the Ross Davis Studio. For the first 5yrs we lived above the shop, expanding the building as we went along. Hamilton Design became Hamilton Design Glass.
Running a retail business was a fascinating, at times frustrating and time-consuming but ultimately rewarding experience. My wife Rosie was very hands on, assisting in many aspects of the day to day running of the business. It soon morphed from strictly my studio to a gallery: the Hamilton Design Glass Gallery.
The careers of many glass artists were launched through the Gallery and we became a fixture on the cultural circuit: "a little bit of Paddington in Lane Cove.". The Gallery was the first in Sydney to sell the work of Peter Goss (QLD), Sallie Portnoy (USA/Sydney), Jill McGuiness (USA/Sydney), Patrick de Sumo(France/USA) and Gene Polt (W.A.). The watercolourist Owen Thompson had his first solo exhibition at our Gallery, as did glass artist Shirley Gibson, who filled the shop windows with draped fabric and woven lead, leaving the locals scratching their heads and wondering "what goes on in there??". We took on The Australian Craft Show from its inception, exhibiting a stable of artists and growing in reputation over the years. Regulars could be certain they would find something unique and very special, often stopping by on the way to a wedding to select a gift! (The Gallery giftwrapping was instantly recognisable).
Blackwattle Bay
1996-2000
There was a small coterie of artists working in a privately held warehouse space down the road from the Fish Markets, and I found it a fascinating environment. The property boasted the oldest wharf on Sydney Harbour with Hank and Annie's yacht a constant work in progress. The studio space, formerly leased by Cherry Philips and Maureen Cahill, I shared with Chilean-born glass artist Monica Valenzuala, a mature-aged graduate of Sydney College of the Arts and sadly recently deceased.
It was a beautiful spot: we were right on the water's edge and could watch pelicans and other seabirds anytime of the day.
But as the 2000 Sydney Olympics approached my landlords decided they needed my studio space as accommodation for visiting relatives and built a barbecue by the water. So once more I was on the move. And that brought me to Elizabeth Street, Central.
Hibernian House
2000+
I was reluctant to take studio space on the first floor of a warehouse but good alternatives were just not offering at the time. The available space was well-lit, had high ceilings and was positioned adjacent to a goods lift which opened onto a loading dock in Kippax Street. It was a great location and seemed to be a pretty funky space. The reality proved somewhat different, with the goods lift working only about half the time! And over the past decade and a half vehicle access/parking has become more and more difficult. With the current Light Rail construction underway its almost impossible! Elizabeth St is now permenantly tagged as No Stopping 24/7.
Knot Gallery, in studio 107, was a hub of creativity and took the lead in Sydney's underground art scene from 2001-2005. Knot was established by a small group of visionary artists in the building including Keh Ng, Michelle McCosker, Chris Hancock AKA MonkFly, Matt Venables AKA Mercedes Malone and Alasdair Nichol, who acted as director. The core of Knot Gallery artists is now operating in Redfern as 107 Projects. G &A Gallery was located on the 2nd floor during 2005-06 and quickly established an enormous reputation for leading the conceptual art movement before closing rather abruptly. For several years 505 was famous for its Monday night jazz, with such luminaries as Inga Liljestrom, Chris Abrahams and many internationals passing thru Sydney performing to a full house. The club has since relocated to Cleveland St retaining the name 505, it's former suite number in Hibernian. Cameron and Kerry have recently re-established a theatre in the building, the Old 505.
Suite 104, next door to me, was until recently a rehearsal studio where the likes of Ghoul, Bear Hug , Seekea and most recently The Preatures have worked out. On the other side one of the more interesting neighbours for the past few years has been contemporary art mega-star Ben Frost . Ben eventually moved on and Studio 103B is now occupied by the remarkable performance artist Yiorgos Zafiriou. Dance 101 on the first floor was run by the gorgeous Rosano Martinez and Maya Sheridan for several years and hugely popular. They have since relocated to the World Bar in Kings Cross. People and businesses come and go... I'm heading up for 18 years at these premises!
A few years ago the building underwent a major refurbishment: the first in living memory! The Kippax St facade was completed end of 2010 and then for another 6x months we were without windows on Elizabeth St: difficult, to say the least. The noise and dust from the soda blasting of the exterior was horrendous. By end of 2011 the refurb was finally completed: she is a beautiful old dame, built in 1913 and certainly deserved some love and attention.
Publishing details: https://stainedglass.com.au/page/About_Me
Moor Stephenview full entry
Reference: stained glass artist, see website of Jeffrey Hamiltion:
A Personal History
Randwick T.A.F.E.
In 1974 I graduated from the National Art School, Randwick College of T.A.F.E. with the Interior Design Diploma (Credit). It was a 4x year full time course at that stage and a gruelling one at that. But many of the tutors, including Lesley Penny, Roy Lewis, Nicholas Munster and Ken Reinhardt, among others, were truly inspiring pushing us all beyond what we imagined we were capable of.
People have said to me over the years they can see a "Randwick School" influence in my work and I can now see what they mean; not only in aesthetic terms but in the finish of an artwork- the attention to detail and fine craftsmanship that was drilled into us still comes through and is something I do subscribe to.
The foundation year was common to each of the three strands of Industrial, Interior and Graphic Design and it was the strength of the graphic design training that landed me a job at Taronga Zoo.
Taronga Zoo
1975-79
My first job out of College was the position of Staff Artist for Taronga Zoo, near Mosman on Sydney Harbour. It was a beautiful location in which to work and I thought that I was very lucky indeed. Most of my time was spent illustrating birds, fish and animals for identification labels, for education or for publicity. Naturally the illustrations were required to be as accurate as possible and the resource material was readily at hand so I made a point of getting out into the grounds as often as possible.
At one stage there were three graduates from Randwick College on staff: Louise Pinnock and Barbara Tap had joined the team.
Lettering and signage also formed a large part of the job description: this was graphic art in the days when 'cut and paste' meant exactly that! It was very hands-on and excellent for honing my painting skills. Eventually the Art Dept. did acquire a process camera but not until after I had moved on and not without much lobbying from Marina Bishop and Stanley, my replacement.
After 3yrs there the job was losing its excitement and I felt the need for something more challenging and which offered more of a future. We placed an ad in the Sydney Morning Herald for an artist to join the team and while checking that to see how it ran I noticed an adjacent advert looking for an artist to train in glass: I decided to take along my portfolio and give it a try. An interesting comment from Daryl Clements, PRO at that time: "It's like the fizz has gone out of the lemonade!" I would miss the community of the Zoo but it was an opportunity too good to pass up.
The Studio of Stephen Moor
1979-81
I received my training as a glass painter under Stephen Moor, at his Strathfield studio from 1979-82. His cutter, a semi-retired glazier named Clarie, taught me to cut glass (old school: no tungsten wheels, no grinders!) and Stephen instructed me in all the aspects of designing for a window, preparing a cartoon, translating that to a cutline, selecting glass, painting and firing. He was somewhat impressed with my graphic skills, remarking one day "At last! someone who can letter as good as I can!" (We restored a LOT of painted inscriptions).
Religious windows were our staple. I learnt a great deal about liturgical arts under Stephen and my early years as a junior Sunday School teacher at Georges Hall Baptist Church stood me in good stead.(At 14or 15 I set myself the task of reading the Bible from cover to cover!) Occasionally the studio received a domestic or a commercial commission and over time I gradually took on more responsibility, eventually taking a commission through to completion from Stephen's scale drawings.
However it wasn't until after I left Stephen Moor's studio mid-1982 that I learnt to lead up a window. All the construction, puttying and all the site work was carried out by the leadlighters next door, Bolton Glass. So thanks to a few quick lessons from my friend Steve Lancaster at Bolton's, I managed to stay ahead of my students at The Cottage.
The Cottage, Mosman
1982-1990
On leaving The Studio of Stephen Moor I took a teaching job at The Cottage, a community adult education centre in Hale Rd Mosman under the direction of Pam Kidney. I had been recommended for the job by Warren Langley, who was teaching there at the time. The Cottage was pivotal in my career and I learnt a great deal while teaching: both about the craft and about myself.
It was a place where one could expand one's ideas: they were about developing the tutor as much as developing the student. One particularly memorable weekend was a skills exchange between tutors where we each became students, learning completely new craft techniques and media from colleagues working at the top of their field, such as Audrey Simpson (fibre)
I had students from all walks of life, from politicians to plumbers, even a retired Headmistress. The artist Frank Hinder, who had become a friend around that time, joined my leadlight class for a term: a humbling and enriching experience. Frank was a truly great Australian artist and a wonderful human being, completely unaffected by fame.
The Cottage hosted regular exhibitions of teachers' and students' work and I struck up lasting friendships with two other teachers: Tanja Cunninghame (visual arts for young people), who later moved to Glenn Innes, and Owen Thompson (watercolour) who moved to Hazelbrook. I taught Colour and Design there as well as Leadlighting and on the encouragement of Beth Mazengarb and Bunty George, members of Altrusa, I eventually started running classes at my new shop in Lane Cove.
Lane Cove
1983-96
During these years I was living with my wife and two children at Riverview. It seemed a natural evolution to establish my business there, converting the garage to a studio. I registered the name Hamilton Design and in October 1982 launched my career with a solo exhibition "Pictures at an Exhibition" in that house. A mix of drawings, paintings and stained glass, it was a successful show with lots of people attending over the 10 day period and a total of 7x works sold, which I found encouraging.
As the business grew it became clear very quickly that my career was developing and I needed more space and also more exposure: a more commercial working environment. So we took the difficult step of selling that beautiful house on Tambourine Bay and acquiring a shop on Burns Bay Road: a small but established art gallery, the Ross Davis Studio. For the first 5yrs we lived above the shop, expanding the building as we went along. Hamilton Design became Hamilton Design Glass.
Running a retail business was a fascinating, at times frustrating and time-consuming but ultimately rewarding experience. My wife Rosie was very hands on, assisting in many aspects of the day to day running of the business. It soon morphed from strictly my studio to a gallery: the Hamilton Design Glass Gallery.
The careers of many glass artists were launched through the Gallery and we became a fixture on the cultural circuit: "a little bit of Paddington in Lane Cove.". The Gallery was the first in Sydney to sell the work of Peter Goss (QLD), Sallie Portnoy (USA/Sydney), Jill McGuiness (USA/Sydney), Patrick de Sumo(France/USA) and Gene Polt (W.A.). The watercolourist Owen Thompson had his first solo exhibition at our Gallery, as did glass artist Shirley Gibson, who filled the shop windows with draped fabric and woven lead, leaving the locals scratching their heads and wondering "what goes on in there??". We took on The Australian Craft Show from its inception, exhibiting a stable of artists and growing in reputation over the years. Regulars could be certain they would find something unique and very special, often stopping by on the way to a wedding to select a gift! (The Gallery giftwrapping was instantly recognisable).
Blackwattle Bay
1996-2000
There was a small coterie of artists working in a privately held warehouse space down the road from the Fish Markets, and I found it a fascinating environment. The property boasted the oldest wharf on Sydney Harbour with Hank and Annie's yacht a constant work in progress. The studio space, formerly leased by Cherry Philips and Maureen Cahill, I shared with Chilean-born glass artist Monica Valenzuala, a mature-aged graduate of Sydney College of the Arts and sadly recently deceased.
It was a beautiful spot: we were right on the water's edge and could watch pelicans and other seabirds anytime of the day.
But as the 2000 Sydney Olympics approached my landlords decided they needed my studio space as accommodation for visiting relatives and built a barbecue by the water. So once more I was on the move. And that brought me to Elizabeth Street, Central.
Hibernian House
2000+
I was reluctant to take studio space on the first floor of a warehouse but good alternatives were just not offering at the time. The available space was well-lit, had high ceilings and was positioned adjacent to a goods lift which opened onto a loading dock in Kippax Street. It was a great location and seemed to be a pretty funky space. The reality proved somewhat different, with the goods lift working only about half the time! And over the past decade and a half vehicle access/parking has become more and more difficult. With the current Light Rail construction underway its almost impossible! Elizabeth St is now permenantly tagged as No Stopping 24/7.
Knot Gallery, in studio 107, was a hub of creativity and took the lead in Sydney's underground art scene from 2001-2005. Knot was established by a small group of visionary artists in the building including Keh Ng, Michelle McCosker, Chris Hancock AKA MonkFly, Matt Venables AKA Mercedes Malone and Alasdair Nichol, who acted as director. The core of Knot Gallery artists is now operating in Redfern as 107 Projects. G &A Gallery was located on the 2nd floor during 2005-06 and quickly established an enormous reputation for leading the conceptual art movement before closing rather abruptly. For several years 505 was famous for its Monday night jazz, with such luminaries as Inga Liljestrom, Chris Abrahams and many internationals passing thru Sydney performing to a full house. The club has since relocated to Cleveland St retaining the name 505, it's former suite number in Hibernian. Cameron and Kerry have recently re-established a theatre in the building, the Old 505.
Suite 104, next door to me, was until recently a rehearsal studio where the likes of Ghoul, Bear Hug , Seekea and most recently The Preatures have worked out. On the other side one of the more interesting neighbours for the past few years has been contemporary art mega-star Ben Frost . Ben eventually moved on and Studio 103B is now occupied by the remarkable performance artist Yiorgos Zafiriou. Dance 101 on the first floor was run by the gorgeous Rosano Martinez and Maya Sheridan for several years and hugely popular. They have since relocated to the World Bar in Kings Cross. People and businesses come and go... I'm heading up for 18 years at these premises!
A few years ago the building underwent a major refurbishment: the first in living memory! The Kippax St facade was completed end of 2010 and then for another 6x months we were without windows on Elizabeth St: difficult, to say the least. The noise and dust from the soda blasting of the exterior was horrendous. By end of 2011 the refurb was finally completed: she is a beautiful old dame, built in 1913 and certainly deserved some love and attention.
Publishing details: https://stainedglass.com.au/page/About_Me
Chiu Freda illustratorview full entry
Reference: see website:
Freda Chiu is a Sydney-based freelance illustrator, author and educator at The University of Technology Sydney. 
She is inspired by her love of children’s picture books, indie comics, horror movies and good stories.

As well as illustrating children’s books, Freda’s work spans comics, editorial illustration, public art installation and retail graphics.
If you have an exciting commission or collaboration in mind, please get in touch!

SELECTED CLIENTS
Walker Books, Allen and Unwin, Hardie Grant Egmont, Puffin Books UK, Penguin Random House, SBS (Special Broadcasting Service), Singapore Airlines, Sony, University of Technology Sydney, The Galeries, Spring Court, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Google
AWARDS AND NOMINATIONS
2022 The Children’s Book Council of Australia Award for Best New Illustrator (Shortlisted)
2022 IBBY Australia Ena Noël Award (Shortlisted)
BOOKS
2021 A Trip to the Hospital , Allen and Unwin (Author and Illustrator)
2021 Minty Mae Gray and the Strangely Good Day by Fifi Box, Hardie Grant (Illustrator)
2020 The Extraordinary Life of Alan Turing , Puffin Books UK (Illustrator)
2019 The Extraordinary Life of Neil Armstrong by Martin Howard, Puffin Books UK (Illustrator)
2019 Good Selfie: Tips and Tools for Teens to Nail Life by Turia Pitt, Vahene Press (Illustrator)
Upcoming Books:
2022 Miss Mary Kate Martin’s Guide to Monsters by Karen Foxlee, Allen and Unwin (Illustrator)
2023 Last Place Lin by Wai Chim, Allen and Unwin (Illustrator)
2024 Good Hair by Yvonne Sewankambo, Walker Books (Illustrator)
PRESS
2022 SBS Interview
2020 ABDA Interview 
2018 Emerging Writers Festival Interview
2017 Ball Pit Magazine Interview
TEACHING EXPERIENCE

2017- Present   Tutor and Lecturer at the School of Design, University of Technology Sydney
Teaching Responsibilities
BA Design in Visual Communications
VC Illustration: Editorial Illustration (Awarded UTS Commended Subject 2020)
VC Illustration 1: Media and Techniques
BA Design in Animation
Animation Studio: Foundations in Animation Design

Workshops
2022
SBS Lunar New Year Art Activity

2021
4a Centre for Contemporary Asian Art: Create your own Characters
2020
Halloween Inking Kids Workshop, Woollahra Libraries
Kids Art Workshop (Online event- Let’s Make a Fold-out Storybook), Woollahra Libraries
2018
Kids Comic Workshop, Fairfield City Museum and Gallery

EXHIBITIONS AND EVENTS

Solo Shows
2017 The Other Art Fair  
2016 "Mr Kite's Open Mind", Goodspace Gallery, Chippendale
2015 "Tiny Terrors", Wedge Gallery, Books Kinokuniya, Sydney (Jul 3-25)
Live Painting
2020 Live Piano Painting with Ambush Gallery, ANZ Tower, Sydney.
2019 Spring Court Shopfront Window Mural, The Galeries
2018 The Winter Garden, Sydney
2017 The Other Art Fair


EDUCATION
2014 B Design in Visual Communication and B Arts International Studies (Japanese Major), University of Technology, Sydney (UTS)
2012 Sapporo University, Hokkaido 
Publishing details: https://fredachiu.com/about
Combes Alice Herminie view full entry
Reference: see auction, Australian, Aboriginal & International by Theodore Bruce, April 26, 2022, lot 6053: Alice Herminie Combes
Australia, (19th-20th Century)
Botanic Studies [4]
Watercolour
Unsigned
Dimensions
35 x 25 cm (3), 35 x 20 cm Frame: 59 x 32.5 cm (3) 50 x 23.5 cm
Artist or Maker
Alice Herminie Combes
Medium
Watercolour
Condition Report
Laid on board, original framing
Provenance
The Family of the Artist
The artist was the daughter of Edward Combes (1830-1895), engineer, pastoralist, politician and painter, one of the Founding Members of the AGNSW

Schiffers Franz Oswald (1902-1976) German?view full entry
Reference: see Antikbar Original Vintage Posters
April 23, 2022, lot 339, Original vintage propaganda poster aimed at allied soldiers stationed in Europe after the World War Two - Almost! VD - a military poster from World War II raising awareness about the venereal disease and reproductive health. Design featuring an illustration by a German artist Franz Oswald Schiffers (1902-1976) who worked previously for the Nazi Propaganda Ministry, depicting a soldier in uniform with a suitcase at his feet looking at a sailing ship while standing at a pier stopped by a hand with large white letters 'VD'. Good condition, minor creasing, minor staining, small tears, small paper losses in margin. Country of issue: Australia, designer: Franz Oswald Schiffers (1902-1976), size (cm): 58x41, year of printing: 1946.
and
Original vintage propaganda poster aimed at allied soldiers stationed in Europe after the World War Two - VD Take Care - a military poster from World War II raising awareness about the venereal disease and reproductive health. Design featuring an illustration by a German artist Franz Oswald Schiffers (1902-1976) who worked previously for the Nazi Propaganda Ministry, depicting a soldier in uniform running away from large letters 'VD' appearing from a dark stormy sky with lightning. Good condition, creasing, minor staining, small paper losses in margins. Country of issue: Australia, designer: Franz Oswald Schiffers (1902-1976), size (cm): 58x41, year of printing: 1946.
and
Original vintage propaganda poster aimed at allied soldiers stationed in Europe after the World War Two - Going home? Don't be delayed by V.D. - a military poster from World War II raising awareness about the venereal disease and reproductive health. Design featuring an illustration by a German artist Franz Oswald Schiffers (1902-1976) who worked previously for the Nazi Propaganda Ministry, depicting a soldier in uniform tied up with a rope that forms letters 'VD' with a black and blue map of Europe in the background. Fair condition, tears, drawing, staining, paper losses in margins. Country of issue: Australia, designer: Franz Oswald Schiffers (1902-1976), size (cm): 58x41, year of printing: 1946.

Ringman N P publisherview full entry
Reference: name in inscription of the Charles Rodius engraving:
Charles Rodius (1802-1860)
Sydney Cove - Port Jackson, 1838
[aquatint engraving?]
34.2 x 48.4 cm (sheet size); 21.9 x 38.8 cm (pictorial image size)
Printed in image lower left: ‘Drawn by Chs. Rodius’
Printed in image lower right: ‘Engd by S. G. Hughes.’
Printed in image lower centre: ‘Sydney Cove, Port Jackson.
Printed below main title: ‘The steam boat Australian accompanying with numerous friends on farewell of the missionary brig Camden [flag image inserted] October 25th 1838.’
Printed below titles: ‘Sydney Pubd 1838 by N. P. Ringman.’



Calve P sculptorview full entry
Reference: see Journal and proceedings, Vol. 6 Part. 6 (1920) The Royal Australian Historical Society.  
1920. p 282, ‘The Discovery of Mudgee.  
By H. SELKIRK:
In connection with the approaching Centenary of Mudgee the following extract is quoted from The Sun, 3rd November, 1920:  
“In connection with the Mudgee Centenary celebrations, which have been fixed for March next, the local Committee is inviting tenders for the erection of an obelisk to the memory of Lawson,  the discoverer of the district. The design of the obelisk has been prepared by Mr. P. Calve, a Sydney sculptor, and specifications and a sketch of the proposed  work may be seen at the offices of the Country Promotion League, 3 and 4 Imperial Arcade, Sydney.”  
Foy Johnview full entry
Reference: Sydney Morning Herald article ‘Posters illuminated gigs big and small’, by Phil Brandel, mainly about John Foy’s rock music posters.
Publishing details: SMH, 19.4.22, p27
Ref: 145
Foy Johnview full entry
Reference: Snaps Crack Pop! by John Foy, Jim Paton.
‘It's a mongrel. Neither monograph nor memoir, 'Snaps, Crack & Pop!' is something in between. Utilising the rock posters of Skull Printworks and graphics of Red Eye and Black Eye Records, the book documents the unusual career path of designer and reluctant record executive, John Foy. It's a personal journal that traverses his experiences in the original 70's Punk era, legendary record stores, trading 60's psychedelic posters, as well as more recent exploits. With humour as weapon of choice, Foy establishes facts and dispels myths, as he interweaves his experiences with sociological observations of the times. -- blurb.
Publishing details: Extra deluxe ltd edition. Published
[Australia] : Past Present Future Art a division of Red Eye Record Label, 2018.
239 pages. + 1 packet of ephemera.
Limited edition of 500 copies.
Ref: 1009
poster artview full entry
Reference: see Snaps Crack Pop! by John Foy, Jim Paton.
‘It's a mongrel. Neither monograph nor memoir, 'Snaps, Crack & Pop!' is something in between. Utilising the rock posters of Skull Printworks and graphics of Red Eye and Black Eye Records, the book documents the unusual career path of designer and reluctant record executive, John Foy. It's a personal journal that traverses his experiences in the original 70's Punk era, legendary record stores, trading 60's psychedelic posters, as well as more recent exploits. With humour as weapon of choice, Foy establishes facts and dispels myths, as he interweaves his experiences with sociological observations of the times. -- blurb.
Publishing details: Extra deluxe ltd edition. Published
[Australia] : Past Present Future Art a division of Red Eye Record Label, 2018.
239 pages. + 1 packet of ephemera.
Limited edition of 500 copies.
Vegetation in the early landscape art of the Sydney regionview full entry
Reference: Vegetation in the early landscape art of the Sydney region, Australia: accurate record or artistic licence? By Lynette C. McLoughlin.
‘With its relatively short European history, Australia's earliest paintings may provide information on both the pre-European landscape and changes since first settlement. The pictorial record is examined as historical documentation of natural landscape, particularly vegetation, by considering artistic depictions of the region around Sydney, New South Wales, from initial settlement in 1788 to the early 1850s. Critical comment relating to the accuracy of the landscape paintings is examined by reference to the pictures and to Sydney's dramatically varied geology that shaped the landscapes and the vegetation communities that artists painted. There are few detailed studies of Australian landscape painting and much of the critical comment is found to be generalized and only partly accurate, including the persistent criticism that artists misrepresented Australian environments for a multitude of reasons. The pictorial record displays consistent observation of the real variation in landscape character, and in vegetation structure, communities and species. It also appears to provide interesting evidence of differential impact of fire, indicating different pre-settlement fire regimes in different landscape types.’
Publishing details: Abingdon: Taylor & Francis Group, Landscape research, 1999-03-01, Vol.24 (1), p.25-47
Ref: 1009
Sweet Samuelview full entry
Reference: CAPTAIN SWEETS VIEWS OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA, 100 Pages, 94 historical photographs of Adelaide and Surrounds c.1860 [see Elder Fine Art, Collectable Australian & European Paintings, Sunday 1st May, 2022, lot 139.
Publishing details: c.1860
Ref: 1000
Thake Eric still life linocutview full entry
Reference: Still life with Japanese figure 1929, Original linocut with watercolour, 127 x 107 mm (plate); 210 x 177 mm (sheet), signed lower right and dated 1929 in pencil. Framed in black timber.
Eric Thake attended night classes at the National Gallery of Victoria in 1922 and from 1925 to 1928 studied drawing and painting with George Bell. He focussed on linocuts and woodcuts and in 1929 exhibited his prints alongside Margaret Preston, Dorrit Black, Ethel Spowers and Eveline Syme at the Arts and Crafts Society. Thake exhibited with Sydney’s Society of Artists, and ‘was a founding member of the Contemporary Art Group (from 1932) and the Contemporary Art Society (from 1938). By the early 1930s, Thake was already gaining a reputation as one of the young artists challenging the conservative standards. In 1932 he was described as ‘notable among modernism’s adherents’.’ – Alisa Bunbury, Windows, reflections and shadow play in the art of Eric Thake. The La Trobe Journal No. 105, September 2020, p. 8.
‘There are few, if any, graphic artists in Australia with such a sense of design or who can surpass the sensitivity and purity of Thake’s line’ – Elizabeth Summons, Introduction to The Eric Thake Picture Book. Melbourne, 1978.
A fine example of Australian modernism by one of our most accomplished graphic artists.
Rare, no examples traced in public collections. [From Douglas Stewart Fine Books, April 20, 2022.


flora in landscape art of the Sydney regionview full entry
Reference: see Vegetation in the early landscape art of the Sydney region, Australia: accurate record or artistic licence? By Lynette C. McLoughlin.
‘With its relatively short European history, Australia's earliest paintings may provide information on both the pre-European landscape and changes since first settlement. The pictorial record is examined as historical documentation of natural landscape, particularly vegetation, by considering artistic depictions of the region around Sydney, New South Wales, from initial settlement in 1788 to the early 1850s. Critical comment relating to the accuracy of the landscape paintings is examined by reference to the pictures and to Sydney's dramatically varied geology that shaped the landscapes and the vegetation communities that artists painted. There are few detailed studies of Australian landscape painting and much of the critical comment is found to be generalized and only partly accurate, including the persistent criticism that artists misrepresented Australian environments for a multitude of reasons. The pictorial record displays consistent observation of the real variation in landscape character, and in vegetation structure, communities and species. It also appears to provide interesting evidence of differential impact of fire, indicating different pre-settlement fire regimes in different landscape types.’
Publishing details: Abingdon: Taylor & Francis Group, Landscape research, 1999-03-01, Vol.24 (1), p.25-47
REMEMBER GARDENSview full entry
Reference: REMEMBER GARDENS: EIGHT WOMEN & THEIR VISIONS OF AN AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE, by Holly Kerr Forsyth. Beautifully illustrated, it is the story of Elizabeth Macarthur, Edna Walling, and six other women whose passions for their gardens and for garden making have shaped our relationship with the Australian landscape. It commemorates more than two centuries of gardens and the role of women establishing a rich heritage.


Publishing details: Melbourne: The Miegunyah Press, 2008.
First Paperback Edition.
28cm x 21cm. xii, 273 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial french fold wrappers.
Ref: 1000
garden artview full entry
Reference: see REMEMBER GARDENS: EIGHT WOMEN & THEIR VISIONS OF AN AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE, by Holly Kerr Forsyth. Beautifully illustrated, it is the story of Elizabeth Macarthur, Edna Walling, and six other women whose passions for their gardens and for garden making have shaped our relationship with the Australian landscape. It commemorates more than two centuries of gardens and the role of women establishing a rich heritage.


Publishing details: Melbourne: The Miegunyah Press, 2008.
First Paperback Edition.
28cm x 21cm. xii, 273 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial french fold wrappers.
CAPTURING BRISBANEview full entry
Reference: CAPTURING BRISBANE: THE CITY'S FIRST PHOTOGRAPHERS, 1855 TO 1901, by Brian G. Rough. [To be indexed]
"Photographers have made a significant contribution towards our understanding and interpretation of the City’s past by recording the people and places around them. Capturing Brisbane provides the stories of 158 commercial photographers and 54 photographic studios operating in the City between 1855 and 1901. By accurately identifying the people who created the images, and from when and where they were operating, it provides a very useful tool to assist in dating Brisbane photographs." (publisher's blurb)

Publishing details: Brisbane: Brian Rough, 2022.
First Edition.
30.5cm x 22cm. 137 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial matte papered boards.
Ref: 1000
photographyview full entry
Reference: CAPTURING BRISBANE: THE CITY'S FIRST PHOTOGRAPHERS, 1855 TO 1901, by Brian G. Rough.
"Photographers have made a significant contribution towards our understanding and interpretation of the City’s past by recording the people and places around them. Capturing Brisbane provides the stories of 158 commercial photographers and 54 photographic studios operating in the City between 1855 and 1901. By accurately identifying the people who created the images, and from when and where they were operating, it provides a very useful tool to assist in dating Brisbane photographs." (publisher's blurb)

Publishing details: Brisbane: Brian Rough, 2022.
First Edition.
30.5cm x 22cm. 137 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial matte papered boards.
Encyclopaedia of Australian Potter's Marksview full entry
Reference: Encyclopaedia of Australian Potter's Marks by Geoff Ford. Over 1600 marks.
Publishing details: SALT GLAZE PRESS, 1998
Ref: 1009
pottery marksview full entry
Reference: see Encyclopaedia of Australian Potter's Marks by Geoff Ford. Over 1600 marks.
Publishing details: SALT GLAZE PRESS, 1998
Jones John Llewelyn view full entry
Reference: PAINTINGS AND WATERCOLOURS BY J. LLEWELLYN JONES by Lawsons
May 5, 2022, Live auction
Sydney, NSW, 28 works
Llewellyn Jones Jview full entry
Reference: see John Llewelyn Jones
Woolrych Francis Humphrey W 1868 - 1941view full entry
Reference: see Toomey & Co. Auctioneers
April 27, 2022, 10:00 AM CST
Oak Park, IL, US, lot 277 Francis Humphry William Woolrych
(Australian/American, 1868-1941)
Fall Landscape
oil on canvas
signed lower right
25 1/8" x 30 1/8"
Provenance:
The Ira Simon Collection, Chicago, Illinois
Condition Report
Frame: 27 3/4"h x 32 3/4"w x 1 1/2"d
Surface dirt. Some areas of craquelure. Under UV light there is evidence of inpainting in all quadrants. Good condition.
Stocqueler Joachim Hayward 1800-1885view full entry
Reference: Stocqueler (J.H). The Life of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington, 2 volumes,
Publishing details: London: Ingram, Cooke, and Co, 1852, frontispieces and additional illustrated titles, numerous plates and illustrations to text,
Ref: 1000
Polaine Peterview full entry
Reference: see LACY SCOTT & KNIGHT auction, UK, 23.4.22, lot 1002, Peter Polaine (b. 1937) - Australian ghost trees, monotype, signed and titled in pencil to the margin, 30x25cm
Gould Johnview full entry
Reference: The Birds of Great Britain, 5 volumes, by John Gould.
Publishing details: Published by Eric Maylin, London, 1980. All contained within card slip case
Ref: 1000
Gould Johnview full entry
Reference: John Gould’s Birds
Publishing details: Chartwell Books, hc,1980
Ref: 1000
Boyd Lynne 1953 - 2022view full entry
Reference: see obituary, Charles Nodrum Gallery, ‘Vale
Lynne Boyd, 1953 - 2022. It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Lynne Boyd on the 20th of April, 2022 - her 69th birthday. 
Lynne died at Kyneton hospital after a battle with cancer. 
Our thoughts are with her husband Peter, daughter Georgia and son Christian. 

Charles Nodrum Gallery held the first of many solo shows of Lynne's work in 1995.  She completed studies at the Victorian College of the Arts in 1984, and a Master of Fine Arts at Monash University in 2004.  She later lectured at the VCA, RMIT, Monash and La Trobe Universities.

Lynne lived and worked in Melbourne her entire life, with all her adult years within easy reach of Port Phillip Bay.  She began exhibiting her paintings of the Bay in the mid-1980s (at Arden Street Gallery in Melbourne) and variations on this subject remained the core of her practice thereafter. Of the many artists who have confronted this subject, few could match her subtle and sensitive handling of its light - particularly on those grey and misty days when the air itself seems to shimmer and sea and sky seem to melt into a barely differentiated whole. In these works her "atmospherics" combined depictive precision with meteorological accuracy (the hand and brain working with confidence) to produce works which evoke in the viewer a sense of quiet contemplation.  They exemplify Berenson's (now unfashionable) criterion that art should help us to breathe more deeply.     ’
Whitehead Isaac Pview full entry
Reference: see eBay listing located in US 25.4.22. Is it the Australian artist Isaac Whitehead? It is signed ‘I P Whitehead]: Australian artist Isaac Whitehead (1819-1893). The painting is signed "I P Whitehead", and titled "Early Autumn Sketch 1869", and inscribed "Bella 1876" on the verso, seen magnified in picture 8. The painting is housed in its original gold leaf frame. The painting is in excellent condition with no rips, tears, repairs, water damage, or in-painting. The painting has been recently cleaned by a professional restorer, with a foam-board backing added with a clear plastic window to view the back of the canvas. The original frame is in very good condition with no cracks, major losses, or repairs, but does have age related wear including nicks, gouges, and some minor losses to the gold leaf. In addition, the gold leaf is very brittle in some spots and may even come loose during shipment. The painting is a real gem and ready for hanging as-is. The frame measures roughly 18" x 13.5", with the image measuring roughly 11" x 6.25". Below is some information about the artist, whose auction results include sales up to $33,844. 
Isaac Whitehead (1819-1883), like his great contemporary Eugene von Guérard, was much admired for his masterly paintings of the sublime in nature. In 1875, he was singled out, after Von Guérard and Louis Buvelot, as: "Another aspirant for fame as a delineator of Australian scenery is Mr. Isaac Whitehead, who during the last three or four years, has made wonderful progress, and may now be said to be most successful in reproducing upon canvas the distinctive features of the scenery he portrays". A grand painting from that year, In the Sassafras Valley, Victoria, is now in the M. J. M. Carter Collection of the Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Another, of similarly imposing dimensions, Fernshaw, 1880, is in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne. While Whitehead and von Guérard shared a romantic view of nature, transforming the topographical view into a celebration of grandeur, the latter’s attention to detail was outstripped by Whitehead’s botanical accuracy in the rendering of the different species of fern and gum. They also differed in the warmer tones and brighter touches of sunlight Whitehead introduced into the depths of his forests, banishing shades of that colonial melancholia that lingered in the work of others. In achieving this, Whitehead combined the best of von Guérard with the more settled atmosphere of Buvelot to create his own, unique image of Australia. Significantly, when Whitehead and von Guérard showed two paintings each at the Exposition Universelle de Paris of 1878, it was Whitehead who was awarded a silver medal. His winning works were Ocean Beach, Sorrento, 1876 and Fernshaw, Victoria. 

Dublin-born Whitehead settled in Melbourne with his family in about 1858. He soon came to prominence as the colony’s leading picture framer; his superbly worked golden frames featuring native plants are still seen today on the paintings of his leading contemporaries. A foundation member of and regular exhibitor with the Victorian Academy of Arts, he also participated successfully in the Melbourne Internationals of 1879 and 1880. Prior to its Paris showing, Ocean Beach, Sorrento was seen by an admiring Melbourne public in the Victorian Academy’s annual exhibition of 1876, and again in Sydney at the New South Wales Academy of Art of 1877. Although Whitehead’s paintings show him chiefly occupied with scenic landscapes, an early sketchbook from his days in Ireland reveals an interest in coastal views as well. This is supported by another seascape, Wilson’s Promontory, seen in the Victorian Academy’s annual exhibition of 1878, the price of £31.10.0 indicating it was a substantial work. 
Norton Rosaleenview full entry
Reference: ROSALEEN NORTON: KINGS CROSS WITCH, by Richard Moir; Rosaleen Norton. The author's personal memories of Australian artist and witch, Rosaleen Norton, in her later years. Illustrated throughout with black and white reproductions of Norton's paintings.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Richard Moir, 1994.
First Edition. Signed by Author
20.5cm x 15cm. [iii], 48 leaves (printed recto only), black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Limited edition of 250 signed and number copies, of which this is number 185.

Ref: 1000
Gibson Robinview full entry
Reference: LIGHT, SPACE, PLACE: THE ARCHITECTURE OF ROBIN GIBSON. By Deborah van der Plaat; Lloyd Jones. "While many architects aspire to profoundly transform their cities, very few ever manage to build at a scale that might make this possible. Architect Robin Gibson not only built prolifically and at expansive urban scales, his projects also helped to redefine the culture and identity of one of Australia's major capital cities. Born in Brisbane in 1930, Gibson graduated from the University of Queensland in 1954. He spent a brief period working as an architect overseas before returning to his home city in 1957. Here, he established an architectural practice that would go on to design some of Brisbane's most important civic and commercial environments, including a cluster of what are arguably the most transformative projects ever built in the city: the Queensland Museum, the State Library of Queensland, the Performing Arts Complex and the renowned Queensland Art Gallery. Though he rarely wrote or published on his own architecture, Gibson had an outsized presence in his home city (at one point being named Queenslander of the Year) and he was awarded the Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal, the institute's highest honour. His output, however, has been subject to surprisingly little criticism in either mainstream or professional publications. Furthermore, much of this criticism gives us an imperfect understanding of the thinking behind Gibson's architecture. While commentators have attempted to situate Gibson within the conventional folds of international modernism, or even brutalism, this book reveals that his body of work, while carrying many of the formal trappings of high modernism, was actually underpinned by a distinctive vision of Brisbane as a sub-tropical city, sensitive to climate and place, and alive with people." (publisher's blurb)
Publishing details: Melbourne: Uro Books, 2022.
First Edition.
29cm x 24cm. 344 pages, illustrations, some colour. Pictorial cloth.
Ref: 1000
Holiday Audrey (illustrator)view full entry
Reference: MANSIONS, COTTAGES AND ALL SAINTS, by Audrey Holiday; Walter Eastman
Publishing details: Hobart: Printing Authority of Tasmania, 1994.
First Edition. Signed by Author
21cm x 29.5cm. x, 182 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Haluwana Michael photographerview full entry
Reference: Walking with Colour. By: Michael Haluwana. Vast, ancient and majestic the landscapes of Australia’s western reaches are filled with rich colours and fascinating forms. The seas, forests and arid plains are brimming with unique wildlife and dynamic energy. The variety of hues provides endless inspiration while changes in perspective can allow the creation of unexpected compositions. From its rugged ranges to sweeping coastlines, Western Australia is a place of dramatic and diverse landscapes, natural wonder and boundless beauty, providing both a challenge and inspiration to capture on camera.

Publishing details: Western Australian Museum , 2022, 204 pp
Ref: 1000
Hinder Warrenview full entry
Reference: Still moments : the landscape photography of Warren Hinder / Warren Hinder
Publishing details: Katoomba [N.S.W.] : Warren Hinder Editions, 2008 
32 leaves : chiefly ill. (some col.) ;
Ref: 1000
Dupain Max view full entry
Reference: Old colonial buildings of Australia / Max Dupain ; [text by J.M. Freeland]
Publishing details: Sydney : Methuen Australia, 1980 
176 p. : ill. (some col.) ;
Ref: 1000
architectureview full entry
Reference: see Old colonial buildings of Australia / Max Dupain ; [text by J.M. Freeland]
Publishing details: Sydney : Methuen Australia, 1980 
176 p. : ill. (some col.) ;
Scott Haroldview full entry
Reference: see See Heritage Auctions, Texas, US, Fine & Decorative Arts - #13185
May 13, 2022, lot 27043, Harold Scott (20th century) View of Lane Cove River and Sydney from Boronia Park, Hunters Hill, New South Wales Oil on canvas laid Masonite 18 x 24 inches (45.7 x 61.0 cm) Signed lower right: Harold Scott Titled on the reverse: View of Lane Cove River and Sydney from Boronia Park, Hunters Hill, New South Wales PROVENANCE: Private collection, New Jersey.

Giglioli Enricoview full entry
Reference: see Veritable Apollos: Aesthetics, Evolution and Enrico Giglioli's Photographs of Indigenous Australians, 1867-1878, by Jane Lydon (University of Western Australia, Australia)
Ideas about Aboriginal people have always been shaped by Eurocentric aesthetic
 judgements, however unstable: as the Italian Darwinist Enrico Giglioli wrote in
1875, ‘we find some, like Pickering and Leichhardt, who assert that the
aborigines are veritable Apollos, while others have depicted them as the most 
wretched of humans in their physical aspect.’ The mid-nineteenth century saw a
‘visual revolution’ intersect with tremendous scientific ferment surrounding the
origins and history of humankind. One of the more controversial implications of 
Darwin’s theory of evolution was that aesthetic judgement and perceptions of 
beauty were relative, and a function of natural selection. However, scientists
including Darwin himself found it difficult to abandon conventional western aesthetic criteria for defining other peoples. Giglioli’s work on Australian Aboriginal people exemplifies the intense experimentation of this formative period, and the development both of ideas about Indigenous Australians and a new visual language to express them. Through an innovative visual comparative
method, he sought to place Aboriginal Australians within an evolutionary racial 
taxonomy. Nonetheless, conventions of beauty focused on the antique classical 
ideal continued to structure perceptions of Aboriginal people, and continue to be
implicated in arguments for intervention and colonization. Such analysis reveals
the contingency of rival visual discourses in the past, and denaturalizes ways of 
seeing race in the present.
Publishing details: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 2013
Miles Henry 1813–1900view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Virtual Show and Tell no. 16 MARCH / APRIL 2022: Henry Miles’ Death of the Wild Horse, Oil on canvas, c 1875 – 1885. 50.5 cm x 63.5 cm. Englishman Henry Miles (1813–1900) was the Pound Keeper at North Rhine (in the Angaston district at the southern end of the Barossa Valley) from at least August 1854 to December 1876, managing lost and stolen animals.
He married Mary Ann Winter from Somerset in 1853 at Gawler River. Self-taught, all his artwork was completed with his left hand due to a disability. At the Royal Adelaide Show in 1874 and 1876 he was reported to have exhibited paintings of sheep and cattle owned by John Angas of Collingrove, the historic Angaston property.
The owner purchased it 25 years ago assuming it was a naïve ‘mirror image’ copy of one by Englishman George Stubbs (1724-1806) who produced 17 paintings and engravings of the scene.
It’s an epic choice of subject for Miles, incorporating anatomical understanding of the two animals as well as themes of heroic action, drama and sentiment.
Editor: So where did Miles see the original?
Stubbs
Wedgwood plate, Second Parramatta Bridgeview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Virtual Show and Tell no. 16 MARCH / APRIL 2022: After de Sainson, lithograph from sketches of first voyage of Dumont D’Urville, Voyage de la corvette l’Astrolabe,publishedParis1833,plate33. Diameter:25.5cm.
Plate with transfer-printed decoration of Parramatta’s second bridge 1826, by Wedgwood UK for retail store David Jones 1962. One of a set of four limited edition historical plates comprising the lighthouse at Watson’s Bay, the bridge at Parramatta, the entrance to Sydney Cove and Government House. Another set of Melbourne scenes Como, Government House, Princes Bridge and Bourke St 1878 was made for retailer Myer.
This wooden Gaol bridge was constructed on the same site as the later 1837 Lennox bridge and had a crossing span at Church Street which gave access between the town and the gaol. It also helped to open up access to the growing settlements to the north of Parramatta River.
The decking of the bridge was supported on ten sandstone piers. It was of timber and included a guard-rail or balustrade on either side that comprised drop posts with top and bottom rails with each section infilled with timber diagonals.
Floodwaters in 1826 severely damaged three of the piers and, with one being rebuilt in late 1827, the bridge managed to survive until the late 1830s when the stone Lennox bridge (still standing) was completed.
de Sainson Lview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Virtual Show and Tell no. 16 MARCH / APRIL 2022: After de Sainson, lithograph from sketches of first voyage of Dumont D’Urville, Voyage de la corvette l’Astrolabe,publishedParis1833,plate33. Diameter:25.5cm.
Plate with transfer-printed decoration of Parramatta’s second bridge 1826, by Wedgwood UK for retail store David Jones 1962. One of a set of four limited edition historical plates comprising the lighthouse at Watson’s Bay, the bridge at Parramatta, the entrance to Sydney Cove and Government House. Another set of Melbourne scenes Como, Government House, Princes Bridge and Bourke St 1878 was made for retailer Myer.
This wooden Gaol bridge was constructed on the same site as the later 1837 Lennox bridge and had a crossing span at Church Street which gave access between the town and the gaol. It also helped to open up access to the growing settlements to the north of Parramatta River.
The decking of the bridge was supported on ten sandstone piers. It was of timber and included a guard-rail or balustrade on either side that comprised drop posts with top and bottom rails with each section infilled with timber diagonals.
Floodwaters in 1826 severely damaged three of the piers and, with one being rebuilt in late 1827, the bridge managed to survive until the late 1830s when the stone Lennox bridge (still standing) was completed.
Parramatta Bridge imagesview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Virtual Show and Tell no. 16 MARCH / APRIL 2022: After de Sainson, lithograph from sketches of first voyage of Dumont D’Urville, Voyage de la corvette l’Astrolabe,publishedParis1833,plate33. Diameter:25.5cm.
Plate with transfer-printed decoration of Parramatta’s second bridge 1826, by Wedgwood UK for retail store David Jones 1962. One of a set of four limited edition historical plates comprising the lighthouse at Watson’s Bay, the bridge at Parramatta, the entrance to Sydney Cove and Government House. Another set of Melbourne scenes Como, Government House, Princes Bridge and Bourke St 1878 was made for retailer Myer.
This wooden Gaol bridge was constructed on the same site as the later 1837 Lennox bridge and had a crossing span at Church Street which gave access between the town and the gaol. It also helped to open up access to the growing settlements to the north of Parramatta River.
The decking of the bridge was supported on ten sandstone piers. It was of timber and included a guard-rail or balustrade on either side that comprised drop posts with top and bottom rails with each section infilled with timber diagonals.
Floodwaters in 1826 severely damaged three of the piers and, with one being rebuilt in late 1827, the bridge managed to survive until the late 1830s when the stone Lennox bridge (still standing) was completed.
Fischer Edward jeweller 1828–1911view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Virtual Show and Tell no. 16 MARCH / APRIL 2022: Christening Mug by Edward Fischer Geelong, Inscribed: ‘Frances Annie Lugg from her Godfather Geelong July 21st 1881’. Sterling silver. Base 70 cm diam, height 8.6 cm, weight 140 g.
Edward Fischer (1828–191; see VS&T 15 for further information), dominated the jewellery trade in Geelong up until 1891.
Frances Annie Lugg born Geelong 1875, and married Philip Charles Holmes Hunt (1874– 1941), ADB volume 9, at Christ Church, South Yarra on 16 April 1907.
Hunt, a gas engineer from England, arrived in Melbourne in 1902 to take up a position at the Metropolitan Gas Co. He introduced slot meters, making gas affordable to Melbourne’s working class.
After visiting Europe in 1910 to investigate new carbonizing plant, he recommended and supervised impressive construction and developmental projects, including in 1912 Australia’s first vertical retort installation. The acknowledged leader of the gas industry in Australia, Hunt acted as consultant to the Australian Gas Light Co., Sydney, the South Australian Gas Co., the Hobart Gas Co., and the Newcastle Gas and Coke Co.
His wife Frances pre-deceased him in 1940.

seed pictureview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Virtual Show and Tell no. 16 MARCH / APRIL 2022: Kookaburra Seed Picture, Inscribed: “SEED PICTURE made by Helen Howes 1950” Frame 22cmx17cm. The kookaburra formed from seeds and sitting on a twig was probably created by a young girl.
A search in TROVE on-line newspapers, failed to identify the maker however this modest item was probably made by a South Australian as it was acquired from a shop in that state.
Many children made Christmas gifts for their parents, and still do and this art work was probably one such gift. Current craft websites suggest making seed pictures for children’s art and craft activities.
Question: If you can identify the seeds used to create this picture please advise the editors.
Melbourne - Lord Melbourne portrait by Pickersgillview full entry
Reference: see Justin Miller Fine Art catalogue, winter exhibition, 2022: includes essay on Lord melbourne and the portrait.
Publishing details: Justin Miller Fine Art, 1922, 59pp
Bishop Mervyn photographerview full entry
Reference: see Justin Miller Fine Art catalogue, winter exhibition, 2022. Includes short essay.
Publishing details: Justin Miller Fine Art, 1922, 59pp
Beattie John Watt 1859-1930view full entry
Reference: see FLINTS AUCTIONS LTD, UK, 5.5.22, lot 245, JOHN WATT BEATTIE (1859-1930) Photographs of Tonga, three late albumen prints, c.1890-1900, each mounted on card and numbered in the negative, with wetstamp verso 'Printed by J.W. Beattie, Hobart' and each bearing the name A Butcher in faint pencil, one titled 'Coconut Walk in Lifuka, one titled 'Roman Catholic Church Tonga', the third a surf and headland view, untitled. Each 9cm x 12cm, on cards 10.6cm x 16.4cm. Note: Beattie was an important 19th century Australian photographer becoming State Photographer of Tasmania in 1896. He made photographic trips to the South Sea Islands, but also lent his camera to his friend Bishop Montgomery to record the islands. The fact that these are stamped 'Printed by' may indicate that the Bishop was the photographer.
Cazalis Captain commander of the Arche-d'Alliance view full entry
Reference: see see Briscadieu auction, Bordeaux, France, 30.4.22, lot 848 Album Amicorum - Travels - Drawings
[OCEANIA - ENGRAVINGS and DRAWINGS ALBUM]
Scrap Book or album amicorum of Captain Cazalis, commander of the Arche-d'Alliance (Campaign in Oceania and around the world during the years 1850, 1851 and 1852). There are engravings taken from Voyage de l'Astrolabe (La Pérouse), engravings of costumes by Victor Adam, engravings by Sainson (some in color), pencil drawings (Apia, Opulu island, warriors of Atoua returning at home after the war (April 22, 1851) - Pic de Lombac (August 27, 1851) - Pencil drawing of various utensils with signature "Tribute to Captain Cazalis Arche d'Alliance" (September 6, 1851, signature to be identified) - Study in the tropic), 4 drawings enhanced with watercolor (New-Castle, Australia, Flag-Staff - Kaïlua Fish, Sandwich Islands (February 19, 1851) - Honolulu (February 3, 1851) - Steamboat (very small format)), color gouaches on rice paper (Chinese costumes, Chinese tortures, junks and boats, brightly colored birds, large-format Chinese fish, bouquets of flowers, 9 Chinese costumes on leaf veins, crafts (picking and drying tea, weaving), a part with lacks or accidents) and other various lithographs without r contribution with the trip to Oceania.
In folio, drawings and engravings laminated or inserted in the pages of the album. ½ black shagreen with corners, spine detached, binding worn, as is.
Captain Cazalis carried out several crossings as a captain of boats, in the Indian Ocean and in the Pacific Ocean, notably ensuring a Paris-San Francisco crossing via Brazil and along the coasts of South America.



Caesar Kurt view full entry
Reference: see Finarte Casa d'Aste auction, Saturday 07 May, 2022, Rome, Italy. Lot 293: Kurt Caesar


Corroboree: Australia, 1960

pencil and ink on thin cardboard
32,5 x 44 cm ciascuno
Complete story composed of 20 original comic arts made by Caesar entitled "Corroboree: Australia", published for the first time on the pages of Il Vittorioso in 1960. Each on two panels. Signed on the fourth page.


Holford Williamview full entry
Reference: WILLIAM HOLFORD'S ART & DESIGN INFLUENCE on AUSTRALIAN POTTERY, by GEOFF FORD.
Publishing details: 1ST ED 2003, Paperback,
Ref: 1000
Fusinato Marco view full entry
Reference: article in Sydney Morning Herald, 30.4.2022.p 14, ‘A Monster for monstrous times’ on artists Marco Fusinato and collaborator Alexie Glass-Kantor producing work for the Venice Biennale 2022.
Glass-Kantor Alexie view full entry
Reference: article in Sydney Morning Herald, 30.4.2022.p 14, ‘A Monster for monstrous times’ on artists Marco Fusinato and collaborator Alexie Glass-Kantor producing work for the Venice Biennale 2022.
Powditch Peter 1942-2022view full entry
Reference: PETER POWDITCH - A Memorial Exhibition, Saturday 7 May, 2022, 3 - 5 pm
Opening address from John McDonald at 3.30 pm.
Peter Powditch was an intensely original artist and was one of the best known and highly regarded artists in Sydney. He rose to prominence in the 1960s and 70s with imagery depicting quintessential Australian beach culture, in particular the bikini clad figures which achieved widespread and critical acclaim for their radically simplified forms and bright colours. In contrast, by the 1990's his work had evolved into small, pastel  landscapes and at the time of his recent passing, Powditch was making complex three dimensional collages.

He had a respected and balanced understanding of art and the art world and will be remembered not only as a major figure in Australian art but as a passionate teacher, a compassionate human being and dearly loved friend.

Defiance Gallery was honoured to represent Peter for many years and now, alongside the Powditch family, we are delighted to present a collection of works celebrating Peter's long and illustrious career including pieces from the famed Sun Torso and Sprint series as well as works completed in the last twelve months.
Publishing details: Defiance Gallery, 2022.
Ref: 1000
Cullen Adamview full entry
Reference: Hooky the cripple : the grim tale of a hunchback who triumphs. Written by Mark “Chopper” Read ; illustrated by Adam Cullen.
‘Hooky the Cripple is a 2002 novel written by Mark Brandon ‘Chopper’ Read, illustrated by Adam Cullen, and published by Pluto Press. It was formatted as a book for young readers, but by some authorities was considered as containing too much violence for being suitable for children. The book received rather mixed response. While the Queensland government body AccessEd recommended it for secondary schools, a school in Victoria banned it, and likewise the president of the Australian Families Association in Queensland wanted it banned from schools. Read responded, saying “Ban it, just go out and ban it, I am gonna make a fortune if they ban it,” believing the publicity from a ban would increase the book’s sales.’ – Wikipedia

Publishing details: Sydney : Pluto Press Australia, 2002. Oblong octavo, illustrated gatefold wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated by Adam Cullen.
Ref: 1000
Sweet Samuelview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books, May, 2022 catalogue: View of Port Darwin, near Palmerston, 1870. orary caption in pencil ‘Port Darwin’; the print is in very good condition, with a little fading at the bottom edge and some mottling in the negative at upper right.
A rare original print from the earliest series of photographic views of Port Darwin and Palmerston, taken in September 1870 by Captain Samuel White Sweet during the Northern Territory Survey Expedition.
From the ADB:
‘Samuel White Sweet (1825-1886), sea captain, surveyor and photographer, was born on 1 May 1825 at Portsea, Hampshire, England. He probably joined the navy in 1844, served on the China Station for five years and had several voyages to India. In 1858-62 as commander of the Pizarro he kept the meteorological log for the Board of Trade, and in 1861 he surveyed Peña Blanca harbour, South America. He had spent six years working for N. J. Myers Son & Co. of Liverpool as a master, his last ship being the Sarah Neumann. About 1863 he spent two years in Queensland, hoping to grow cotton; in 1867 he moved to Rundle Street, Adelaide, and worked as a photographer.
In January 1869 Sweet took command of the two-masted schooner Gulnare, which was later bought by the South Australian government for the Northern Territory survey expedition. He sailed from Adelaide on 12 February, returning in June, and again in February 1870 to collect more supplies. He also visited Timor and returned to Palmerston (Darwin) on 15 September with eighteen buffaloes, ponies, monkeys, fruit and vegetables. In September in Darwin he photographed the official party at the ceremonial planting of the first pole of the overland telegraph; he also took pictures of the township, the men at work and forest scenery. In November he sailed to the Roper River and took part in the survey there before sailing to Normanton, Queensland, for more supplies, returning in March 1871. In October on his way back to the Roper from Darwin the Gulnare grounded on a reef near the Vernon Islands and by 1872 was condemned….’ (Allan Sierp)

1988 commemorative collection of fine colonial furnitureview full entry
Reference: see 1988 commemorative collection of fine colonial furniture / by Kornelia Vidler and Graeme Dodd.Bibliography: p. 120..
Publishing details: Rustic Charm, 1988 
120 p. : col. ill. ;
Paice Margaret view full entry
Reference: Mirram. Written and illustrated by Margaret Paice. Children’s story about an Aboriginal girl written by the Brisbane born writer and illustrator
Publishing details: Sydney : Angus and Robertson, 1955. 1956 reprint. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 31, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
wonderland of industry Theview full entry
Reference: Official catalogue : the wonderland of industry, All-Australian Exhibition. Illustrated wrappers by J. G. Goodchild, pp. 264, illustrated advertisements inside wrappers for BHP and Seppelt’s wines, other black and white advertisements throughout (including Penfolds), includes exhibits from various industrial manufacturers, government departments, decorative Artis, fine arts (painting, drawing, watercolour), applied arts, woodwork, needlework, photography etc.
Publishing details: Adelaide : The South Australian Chamber of Manufactures, 1925. Octavo,

Ref: 1000
Goodchild J Cview full entry
Reference: see Official catalogue : the wonderland of industry, All-Australian Exhibition. Illustrated wrappers by J. G. Goodchild, pp. 264, illustrated advertisements inside wrappers for BHP and Seppelt’s wines, other black and white advertisements throughout (including Penfolds), includes exhibits from various industrial manufacturers, government departments, decorative Artis, fine arts (painting, drawing, watercolour), applied arts, woodwork, needlework, photography etc.
Publishing details: Adelaide : The South Australian Chamber of Manufactures, 1925. Octavo,

Queens & sirensview full entry
Reference: Queens & sirens : archaeology in 19th century art and design, curators, Alison Inglis and Jennifer Long. ‘Queens & sirens : archaeology in 19th century art and design presents paintings, furniture, jewellery and ceramics made by artists fascinate with the great archaeological discoveries of the nineteenth century’ – the Director’s foreword.
Never before had the ancient world seemed so close, so alive, so knowable as in the nineteenth century. This was the great age of history writing and of the historical novel, with books being eagerly devoured by the increasingly literate middle and working classes. The nineteenth century was also the great age of archaeology, starting with the exploration of Egypt during the Napoleonic era, and continuing with the astonishing discovery of the Assyrian civilisation in the 1840s, the famous excavations at Troy and Mycenae during the decade of the 1870s and finally the discovery of Knossos on Crete in the 1890s. Nineteenth century artists and designers were not immune to the new vision of antiquity that emerged in the wake of these dramatic discoveries. For archaeological excavations were not simply exciting and topical, they also offered a different way of understanding the past; one which emphasised its humanity and physical reality. 
The genesis of Queens and Sirens is Edwin Long's A Babylonian Maid 1883. While the title of the painting referred to a Babylonian female, the decorative elements of her costume, the water vessel that she bears, and the background architecture, are indicative of an Egyptian setting. The hieroglyphs carved into the column behind the figure include a stylised lotus flower, symbolising the sun and creation; the bow-shaped Ankh, a life-giving symbol of air and water; the Sphinx with a double crown, representing the power of the sun god Horus; the vulture, representing female deities associated with the Upper Egyptian town of El-Kab; and the falcons which are the symbol of Horus and the kingship. It is the interest in these with archaeological details that formed the central theme of this exhibition.
Queens & Sirens coincided with an exhibition of ancient Egyptian civilisation, Life and Death under the Pharaohs at the National Wool Museum, Geelong
Publishing details: Geelong : Geelong Art Gallery, 1998. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 32, illustrated.
Ref: 1009
Australian Studio Glassview full entry
Reference: see Australian Studio Glass - The movement, its makers and their art, by Noris Ioannou
Publishing details: Craftsman House 1995 (ex libris)
Lahm Hottie (Hardtmuth)view full entry
Reference: Further adventures of Tuckonie. With 4 full page colour plates and monochrome drawings by Hottie Lahm;
Publishing details: Sydney : Winn & Co., 1942. Small quarto, pictorial stiff wrappers pp. 32,
Ref: 1000
Young Blamireview full entry
Reference: Magic casements. WALLACE, Helen E.; YOUNG, Blamire (1862-1935) (illustrator)
With three plates from watercolours by Blamire Young.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Brown, Prior & Co., 1926. Deluxe edition of one thousand copies Quarto, gilt-titled ivory buckram dustjacket (spine slightly toned), 104 pp, the plates tipped-in
Ref: 1000
Reid Peter 1833-1911view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue April, 2022: Quorn Hall, the residence of T. B. Clarke. Campbell Town, Tasmania, late 1860s. By REID, Peter Laurie (1833-1911). ne of Reid’s own copy prints, rather than having been made from the original negative; in fine condition.
At the time this rare photograph of Quorn Hall was taken – probably around 1867 or 1868 – the property was being managed by Thomas Biggs Clarke (1832-1878), second son of William John Turner Clarke (1805-1874). Note in the lower right foreground the wild deer and an alpaca, and at lower left, an emu; in what is a very early example of photomontage in Australia, Reid added these to embellish his view, supplying them from a photograph of artist Henry Gritten’s 1861 view of the Palladian Quorn Hall residence, in which these creatures appear in the foreground.
The Archives Office of Tasmania holds a Peter Laurie Reid carte de visite of Quorn Hall (Photographic Carte-De-Visite Collection, NS1442 – not viewable online) which is presumably the same view as the one we offer here. We have not been able to trace any other example of this splendid view of Quorn Hall in Australian collections.
W. J. T. Clarke had arrived in Tasmania with his wife Eliza (née Dowling) in 1830. He took up land first in Tasmania, and later in Victoria, and was responsible for introducing Leicester sheep into Australia. W. J. T. Clarke’s wealth, acquired through land ownership and the wool industry, is legendary; later in life he is reputed to have been the wealthiest man in Australia. In 1846 he purchased the property Quorn Hall, near Campbell Town, but after his move to Victoria he placed the management of the estate, together with that of a property called Brambletye, on the South Esk River, in the hands of his son, Thomas Biggs.
Thomas’s older brother, on the other hand, followed in their father’s footsteps in Victoria: he was the notable pastoralist, landowner, stud-breeder and philanthropist Sir William John Clarke (1831-1897), owner of the famous mansion Rupertswood, near Sunbury; while his younger brother, Joseph Clarke (1834-1895), became governor of the Colonial Bank in Melbourne and lived in the magnificent Toorak residence, Mandeville Hall.
An obituary for Thomas Biggs Clarke, of Quorn Hall, appeared in the Mercury (Hobart), on 24 December 1878:
‘One of the leading sporting men of the colony has passed away during the month, in the person of Mr. Thomas Biggs Clarke, who expired at his residence, Quorn Hull, on the 11th instant, after a protracted illness. Mr. Clarke was the son of one of the earliest Tasmanian colonists, Mr W. J. T. Clarke, formerly of Hobart Town, but more recently of Victoria, where he removed some few years before his death, and where his other sons, the Hon W. J. Clarke, M.L.C., of Sunbury, and Mr Joseph Clarke of Toorak, (late of Norton Mandeville, Tasmania) now reside. The deceased was a native of Tasmania, and was about 45 years of age at the time of his death. His only education was received at Mr. Thompson’s School, Hobart Town, where he was a schoolfellow of the hon John Lord, and other well-known Tasmanians; afterwards he went to England to finish, as all the brothers did. He was married to a daughter of Mr. Henrie Nicholas, of Cawood, near Hamilton, and leaves several children, who are well provided for by the elder Mr. Clarke’s will, a large sum having been left to each. The deceased has for a number of years resided at Quorn Hall, and has been intimately connected with the sporting events of the colony. The large Park was well stocked with deer, and the Quorn Hall hounds are a household word in Tasmania. He was the owner of a large quantity of blood stock and valuable sheep. The chief circle, however, in which he was known was the racing world, and his four-in-hand was always one of the sights of our great race meetings. He was not only a racer but a breeder of horses, and the imported sire Horror, which recently died, was located at Quorn Hull, where there were also a large number of really valuable brood mares of various very old strains of blood. Fingal, the well known Victorian-bred cross-country horse, and the flat racers Canezou, Yougogo, Sir John Moore, and King Arthur, all of which are now in training, were Mr. Clarke’s property. He was well liked in racing circles as an enthusiastic and straight-going sportsman. The body was brought by train to Hobart Town on Saturday, 14th instant, and was interred in the Sandy Bay Cemetery. A large number of his friends in the city followed the remains to the grave. None of the Victorian relatives of the deceased were present, his mother having also died during the week, and her funeral taking place in Melbourne on the same day.’
A note on the Photographer, Peter Laurie Reid (1833-1911):
From the DAAO:
‘Peter Laurie Reid, … professional photographer, was apparently named after Sir Peter Laurie, lord mayor of London, by his father James Reid, a builder. Peter Laurie Reid, who was married to a daughter of H.W. and Sarah Seabrook, kept a store and post office at 172 Elizabeth Street, Hobart Town, from at least 1852 until 1862 when he sold the shop and opened a registry office at 44 Murray Street. On 18 June 1863 this was for sale. He then set up the photographic business of P.L. Reid & Co., initially in partnership with Matthew Patrick Dowling; they advertised for an apprentice for the photographic business on 29 July 1864. Later that year Reid and Dowling parted on unfriendly terms and subsequently conducted a bitter debate in the Hobart Town press. Dowling complained in the Hobart Town Advertiser of 5 September 1864 that ‘a large number of card portraits taken by him’ were still on show at Reid & Co. Reid replied to this ‘consummate impudence’ the following day, explaining that Dowling’s portraits were ‘only on show to display their inferiority to those taken by P.L. Reid & Co.’s double card process’, adding that in any case many of Dowling’s photographs had been taken by Dowling’s brother Paul when in partnership with Sharp. A lively exchange of public insults followed, with the principals adopting the sobriquets ‘Federal Dowling’ and ‘Confederate Reid’. An ‘apology’ from Reid to Dowling was published on 14 October but this did not conclude the quarrel. Reid was still writing long rejoinders in the Advertiser on 28 October.
At the end of 1864 Reid & Co. advertised portraits of Colonel and Mrs Gore Browne (the governor and his wife) and Rev. J.W. Simmons for sale. By June 1865, when advertising had everywhere become more aggressive, his firm was offering every sitter a portrait photograph at no cost. This was not, of course, quite the bargain it seemed. The first carte-de-visite was free provided that at least four were purchased; the others cost 1s 6d each. Nevertheless, the offer generated a great deal of publicity even in other colonies and presumably gained him some extra business if no long-term financial security. In September 1865 Reid changed the name of his company to the London Portrait Gallery and moved back to his former premises at 172 Elizabeth Street. In August 1866 he was promoting the sale of photographs through his ‘Great Christmas Gift Club scheme’, but by December the property was for sale. Early the following year Reid moved to Launceston, opened another photographic portrait gallery and worked as a travelling photographer. In December 1868 he had ‘four hundred views from all parts of the island’ for sale at his Launceston gallery. By 1878 he was at Latrobe, near Devonport, and his Launceston studios had been taken over by G. Padman. Surviving cartes-de-visite views of Launceston (1860s, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney) are of a high standard.’

Governor Davey’s Proclamation to the Aboriginesview full entry
Reference: see see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue April, 2022: Governor Davey’s Proclamation to the Aborigines, 1816. Presented to the Museum by Mr. A. Bolter, 1867. [Circa 1890]. [Title from image]. Albumen print photograph of a lithograph held in the collection of the Tasmanian Museum; 260 x 180 mm, blind stamped J. W. Beattie, Photographer, Hobart at lower left; laid down recto of a leaf removed from a 19th-century album; some short edge tears and light foxing at top edge, otherwise in good condition; verso with another Beattie albumen print, a topographical view captioned in the negative Hobart, from the bay. 786, B. 
A rare late nineteenth-century photograph by J. W. Beattie of one of the hand-coloured lithographs produced by the Tasmanian Surveyor General’s Office in 1866 which were sold to the public as souvenirs at the Intercolonial Exhibition in Melbourne that year and at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1867. The lithograph design was in turn based on the timber proclamation boards made in 1829 by George Frankland at the request of Lieutenant-Governor George Arthur (not Thomas Davey, Governor of Van Diemen’s Land 1812-1817).
At some point around 1890, Beattie photographed the lithograph which had been presented to the Tasmanian Museum by Mr. A. Bolter in 1867, and which carries an inscription to that effect at the foot of the heading. Beattie sold his albumen prints of the Proclamation Board lithograph to an entirely new generation of souvenir collectors, which is testament to the enduring power of Frankland’s imagery (from the perspective of a white audience, at least).
Frankland’s design for Governor Arthur’s original proclamation boards comprised four illustrations separated by ink-ruled lines; these pictorial sequences are intended to be read from bottom to top, and they depict (i) a British man shooting an Indigenous man and being hanged as a consequence, (ii) an Indigenous man spearing a British man, and being hanged, (iii) a group of Indigenous people shaking hands with the Governor, and (iv) Indigenous and European men, women and children, all in European clothes, standing side-by-side as friends; at the foot in manuscript is an imagined dialogue between an Indigenous man and the Governor: ‘”Why Massa Gubernor”, said Black Jack. “You Proclamation all Gammon – how blackfellow read him eh! He no learn him read Book.” “Read that then”, said the Governor pointing to a Picture’.
The original boards were fastened to trees where Aboriginal people might notice them, with the intention of broadcasting the way in which colonial justice worked. The design explicitly illustrates capital punishment for both whites and blacks who commit murder; it also attempts to promote – albeit hypocritically – peaceful relations between blacks and whites. This was in the period immediately following the declaration of martial law in 1828 when the infamous military operation known as the “Black Line” was implemented, resulting in the rounding-up of Tasmania’s Indigenous population.
Of the one hundred or so original proclamation boards designed by George Frankland which were nailed to trees by authority of Lieutenant-Governor Arthur, only seven are known to have survived. In what is an interesting coincidence, the Mitchell Library’s original board was purchased in May 1919 from none other than J. W. Beattie – who by that time had branched out from photography to become a dealer in curios and historical relics – for a mere £30.

Allport Morton photographview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue April, 2022: ALLPORT, Morton (1830-1878)
In Port Esperance, Tasmania. [Title from caption on mount]. Between 1862 and 1866. Albumen print photograph, 190 x 240 mm, laid down on original album leaf, 270 x 370 mm, contemporary manuscript title in ink beneath the image In Port Esperance, Tasmania; the print is in fine condition with excellent tonal range; the album sheet is entirely frre from foxing.
A rare example of the photography of Morton Allport, the Tasmanian naturalist who, from around 1855, was active as one of the colony’s pioneer photographers. Allport was a member of the Amateur Photographic Association of Great Britain and his landscape photographs were awarded several of the Association’s prizes.
The Allport Library (State Library of Tasmania) holds the only other copy of this image in identical large format, dated to between 1862 and 1866; it also holds a small, cropped version, 80 x 76 mm, being one half of a stereoview.


DURYEA Townsend (1823-1888)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue April, 2022: Appointment, 66 & 68 King William St., Adelaide / Prize Medal, Universal Exhibition 1867’; Albumen print photograph of a lithographed poem titled ‘An Acrostic’, dated and initialled in the image ‘Hobart Town, 9th August 1848 / W.S.E.’, carte de visite format, 105 x 63 mm (mount), verso with imprint of ‘T. Duryea, Artist & Photographer, by Appointment, 66 & 68 King William St., Adelaide / Prize Medal, Universal Exhibition 1867’; both the albumen print and mount with toning spots (but the poem is entirely legible), the mount also with small loss at bottom right corner.
The first letters of each line of this poem spell the name of the printer, publisher and editor John Campbell Macdougall (1805-1848), who arrived in Hobart in 1825 and in 1827 purchased the Tasmanian from Robert Howe. He later also owned the Colonial Times and the Trumpeter. (See entry on Macdougall in ADB).
This poem in honour of John Campbell Macdougall, who died on 21 July 1848, was published in his own newspaper, the Colonial Times and Tasmanian, on August 11 1848. However, the line arrangement in the newspaper column was different to the way it appears on this carte de visite. It is probably safe to assume, therefore, that this is a photograph of the version known to have been printed on satin (the only surviving example of which is contained in the so-called Crouch Album, owned by Robin Redvers Terry). Why a printing of the poem on satin was photographed as a micro-image by renowned Adelaide photographer Townsend Duryea some 20 years after Macdougall’s death is something of a mystery; it is possible that the author, “W.S.E.”, had moved to Adelaide by that time.

Fiveash Rosaview full entry
Reference: from SA Australiana Study Group 75th Meeting, 3 March 2022 posted online at https://www.australiana.org.au/].
Image 1, Rosa Catherine Fiveash (1854-1938) Quarantine Camp: Jubilee Oval, 1919, watercolour, private collection. 13.5 x 8.5cm
Image 2. Back of painting inscribed and signed by Rosa C. Fiveash ‘The Tent of Mrs T.K. Hamilton, and Mrs J.A. Smith in the “Quarantine Camp,” Jubilee Oval, Adelaide, South Australia, February 27th, 1919’, private collection.
During the Spanish Influenza pandemic of 1919 the borders snapped shut, in an effort to keep the state isolated from infection, and Rosa Catherine Fiveash (1854-1938) was amongst the 644 South Australians stranded outside her own state. She and the others were
2
controversially repatriated back to Adelaide by train and accommodated on the Jubilee Oval off North Terrace, with only 100 tents between them. Upon arrival the group were left to their own devices, and organised themselves so that older women, such as Rosa, and those women with young families were given priority tent accommodation. Others slept in the oval’s stands or shed structures normally used to exhibit animals. The contingent managed their own cooking and hosted several sittings each meal. They also produced their own entertainment which resulted in a commemorative compilation magazine titled Normal. The publication’s title referred to the daily medical check of each man, woman and child that finished with the camp doctor’s hoped-for pronouncement of “Normal”.
Rosa painted this watercolour of her tent neighbours on the second day of her quarantine at the Jubilee Oval. Her tent can just be seen on the left side with her initials underneath. She wrote the names of the two women depicted in the neighbouring tent on the back of the painted postcard. Mrs T.K. Hamilton was the Northern Irish wife of a prominent Adelaide doctor and Mrs J. A. Smith was the founder of Girton House School which would later become Pembroke.
A detailed article on this painting and the incident can be found in the Australiana Journal, February 2022, volume 8, no 1.
Barringer Gwen aka Gwendoline L’Avence Adamsonview full entry
Reference: from SA Australiana Study Group 75th Meeting, 3 March 2022 posted online at https://www.australiana.org.au/].
“River Torrens, Adelaide”, oil on board, Gwendoline L’Avence Adamson, later Barringer (1883-1960). 17.5 x 9.5cm.
Conflicting information surrounds Gwen Adamson’s biographical information, even her birth year, but her family gravestone in West Terrace Cemetery states 1883. Her middle name is often recorded as L’Avance but L’avence was the maiden name of her maternal grandmother who arrived in South Australia in 1839 at the age of 12. Gwen’s father, Adam Adamson was a J.P. and an accountant working out of the Cowra Chambers on Grenfell Street. They lived at 26 Strangways Terrace, North Adelaide, which is where Gwen was
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residing when she painted this picture depicting Adelaide’s Albert Bridge over the River Torrens, near the Adelaide Zoo.
Gwen first enrolled at the Adelaide School of Design as a Saturday morning Junior with her brother and sister in 1894, and she continued Saturday classes for a few years before taking up painting, modelling, drawing and other subjects with more serious intent in 1898. She commenced full-time studies in 1899 for a further period of two years and was taught painting and sketching by H.P. Gill and Archibald Collins (although the latter probably only taught her modelling).
Although this painting is not dated, three elements provide clues. Firstly, the signature indicates it was painted before Gwen was married in 1910. Secondly, the painting shows a level of proficiency commensurate to her training at that time but not the level of skill she would later reach in her career (as another painting in the notes of the next meeting will show). Lastly, in 1902, when she had completed her full time training at the Adelaide School of Art, she remained connected to the institution as a member of the School’s Art Club. In that year, the club had two special sketching and painting sessions down by the River Torrens at the back of the Botanic Gardens, the exact site this painting would have been created, just a short walk from the back of the Jubilee Building in which the Adelaide School of Design was situated at the time.
Adamson Gwendoline L’Avence see Gwen Barringer view full entry
Reference: from SA Australiana Study Group 75th Meeting, 3 March 2022 posted online at https://www.australiana.org.au/].
“River Torrens, Adelaide”, oil on board, Gwendoline L’Avence Adamson, later Barringer (1883-1960). 17.5 x 9.5cm.
Conflicting information surrounds Gwen Adamson’s biographical information, even her birth year, but her family gravestone in West Terrace Cemetery states 1883. Her middle name is often recorded as L’Avance but L’avence was the maiden name of her maternal grandmother who arrived in South Australia in 1839 at the age of 12. Gwen’s father, Adam Adamson was a J.P. and an accountant working out of the Cowra Chambers on Grenfell Street. They lived at 26 Strangways Terrace, North Adelaide, which is where Gwen was
5
residing when she painted this picture depicting Adelaide’s Albert Bridge over the River Torrens, near the Adelaide Zoo.
Gwen first enrolled at the Adelaide School of Design as a Saturday morning Junior with her brother and sister in 1894, and she continued Saturday classes for a few years before taking up painting, modelling, drawing and other subjects with more serious intent in 1898. She commenced full-time studies in 1899 for a further period of two years and was taught painting and sketching by H.P. Gill and Archibald Collins (although the latter probably only taught her modelling).
Although this painting is not dated, three elements provide clues. Firstly, the signature indicates it was painted before Gwen was married in 1910. Secondly, the painting shows a level of proficiency commensurate to her training at that time but not the level of skill she would later reach in her career (as another painting in the notes of the next meeting will show). Lastly, in 1902, when she had completed her full time training at the Adelaide School of Art, she remained connected to the institution as a member of the School’s Art Club. In that year, the club had two special sketching and painting sessions down by the River Torrens at the back of the Botanic Gardens, the exact site this painting would have been created, just a short walk from the back of the Jubilee Building in which the Adelaide School of Design was situated at the time.
Sawyer Jeanview full entry
Reference: from SA Australiana Study Group 75th Meeting, 3 March 2022 posted online at https://www.australiana.org.au/].
Ceramic tea strainer base and handle, the decoration by Jean Sawyer, Sydney, late 20thC. Base diameter 9 cm, strainer 11 cm across handle.
Shown with two unnamed ceramic strainers, this example signed by Jean Sawyer uses a commercially produced plated metal strainer with attached handle. Working in Sydney, Jean Sawyer has been developing her skills as a porcelain painter over about the past 40 years, concentrating on depicting roses, gumnuts with blossoms, and animals. Exhibiting and selling through local exhibitions from the NSW Central Coast to St Ives for the last ten years, more recently her works have won prizes at the Royal Agricultural Show in Sydney as well as at regional shows. She regards her ceramic pieces as “antiques of the future”.
Bell Georgeview full entry
Reference: from SA Australiana Study Group 75th Meeting, 3 March 2022 posted online at https://www.australiana.org.au/].
“Floral still life”, oils on canvas, by George Bell c1939. 44.5 x 34.7 cm.
On the reverse “Flowers in a jug”, oils on canvas, by George Bell c1939. 38.8 x 29.0 cm.
The painting was bought in 2012 at the sale of Friesia, in Hawthorn, Melbourne. The house had originally been built in 1888 for the German Consul, in the Italian renaissance style.
The artist George Bell (1878-1966) was born in Kew, Melbourne, and studied at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School before continuing his artistic development in Paris and London early in the twentieth century. Following a period late in WW1 as an official war artist to the 4th Division of the Australian Imperial Force, on his return to Australia he taught, and became for many years a critic for the Sun News-Pictorial.
In 1932 Bell and Arnold Shore opened an art school in Bourke Street Melbourne, and this became a centre of modern art in the city. Among their students were Russell Drysdale, Sali Herman, and Bill Salmon. Later in 1932 he formed the Contemporary Group of Melbourne.
In 1937 the Federal Attorney General, Robert Menzies, attempted to establish an Australian Academy of Art, a counterpart to the Royal Academy. This was fiercely resisted by Bell who fought against it in public forums and founded the Contemporary Art Society, with himself as president. Late in life he practised photography and helped organise a series of “alternative photovision” salons. Bell played violin and viola to a high level for much of his life. His entry in the ADB noted that since he destroyed many of his canvases, and later reworked others, his reputation has suffered. Bell’s artistic career, teaching skills, and engagement in public discourse saw him awarded an O.B.E. in the last year of his life.
Goodchild Johnview full entry
Reference: from SA Australiana Study Group 75th Meeting, 3 March 2022 posted online at https://www.australiana.org.au/].
“Glastonbury Abbey”, watercolour by John Goodchild, c1928. 31 x 40 cm.
“Castle Menot” on the Rhine, pen and ink on reverse of the above, by John Goodchild, c1928. 37 x 52 cm. The photograph, early 20thC, unknown photographer.
The above works were produced by John Goodchild (1898-1980) while on an extended honeymoon with his wife Doreen (née Rowley) following their Adelaide marriage in 1926. Travelling to London they both attended the Central School where John studied lithography and engraving and Doreen did clay-modelling. On their return to Adelaide they established their studio in 1929 and John began exhibiting his watercolours with the (Royal) S.A. Society of Arts.
John had been born into a large family in London in 1898, and was with them when they emigrated to Adelaide in 1913. After enlisting in the AIF in 1917 and serving in France he studied at the Central School of Arts and Crafts, London, before returning home. Back in Adelaide he became a commercial artist and also taught etching. His ADB entry noted that “His traditional landscapes, street scenes and architectural views revealed his understanding of tone and form, mastery of line and highly developed sense of colour.” The two works above illustrate that comment.
Apart from his works on paper he also produced furniture, bas-relief panels, and designed the lamps and pylons of the Adelaide City Bridge. The firm of Elder, Smith & Co. commissioned him to do a series of oil paintings of their Australian offices, and in March 1945 the Australian War Memorial commissioned him as an official war artist. As part of the latter duties he was aboard the American battleship Missouri, to view and film the signing of the Japanese surrender.
Goodchild’s influence was wide through his art, as principal of the School of Arts and Crafts during WW2, and through two long periods as board-member of the SA Public Library, Museum and Art Gallery, and from 1940 the National Gallery of S.A. His works are held by the major Australian galleries, the British Museum, and the Library of Congress in Washington.
And “Normanville, S. Aus.”, ink and wash, John Goodchild. 26.5 x 33.5 cm.
Lee Hyun Mi aka H M Du Rhoneview full entry
Reference: see Raffan, Kelleher & Thomas Fine & Decorative Arts auction, 3 May 2022.
HYUN MI LEE (South Korea/Australia/Germany b.1968), 'Meditative Landscape 15', acrylic on canvas, signed and dated 2008 to edge of stretcher, 51 x 40 cm (oval). Exhibited 'H.M.Du Rhone Meditative Landscape' Gallery hm, Australian and Contemporary Art, Katoomba, circa 2008. H.M. Du Rhone is Hyun Mi Lee's alternative working name.
Du Rhone H M aka Hyun Mi Lee view full entry
Reference: see Raffan, Kelleher & Thomas Fine & Decorative Arts auction, 3 May 2022. Lots 19 and 20:
HYUN MI LEE (South Korea/Australia/Germany b.1968), 'Meditative Landscape 15', acrylic on canvas, signed and dated 2008 to edge of stretcher, 51 x 40 cm (oval). Exhibited 'H.M.Du Rhone Meditative Landscape' Gallery hm, Australian and Contemporary Art, Katoomba, circa 2008. H.M. Du Rhone is Hyun Mi Lee's alternative working name.
Hart J R British?view full entry
Reference: see Brunk Auctions, 20.5.2020, NY, lot 617, (British, 19th century)
with Jockey Up, 1853, signed lower left "J.R. Hart 1853", oil on canvas, 14 x 18-1/8 in.; parcel gilt wood frame, 15-7/8 x 19-7/8 in.
Note: In 1853, West Australian became the first horse to with the British Triple Crown.
Provenance: The Sporting Gallery, New York City, New York; Robert Patterson, Sr, Great Britain; By Descent in family
Condition
lined, crackle, retouch, yellowed varnish; frame with abrasions
West Australian racehorseview full entry
Reference: see Brunk Auctions, 20.5.2020, NY, lot 617, (British, 19th century)
with Jockey Up, 1853, signed lower left "J.R. Hart 1853", oil on canvas, 14 x 18-1/8 in.; parcel gilt wood frame, 15-7/8 x 19-7/8 in.
Note: In 1853, West Australian became the first horse to with the British Triple Crown.
Provenance: The Sporting Gallery, New York City, New York; Robert Patterson, Sr, Great Britain; By Descent in family
Condition
lined, crackle, retouch, yellowed varnish; frame with abrasions
Whisson Ken 1927-2022view full entry
Reference: see obituary in Sydney Morning Herald, 4 May, 2022, p 33 written by John McDonald.
Australian Aboriginal Anthropologyview full entry
Reference: Australian Aboriginal Anthropology. By R. M. Berndt. Modern Studies in the Social Anthropology of the Australian Aborigines.
Publishing details: Published for the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies by the University of Western Australia Press. 1970. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 341pp. 18 figures and 2 maps.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Australian Aboriginal Anthropology. By R. M. Berndt. Modern Studies in the Social Anthropology of the Australian Aborigines.
Publishing details: Published for the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies by the University of Western Australia Press. 1970. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 341pp. 18 figures and 2 maps.
Mitchell Thomas 1000view full entry
Reference: CUMPSTON, J. H. L. THOMAS MITCHELL. Surveyor General & Explorer.
Publishing details: Melb. Oxford University Press. 1955. Or.cl. 270pp. b/w plates & maps
leadlightingview full entry
Reference: see Australian Leadlighting by Paul Danaher & Dexter Jackson
Publishing details: Greenhouse, pb, 154pp
Busch Jason photographerview full entry
Reference: see Wendy Whiteley and the Secret Garden by Janet Hawley. Photography by Jason Busch. [’For more than twenty years Wendy Whiteley has worked to create a public garden at the foot of her harbourside home in Sydney's Lavender Bay. This is the extraordinary story of how a determined, passionate and deeply creative woman has slowly transformed an overgrown wasteland into a beautiful sanctuary for everyone to enjoy - and in the process, transformed herself.

Wendy Whiteley was Brett Whiteley's wife, muse and model. An artist herself, with a finely honed aesthetic sense, she also created the interiors at the heart of Brett's iconic paintings of their Lavender Bay home. When Brett died, followed by the death nine years later of their daughter Arkie, Wendy threw her grief and creativity into making an enchanting hidden oasis out of derelict land owned by the New South Wales Government. This glorious guerrilla garden is Wendy's living artwork, designed with daubs of colour, sinuous shapes and shafts of light.

This is Wendy's story but it's also the story of the countless people who cherish the Secret Garden.

About the Author

Janet Hawley enjoyed a wide readership in her thirty-year career as a senior feature writer on Good Weekend Magazine, published in the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.
She's renowned for her intimate profiles of artists and creative people, and trusted by her interview subjects to explore their private worlds and mysteries of the creative process. She's published two books on artists, Artists In Conversations and Encounters With Australian Artists. Her book, A Place on the Coast, co-authored with Philip Cox, explores love of gardens, art and architecture.
Her wide-ranging feature writing for the Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and The Australian has won her numerous major awards, including two Walkley Awards and the Gold Walkley.
Janet's long friendship with Brett and Wendy Whiteley led to her writing the story of Wendy's major opus, the Secret Garden.’]
Publishing details: Syd. Lantern. 2015. Folio. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 289pp. Profusely illustrated in colour.
Light Williamview full entry
Reference: LIGHT, William. A BRIEF JOURNAL OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF WILLIAM LIGHT. Late Surveyor-General of the Province of South Australia.
Publishing details: South Australian Facsimile Editions No. 1. Adelaide. Public Library of SA. 1963. Or.vinyl. 80pp. Very good copy. Facsimile printing of the original 1839 edition.
Ref: 1009
Decorative Arts 1820s - 1990s view full entry
Reference: see Australian Decorative Arts 1820s - 1990s - Art Gallery of South Australia, by Christopher Menz. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Adel. Art Gallery of SA. 1996. Folio. Col.Ill.wrapps. 176pp. Many colour illustrations.
Great Collectionsview full entry
Reference: see MUSEUMS & GALLERIES NSW PRESENTS - GREAT COLLECTIONS. Treasures from NSW Public Institutions, by John McPhee. This hardcover catalogue documents a collaborative travelling exhibition of several public collections within NSW including Treasures from Art Gallery of NSW, Australian Museum, Botanic Gardens Trust, Historic Houses Trust of NSW, Museum of Contemporary Art, Powerhouse Museum, State Library of NSW, State Records NSW .with numerous colour and B&W photos illustrations. There is no separate section for artist’s biographies but some biographical information is provided in the texts accompanying the photographs.

Publishing details: Published by Arts NSW, Australia, 2009, hc, dw, 124pp
Stacey Robyn view full entry
Reference: see House - Imagining the past through the collections of the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales by Robyn Stacey and Peter Timms. [’Curator Peter Timms, & photographer Robyn Stacey team up to present the extraordinary everyday objects to be found in Elizabeth Bay House, Vaucluse House, & the Rouse Hill House & Farm. ‘]
Publishing details: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, Sydney: 2011. Quarto, dustwrapper, 168 pp., colour photographs.
Nineteenth century Australian Periodicalsview full entry
Reference: STUART, Lurline. NINETEENTH CENTURY AUSTRALIAN PERIODICALS. An annotated bibliography. Compiler, Lurline Stuart, publisher John Iremonger.
Publishing details: Syd. Hale & Iremonger. 1979. Or.cl. Dustjacket. 200pp. b/w ills. Moisture marking to
top edge, else a Very Good copy. 1st ed. Edition of 750 copies
Ref: 1009
Alexander Gilesview full entry
Reference: Giles Alexander | Mote of Dust
Exhibition 4 - 21 May 2022

Giles Alexander’s painting practice thinks deeply about belonging and its dual expressions in culture and science. He asks how do we find a sense of belonging in a city, in a country, in the world, indeed in the Universe? To date Alexander’s exacting work has peered through the lens of faith and reason, re-presenting spiritual and celestial spaces in equal measure. In holding a mirror up to the paradox that is our place in the world, his realist painting preoccupations attempt to offer both himself and the viewer pause and perspective amid these image omnipresent times.
 
The exhibition is available to view at the gallery or online.
Publishing details: Peter Walker Fine Ar, 2022 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Lewin John Williamview full entry
Reference: Captain George Dixon. A Voyage Round the World; but more particularly to the North-West Coast of America...
Quarto, with 23 engraved maps and plates (nine of them folding) [including seven natural history plates by Lewin]; the seven natural history plates coloured (one crab plate trimmed to plate mark and extended); an excellent clean copy, with the half-title, in an old Bayntun binding of half dark purple crushed morocco, gilt. London, George Goulding, 1789.
First edition: an excellent copy of the preferred but very scarce issue on thick and large paper (the margins trimmed to a more standard size by the binder) with the seven natural history plates by Lewin in special colouring. The number of copies published of this de luxe issue was certainly small, and has at various times been described as ‘a small number’, ‘a few’, and fifty, while the Hill catalogue speaks of its ‘considerable scarcity and value’. It is certainly scarce on the market.
Dixon’s account of his voyage in the Queen Charlotte is dedicated to Joseph Banks, and is a companion to Portlock’s account of the same voyage; both men had voyaged with Cook, Dixon as armourer of the Discovery. ‘Dixon’s voyage is important as a supplement to Captain Cook and for its contributions to the natural history of the Pacific Northwest... The work previously done by Cook along the northwest coast of America was mapped more definitely by Dixon, who discovered the Queen Charlotte Islands, Port Mulgrave, Norfolk Bay, and Dixon Entrance and Archipelago while continuing down the coast and trading with the Indi- ans’ (Hill). Dixon and Portlock together as far as Prince William Sound, Dixon then following the coast making a series of landfalls. He discovered and closely observed Queen Charlotte’s Island, and entered Dixon’s Straits, before ultimately arriving at Nootka where he joined both Portlock and Meares. The book is ‘an excellent authority for the early days of fur trading on the northwest coast...’ (Streeter).
The Queen Charlotte made visits to Hawaii in 1786 and 1787, trading at Oahu and Kauai. The book also includes a long account of commercial transactions at Canton. Though often cata- logued as the work of William Beresford, whose letters to a friend signed W.B. form the basis of the work, Dixon added substantially to the text and edited the whole.
‘Hawaii One Hundred’, 8; Forbes, ‘Hawaiian National Bibliography’, 161; Hill, 117; Judd, 53; Kroepelien, 300 (German edition only); Lada-Mocarski, 43; Wagner, I, p. 207 etc., II, 732-735. [From Hordern House catalogue May, 2022]
Ref: 1000
Melville Harden S illustrations byview full entry
Reference: see JUKES, J. Beete.
Narrative of the Surveying Voyage of H.M.S. Fly...
Two volumes, octavo, with many engravings (full-page and textual), and a folding map at the end of each volume; a fine copy, complete with all advertisement leaves including a half-sheet advertisement for Leichhardt in vol. I and another for Dutton’s “South Australia” in vol. II, in the original and unfaded blue-grey blind-stamped cloth. London,T. & W. Boone, 1847.
First edition: a fine copy, in original condition, of this important surveying voyage of coastal Australia. Jukes’ account is particularly important for his description of the Queensland coast, the Great Barrier Reef, and the Torres Strait, and includes an impressively detailed map of the north-east coast from Endeavour River north to New Guinea.
The Fly, Captain Blackwood, sailed from Falmouth on 11 April 1842 with the cutter Bramble. Jukes sailed as naturalist to the expedition, and with his captain’s consent wrote the official narrative. The survey of Torres Strait and of the Great Barrier Reef, as well as the various New Guinea explorations, were all of great importance. The proper scientific understanding of
the Barrier Reef could not begin until the completion of the survey, which Jukes charted for the first time in detail. Jukes’ own close examination of the reef was also significant, and his chapter on the subject ‘is an invaluable record. His observations strongly supported Darwin’s theory of the formation of coral reefs...’ (Davidson). Indeed, Jukes’ interest in coral formation is neatly summarised by the account’s terrific opening line, ‘I landed for the first time in my life on a coral island.’
Ingleton notes: ‘the Admiralty decided in 1841 to have the Great Barrier Reefs explored and to have the gaps surveyed in order that some means might be devised for marking the most eli- gible of these openings, in order that they could be recognised in due time and passed through in comparative safety... The expedition was noteworthy for being the first to be despatched to Australia on a purely surveying mission...’ (Charting a Continent, pp. 61-66).
Twelve of the plates are notably fine aquatints by Harden S. Melville, who published his own illustrated work on the voyage (Sketches in Australia and the Adjacent Islands, 1849).
Davidson, ‘A Book Collector’s Notes’, pp.129-30; Ferguson, 4549; Hill, 901; Wantrup, 92a. [From Horder House catalogue, May, 2022]
Brierley Oswald illustratorview full entry
Reference: see KEPPEL, Captain Henry, R.N.
A Visit to the Indian Archipelago, in H.M. Ship Maeander...
Two volumes, octavo, with eight fine tinted lithograph plates (printed by Day & Son); folding chart in a rear pocket; half calf and marbled boards. London, Richard Bentley, 1853.
A fine set of this splendid book, with eight superb plates lithographed by Hawkins after Oswald Brierley.
Henry Keppel had first served in the Malacca Straits in the early 1840s during the campaign against the Borneo pirates. During that time he formed a close friendship with Sir James Brooke, who had been appointed rajah of Sarawak in perpetuity by the sultan of Brunei. In 1847 Keppel returned to the region as captain of the frigate Mæander which was to convey Brooke to Labuan, an island off Borneo. ‘At Brooke’s suggestion, Labuan was ceded to Great Britain in 1846 by the Sultan of Brunei; it was made a crown colony, and Brooke was named governor. Keppel’s book treats of the voyage to Labuan, incidents there, piracy in the South China Sea, and gives a description of Manila’ (Hill).
On the homeward journey the Mæander called in at Port Essington, Cape York, Sydney, Hobart and Norfolk Island. Keppel’s accounts of these ports-of-call are both entertaining and readable. He reports at length on the work of Captain Owen Stanley of the Rattlesnake - who died in Sydney whilst Keppel was on an inland tour with Governor FitzRoy. By coincidence the fine plates which illustrate Keppel’s account are by the distinguished marine artist Oswald Brierley, who joined the Mæander after having served as artist on board the Rattlesnake.
In an uncharacteristic slip by Ferguson he did not record Keppel’s book despite its consider- able Australian importance, while Abbey’s description of an earlier 1852 edition was in error. Abbey ‘Travel in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860’, 550; Hill, 920; not recorded by Ferguson.
Stanley Owenview full entry
Reference: see KEPPEL, Captain Henry, R.N.
A Visit to the Indian Archipelago, in H.M. Ship Maeander...
Two volumes, octavo, with eight fine tinted lithograph plates (printed by Day & Son); folding chart in a rear pocket; half calf and marbled boards. London, Richard Bentley, 1853.
A fine set of this splendid book, with eight superb plates lithographed by Hawkins after Oswald Brierley.
Henry Keppel had first served in the Malacca Straits in the early 1840s during the campaign against the Borneo pirates. During that time he formed a close friendship with Sir James Brooke, who had been appointed rajah of Sarawak in perpetuity by the sultan of Brunei. In 1847 Keppel returned to the region as captain of the frigate Mæander which was to convey Brooke to Labuan, an island off Borneo. ‘At Brooke’s suggestion, Labuan was ceded to Great Britain in 1846 by the Sultan of Brunei; it was made a crown colony, and Brooke was named governor. Keppel’s book treats of the voyage to Labuan, incidents there, piracy in the South China Sea, and gives a description of Manila’ (Hill).
On the homeward journey the Mæander called in at Port Essington, Cape York, Sydney, Hobart and Norfolk Island. Keppel’s accounts of these ports-of-call are both entertaining and readable. He reports at length on the work of Captain Owen Stanley of the Rattlesnake - who died in Sydney whilst Keppel was on an inland tour with Governor FitzRoy. By coincidence the fine plates which illustrate Keppel’s account are by the distinguished marine artist Oswald Brierley, who joined the Mæander after having served as artist on board the Rattlesnake.
In an uncharacteristic slip by Ferguson he did not record Keppel’s book despite its consider- able Australian importance, while Abbey’s description of an earlier 1852 edition was in error. Abbey ‘Travel in Aquatint and Lithography 1770-1860’, 550; Hill, 920; not recorded by Ferguson.
Freehandview full entry
Reference: FREEHAND: RECENT AUSTRALIAN DRAWING, by Linda Michael [To be indexed]

Publishing details: Melbourne: Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2010.
First Edition.
26cm x 21cm. 88 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Ref: 1000
drawing in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see FREEHAND: RECENT AUSTRALIAN DRAWING, by Linda Michael
Publishing details: Melbourne: Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2010.
First Edition.
26cm x 21cm. 88 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Typically ? Australianview full entry
Reference: Typically ? Australian. QCA museum exhibition catalogue held alongside a conference by the same name. Exploring Australian cultural identity since Federation. To be indexed]
Publishing details: Brisbane City Gallery
Brisbane: Queensland College of Art, 1998.
First Edition.
30cm x 21cm. [8] pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated quad-fold.
Ref: 146
Rigby Johnview full entry
Reference: Sydney The Harbour City - by John Kingsmill, paintings by Jeff Rigby.
Publishing details: Pierson & Co. in association with Macquarie Galleries, 1988, hc,  
159 p., [1] folded leaf of plates : col. ill
Gwynne Marjorieview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through objects. From Australiana Society website:
"Temporary Quarters, A.G.H.", oil on canvas, Marjorie Gwynne (1886-1958), 1944 Adelaide. 45 x 55 cm
In 1942 the Contemporary Art Society of South Australia was formed in reaction to the conservatism of the Royal South Australian Society of Arts (RSASA). Marjorie Gwynne - age 55 - was a founding member. Similarly, in 1944, nine RSASA artists (led by Dorrit Black) formed "Group 9" as an exhibiting body with an emphasis on "... technical virtuosity... artists more concerned with the way they paint than with what they paint." Gwynne was also an original member and this painting was exhibited at their first exhibition. Opened by Lady Bonython who remarked "Although all the artists in Group 9 have been influenced by the contemporary movement, their work is still understandable and beautiful. Personally, I prefer poetry and art not to be a crossword puzzle... and to enjoy it without ... a dictionary or a treatise on the sub-conscious."
Marjorie Gwynne's (nee Church) formal art-training began in 1905 as a private student of Hayley Lever - whose work was broadly impressionistic but also influenced by Van Gogh. She then studied part-time at the Adelaide School of Art. A regular exhibitor in Adelaide, reviews of her work were always favourable and terms such as "vigorous brushwork" and "colourist" were commonly used.
Marjorie married into the Gwynne family and lived at "Glynde" - a large estate at Avenue Road, Payneham (visited by the Duke of Edinburgh in 1867). During the Second World War they billeted servicemen, and numerous Gwynne paintings feature military activities around Adelaide. "Temporary Quarters, A.G.H." shows what may be the 105th Australian General Hospital established at Daw Park. Begun in 1940, and with five hundred patients, tents were still used as temporary accommodation until November 1944.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Garfield Jeremiah view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through objects. From Australiana Society website:
Silver table spoon hallmarked for London 1815/16, maker’s mark of Jeremiah Garfield.
Length 22.5 cm.
Jeremiah (Jeremy) Garfield was a London silversmith, born in about 1778, who had served his apprenticeship under the goldsmith John Hudson. After attaining his freedom of the Goldsmiths’ Company in 1800 he worked for some years before entering his own mark in 1813. This enabled him to set up in business on his own as a plateworker, meaning a silversmith capable of making a variety of larger tableware and other items.
Since hallmarked silverware had to be of the same standard of alloy as the silver coinage, it came under the control of the Goldsmiths’ Company, who ran the London Assay Office. When an item was made the maker would stamp it with his individual mark and send it to the Assay Office, where it would be tested to verify the alloy and hallmarked. At the same time duty would be paid on it, the item stamped with a duty mark, and the good returned to the maker.
In 1820 Garfield had supplied another manufacturer with a batch of spoons, but further along the supply chain it was noticed that the marks on them looked suspicious. Then it was found that he had supplied far more “hallmarked” spoons than had ever seen the Assay Office, and he found himself in the dock at the Old Bailey charged with selling spoons ‘...with a counterfeit mark thereon... with intent to defraud’. The faking had gained him 1/6 an ounce and a sentence of fourteen (later reduced to seven) years transportation.
Arriving in Sydney on the convict transport Eliza in late 1822 Garfield was almost immediately assigned to the silversmith and former convict Jacob Josephson, where he later claimed to have been employed as a cook and servant. It seems more likely however that he was making silverware which carried Josephson’s marks. On being granted his Certificate of Freedom in 1828 Garfield became a policeman, and in that capacity was called as a witness in the 1829 trial of Alexander Dick, who had been indicted for allegedly receiving stolen property – some silver spoons. As part of his statement Garfield was to say “... I know the Hallmark well, as I came to this Colony for imitating it...” Following a short career as a policeman Garfield resigned to become a publican, and by the time he died in Sydney in 1842 he was, according to a descendant and family researcher, a wealthy man.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Whitford Ken view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through objects. From Australiana Society website:
Etching “Moonlight” – Hanton Place, off Pulteney Street. Edition 3, no. 3. Ken Whitford, Adelaide, 1930. Plate size: 22.8 x 30.3 cm.
Ken Whitford (1901-1993) and his wife Dora (née Nicholls – 1898-1969) were married at Semaphore SA in 1926. When friends at art school they used to take sketching and painting trips to the area around Second Valley, south of Adelaide. Exhibiting together at the South Australian Society of Arts by 1928, their etchings attracted notice in the Register newspaper. There the critic noted Ken’s “Theatre Royal Lane at Night” for its ...clever effects of light and shades... while Dora’s “Old Cottage on the Hill” was described as ...crisp and sincere. Two years later when the SA Society of Arts mounted its autumn exhibition it included 26 etchings, and the Advertiser art critic wrote of Ken’s “Moonlight, Hanton-place” that it ...felicitously portrays a scene of unsuspected beauty in the purlieus of Pulteney-street. Dora’s “Scotch College” was noted as effective.
Drawn by their love of the Fleurieu Peninsula the couple bought a scrub block there in 1934, and hired a manager to work on clearing it and making it productive until they could move in with their young family. Farming success eluded them there, and in 1938 they moved to another property near Myponga, which became later known as Roslyn Vale, a notable Jersey stud. The challenges of life on the land left the couple with little time to follow their art interests until retirement, when their sons took over the property.
Ken and Dora had worked together on a book “The Art of Etching” which was published by the Investigator Press in 1971, not long after Dora’s death. In 1972 Rachel Biven’s Off the Beaten Track Gallery at Norwood mounted an exhibition of etchings by the Whitfords. Ken also illustrated publications for the centenary of the Myponga School in 1970 and that of the Inman Valley Methodist Church in 1971.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Whitford Dora view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through objects. From Australiana Society website:
Etching “Moonlight” – Hanton Place, off Pulteney Street. Edition 3, no. 3. Ken Whitford, Adelaide, 1930. Plate size: 22.8 x 30.3 cm.
Ken Whitford (1901-1993) and his wife Dora (née Nicholls – 1898-1969) were married at Semaphore SA in 1926. When friends at art school they used to take sketching and painting trips to the area around Second Valley, south of Adelaide. Exhibiting together at the South Australian Society of Arts by 1928, their etchings attracted notice in the Register newspaper. There the critic noted Ken’s “Theatre Royal Lane at Night” for its ...clever effects of light and shades... while Dora’s “Old Cottage on the Hill” was described as ...crisp and sincere. Two years later when the SA Society of Arts mounted its autumn exhibition it included 26 etchings, and the Advertiser art critic wrote of Ken’s “Moonlight, Hanton-place” that it ...felicitously portrays a scene of unsuspected beauty in the purlieus of Pulteney-street. Dora’s “Scotch College” was noted as effective.
Drawn by their love of the Fleurieu Peninsula the couple bought a scrub block there in 1934, and hired a manager to work on clearing it and making it productive until they could move in with their young family. Farming success eluded them there, and in 1938 they moved to another property near Myponga, which became later known as Roslyn Vale, a notable Jersey stud. The challenges of life on the land left the couple with little time to follow their art interests until retirement, when their sons took over the property.
Ken and Dora had worked together on a book “The Art of Etching” which was published by the Investigator Press in 1971, not long after Dora’s death. In 1972 Rachel Biven’s Off the Beaten Track Gallery at Norwood mounted an exhibition of etchings by the Whitfords. Ken also illustrated publications for the centenary of the Myponga School in 1970 and that of the Inman Valley Methodist Church in 1971.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Whitford Dora nee Nicholls 1898-1969view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through objects. From Australiana Society website:
Etching “Moonlight” – Hanton Place, off Pulteney Street. Edition 3, no. 3. Ken Whitford, Adelaide, 1930. Plate size: 22.8 x 30.3 cm.
Ken Whitford (1901-1993) and his wife Dora (née Nicholls – 1898-1969) were married at Semaphore SA in 1926. When friends at art school they used to take sketching and painting trips to the area around Second Valley, south of Adelaide. Exhibiting together at the South Australian Society of Arts by 1928, their etchings attracted notice in the Register newspaper. There the critic noted Ken’s “Theatre Royal Lane at Night” for its ...clever effects of light and shades... while Dora’s “Old Cottage on the Hill” was described as ...crisp and sincere. Two years later when the SA Society of Arts mounted its autumn exhibition it included 26 etchings, and the Advertiser art critic wrote of Ken’s “Moonlight, Hanton-place” that it ...felicitously portrays a scene of unsuspected beauty in the purlieus of Pulteney-street. Dora’s “Scotch College” was noted as effective.
Drawn by their love of the Fleurieu Peninsula the couple bought a scrub block there in 1934, and hired a manager to work on clearing it and making it productive until they could move in with their young family. Farming success eluded them there, and in 1938 they moved to another property near Myponga, which became later known as Roslyn Vale, a notable Jersey stud. The challenges of life on the land left the couple with little time to follow their art interests until retirement, when their sons took over the property.
Ken and Dora had worked together on a book “The Art of Etching” which was published by the Investigator Press in 1971, not long after Dora’s death. In 1972 Rachel Biven’s Off the Beaten Track Gallery at Norwood mounted an exhibition of etchings by the Whitfords. Ken also illustrated publications for the centenary of the Myponga School in 1970 and that of the Inman Valley Methodist Church in 1971.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Whitford Dora later Dora Nicholls 1898-1969 view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through objects. From Australiana Society website:
Etching “Moonlight” – Hanton Place, off Pulteney Street. Edition 3, no. 3. Ken Whitford, Adelaide, 1930. Plate size: 22.8 x 30.3 cm.
Ken Whitford (1901-1993) and his wife Dora (née Nicholls – 1898-1969) were married at Semaphore SA in 1926. When friends at art school they used to take sketching and painting trips to the area around Second Valley, south of Adelaide. Exhibiting together at the South Australian Society of Arts by 1928, their etchings attracted notice in the Register newspaper. There the critic noted Ken’s “Theatre Royal Lane at Night” for its ...clever effects of light and shades... while Dora’s “Old Cottage on the Hill” was described as ...crisp and sincere. Two years later when the SA Society of Arts mounted its autumn exhibition it included 26 etchings, and the Advertiser art critic wrote of Ken’s “Moonlight, Hanton-place” that it ...felicitously portrays a scene of unsuspected beauty in the purlieus of Pulteney-street. Dora’s “Scotch College” was noted as effective.
Drawn by their love of the Fleurieu Peninsula the couple bought a scrub block there in 1934, and hired a manager to work on clearing it and making it productive until they could move in with their young family. Farming success eluded them there, and in 1938 they moved to another property near Myponga, which became later known as Roslyn Vale, a notable Jersey stud. The challenges of life on the land left the couple with little time to follow their art interests until retirement, when their sons took over the property.
Ken and Dora had worked together on a book “The Art of Etching” which was published by the Investigator Press in 1971, not long after Dora’s death. In 1972 Rachel Biven’s Off the Beaten Track Gallery at Norwood mounted an exhibition of etchings by the Whitfords. Ken also illustrated publications for the centenary of the Myponga School in 1970 and that of the Inman Valley Methodist Church in 1971.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Messack Timothy view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through object. From Australiana Society website:
“Still life with zinnias”, oils on board, Timothy Messack, Adelaide 1950s.
Signed lower right. 34 x 33 cm.
Timothy Messack (1915-1998) was born Tymofej Mesac in Chernyhiw (Chernihiv) Ukraine, and in his early years worked at a variety of jobs including as a locksmith and painter while attending art school at night, hoping to save enough to take a full-time art course. The German invasion of Ukraine in 1941 put an end to that, and saw him put into a labour camp near Berlin where he was made to paint buildings. Once the war was over he made his way to Victoria, arriving in Melbourne on the SS Protea on 23 September 1948. On arrival he was sent to the Bonegilla Camp before taking up a two year contract as a woodcutter and car assembler, at the end of which he applied for a job as a painter and decorator. In his new country he was impressed by the quality of light, and was reported as saying “South Australia is a painter’s paradise... I love the warm, vivid colours of the countryside.”
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By 1952 Messack, living at Grange, had already had paintings accepted at two shows of the Royal SA Society of Arts, had exhibited in Sydney, and had a painting hung at the Art Gallery of NSW. His strength at that stage lay in portraiture, with his self-portrait entered for the 1953 Archibald Prize. In that year he changed his name to the current spelling, and with another immigrant Adelaide artist, V W Linde, he was commissioned to paint a mural “The Triumph of Silenus” on the saloon bar wall of the Angaston Hotel; this led him to exhibit 50 paintings later that year at the Angaston Art Show. His work attracted the notice of several art critics, with Ivor Francis noting the conflict between the need for sales and the requirements of artistic integrity, and offering heartening praise and thoughtful criticism. Exhibiting at the John Martin’s Christmas show of “12x8” works in 1954 Messack was able to hold his own with the likes of Gwynne, Stipnieks, Hans Heysen, Kohlhagen, Dowie, Dryden and Barringer.
There seemed to be a hiatus in public mentions of Messack through the sixties and seventies, (perhaps due to the limitations of Trove). But his painting “White Wings” won an award at the Victor Harbor Art Show in 1983, at which stage he was said to have been living at Callington. A measure of international recognition for his art came when his work was chosen as part of the 2015 exhibition “Australian Artists from Ukraine” held by the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art in Chicago. Australia’s then Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, wrote a personal, appreciative and well thought-out introduction to the showing. The Institute, writing of the exhibition, was to say “It shows the talents of six artists that through the vagaries of world history settled in Australia... They influenced Australian art with their individual techniques and personalities. Australia had never seen anything like them before... survivors of a horrific world war, yet through an unbroken spirit, brought to Australia with their art, beauty, culture, and style.”
Messack died on 17 April 1998, and is buried at the Smithfield Memorial Park, Evanston South, SA.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Perry Brothers photographersview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through object. From Australiana Society website:
“Surveying party and theodolite”, c1878, carte de visite photograph, Perry Brothers, Upper-North South Australia. 10 x 6 cm
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A group portrait of a surveying party posing with a theodolite, surveying chain and plumb
bobs, set in a canvas studio on bare ground. The studio imprint verso "Perry Brothers" indicates a date range of 1876-80 - when the Perrys were travelling photographers in the Upper North farming districts of South Australia.
Another carte de visite is known and identifies the middle, and younger, figure as Henry Jacob (1858-1916). Henry was a cadet with the Survey Department from 1875 before being promoted to Surveyor, Sixth Class, on October 1st, 1878. The placement of Henry in the centre of the photograph with the theodolite, might suggest he commissioned the photograph (perhaps to mark his promotion to Surveyor).
The flanking figures bear some resemblance to telegraph-line surveyors Richard Knuckey (1842-1914) and Joseph McMinn (1846-1888). Knuckey was with Goyder's expedition to survey Palmerston (now Darwin) 1869-70 and on the construction of The Overland Telegraph Line, 1870 -72. Knuckey and McMinn surveyed a line from Port Augusta to Eucla (via Pt Lincoln) 1875-77 and Callington to Bordertown in 1878-79.
Henry Jacob stayed with the Survey Department for his working life. As a younger man he surveyed Hundred boundaries and telegraph lines in the outer farming districts and at the Tarcoola and Teetulpa goldfields. In 1899 he became a draftsman at the Adelaide office and in 1912 submitted an entry for the design of Canberra. On his death his family donated Colonel William Light's sextant to the Adelaide City Council. Henry had inherited it from his uncle, William Jacob, who was an assistant surveyor under Light.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Lee-Gaston Gary view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through object. From Australiana Society website:
“Steve” [Dippy] – pencil on paper, by Gary Lee-Gaston, Adelaide 2012. 56.5 x 40.0 cm.
Carried out by Gary Lee-Gaston (1938-2021) at a life art class at Gallery One, Mitcham SA. By the time of this drawing Lee-Gaston was in his mid-seventies, with a vast amount of art and design to his credit, and had published his 2009 book Masterclass – Drawing the Figure From Life. Born in Clare in the mid-north of SA into a family in poor circumstances, they later moved to Adelaide, where he was noted as articulate and well-read. A period in the army was credited with giving him the discipline he needed to succeed after a somewhat challenging youth.
Lee-Gaston was tutored in art by John Dowie, John Goodchild, Jackie Hick and Tom Cleghorn, with his landscapes winning him awards in many SA art competitions. In portraiture he depicted among others several principals of Scotch College and the former governor of SA, Lieut. General Sir Donald Dunstan. On a larger scale he made giant murals for the SA police tattoo. Less well-known probably are what have been described as his ...semi-abstract apocalyptic works and historical paintings.
In over 30 years working as a commercial artist Lee-Gaston was the senior artist for Adelaide’s famous Christmas Pageant, designing and producing more than 200 floats as well as the John Martin’s Magic Cave. He also designed large figures for the Sydney Olympics and the giant cyclists used for promoting the Tour Down Under. A life member of the Adelaide Art Society and a fellow and life member of the Royal SA Society of Arts, he was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in 1996 for services to the arts as a painter, sculptor and commercial artist. His obituary, on which this entry is based, was published in the Advertiser of Saturday 26 February 2022.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Manners Elias knitterview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 76th Meeting, 7 April 2022 - Australia’s history told through object. From Australiana Society website:
Hand knitted Emu sold at Elliston Op Shop
Made by Mrs Elias Manners of Elliston SA Height 45 cm. Length 35cm
Manners has been supplying the op shop with her knitted toys, scarfs and beanies since she and her retired husband moved from Whyalla to Elliston 14 years ago. Rarely, knitted life like emus are made for children’s sleeping companions.
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/
Namadbara Paddy Compass view full entry
Reference: see The Conversation, May 11, 2022: Paddy Compass Namadbara: for the first time, we can name an artist who created bark paintings in Arnhem Land in the 1910s.

For students of Australian art and art collectors around the globe, Arnhem Land is synonymous with bark painting: sheets of tree bark carefully prepared as a canvas for painting by Aboriginal artists.
Bark painters such as John Mawurndjul and Yirawala are some of the most internationally renowned and sought-after Australian artists.
As the market for bark paintings emerged in the early 20th century, recording the name of individual artists was far from the collector’s mind. Museums and art galleries are full of early artworks, sometimes attributed to particular “clans” or geographic areas, but rarely including the name of the artists.
Such collections are routinely named after the collector rather than the creators. One such collection, the Spencer/Cahill Collection at Museums Victoria, is the focus for our ongoing research project.
The Spencer/Cahill Collection is vast and includes many precious objects collected by Sir Baldwin Spencer when he visited Oenpelli (Gunbalanya), Northern Territory in 1912. He later acquired further artworks and objects via his “on the ground” contact, buffalo shooter Paddy Cahill...

Paddy Compass Namadbara (c. 1892-1978) is remembered by people in western Arnhem Land as a skilful artist, a “clever man”, a strong community leader and family man.
During the 1950s and 1960s he spent much of his time on Minjilang (Croker Island), where he often painted alongside contemporary artists such as Yirawala and Jimmy Midjaumidjau.
In 1967 he was visited by researcher Lance Bennett, who was there to collect bark paintings and information for a book he was writing on contemporary Aboriginal art.
During these interviews, Namadbara casually identified his own works in a book published by Baldwin Spencer in 1914, Native tribes of the Northern Territory of Australia. One work features a barramundi, another a swamp hen, black bream and painted hand stencils...


authors:
Joakim Goldhahn Rock Art Australia Ian Potter Kimberley Chair, The University of Western Australia

Gabriel Maralngurra Co-manager, Injalak Arts, Indigenous Knowledge

Luke Taylor Adjunct Fellow, Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit, Griffith University, Australian National University

Paul S.C.Taçon Chair in Rock Art Research and Director of the Place, Evolution and Rock Art Heritage Unit (PERAHU), Griffith University

Sally K. May Associate Professor, University of Adelaide
Cotton Oliveview full entry
Reference: Olive Cotton, Art Gallery of NSW exhibition catalogue. Catalogue of exhibition that was the first art museum to showcase Olive Cotton's life's work that extended over six decades. It comprises her finest vintage prints including images from the 1930s and 1940s some of which have only recently come to light.
Notes "Tour dates: Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney 13 May - 2 July 2000; National Library of Australia, Canberra 14 July - 8 October 2000"--T.p. verso.
Curator: Helen Ennis.
Text: Helen Ennis & Robyn Donohue.
Also issued in a deluxe ed. specially bound for Josef Lebovic Gallery limited to 150 copies containing one original Cotton photograph 'The patterned road 1938' signed by the artist's daughter.
Bibliography: p. 50-[51]
Publishing details: Sydney : Art Gallery of New South Wales, c2000 
62 p. : ill., ports.
Ref: 1000
Coutts Gordonview full entry
Reference: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Gordon Coutts was born in Glasgow/Aberdeen, Scotland on Oct. 3, 1868. He began his art studies at the Glasgow School of Art before venturing south to study in London at the Royal Academy. He continued his studies at the Académie Julian, Paris, under Lefebvre, Fleury, and Rossi, and also at the National Gallery School, Melbourne from 1891 to 1893. He met Tom Roberts there, whose influence is reflected in the portrait "Waiting" shown here, of a young woman seated in the waiting room of a wayside station in the bush. The model, in fact, posed inside a studio, with the background painted around her afterwards. This popular painting is the artist's most esteemed Australian work. The femininity of the sitter and her fashionable attire were trademarks of portrait and genre styles at the time. this portrait is at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He won first prizes for "Painting Head from Life" in 1892 and 1893 and received an Honourable Mention for his Travelling Scholarship entry. In 1896 he moved to Sydney where he taught at the Art Society of New South Wales until 1899 when he returned to Europe. From 1890 to 1902 he was a regular exhibitor at the Victorian Artists' Society in Melbourne, and the Royal Art Society in Sydney. In Europe Coutts met the English artist, Alice Grey whom he married. In 1902 they moved to San Francisco where he became a member and frequent exhibitor at the Bohemian Club, while maintaining a home across the bay in Piedmont. Always an inveterate traveller he spent time in Paris, Spain and Tangier, where he had a studio for many years. He received a gold medal at the Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition in 1909 and at the Paris Salon in1913. Over the years he exhibted regularly at the Royal Academy, the Paris salons and many American International Exhibitions. Suffering from tuberculosis he moved to Palm Springs in 1924. He built a Moroccan style villa to recreate a favourite place in Tangier. Dar Marroc is still a well known local landmark and is now part of the Korakia boutique hotel. Winston Churchill and Sir John Lavery were among the many celebrities to visit Dar Marroc.  Gordon Coutts died in Palm Springs on February. 21, 1937. ]].[1][2][3]
References[edit]
1 ^ "Noted Artist Will Be Buried in Palm Springs". The Sacramento Bee. February 23, 1937. p. 12. Retrieved July 12, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
2 ^ "Death Takes Artist Coutts". The Los Angeles Times. February 23, 1937. p. 16. Retrieved July 12, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
3 ^ "Image / Dar Maroc, Palm Springs". Calisphere. University of California. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
Gruzman Nevilleview full entry
Reference: NEVILLE GRUZMAN RETROSPECTIVE 2: CATALOGUE & SELECTED WRITINGS. Catalogue for a retrospective exhibition of Sydney architect, Neville Gruzman. Larger in scope and more text heavy than your standard exhibition catalogue, this ringbound folder contains a plethora of Gruzman's writings and facsimiles of related articles, divided into six parts exploring different aspects of Gruzman's philosophy and career from the 1940s through the 1980s.

Publishing details: Sydney: Rex Irwin Gallery, 1992.
First Edition.
30.5cm x 23cm. [286] pages, black and white illustrations. Ringbound folder.

Ref: 1000
Gruzman Nevilleview full entry
Reference: ARCHITECTURE INTO MILLENNIUM 3
Neville Gruzman
Catalogue for an exhibition curated by Sydney architect, Neville Gruzman, containing the works and writings of Greg Burgess, Peter Crone, Julie Cracknell and Peter Lonergan, Dale Jones-Evans, Paul Frischknecht, Phil Harris and Adrian Welke, Graham Jahn, Nonda Katsalidis, and Sam Marshall. "The art of architecture is to take materials and employ techniques to create spaces on a particular site. The resultant structure must wholly satisfy the human physical need and give pleasure and delight in the use of the internal and external spaces. The building must integrate into and enhance the environment of which it becomes a part" (Neville Gruzman) The exhibition was sponsored by Lend Lease and opened by Gough Whitlam. Rare, unrecorded in Trove or OCLC.
Publishing details: Sydney: Rex Irwin Gallery, 1993.
First Edition.
30.5cm x 23cm. 100 pages, black and white illustrations. Ringbound folder.
Ref: 1000
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: A TRIBUTE TO LIGHT: EIGHT ORIGINAL LITHOGRAPHS. Catalogue for Lloyd Rees' A Tribute to Light lithograph set. Introduction by Hendrik Kolenberg.
Publishing details: Sydney: Fred Genis and Lou Klepac, 1988.
First Edition.
30cm x 22cm. [8] pages, illustrations, some colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled self-wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Over the Fenceview full entry
Reference: OVER THE FENCE: CONTEMPORARY INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE CORRIGAN COLLECTION. By Gordon Craig
Publishing details: Brisbane: The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016.
First Edition.
26cm x 19.5cm. 96 pages, colour photographs. Pictorial french fold wrappers.

Ref: 1000
photographyview full entry
Reference: see OVER THE FENCE: CONTEMPORARY INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE CORRIGAN COLLECTION. By Gordon Craig
Publishing details: Brisbane: The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016.
First Edition.
26cm x 19.5cm. 96 pages, colour photographs. Pictorial french fold wrappers.

Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: see OVER THE FENCE: CONTEMPORARY INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE CORRIGAN COLLECTION. By Gordon Craig
Publishing details: Brisbane: The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016.
First Edition.
26cm x 19.5cm. 96 pages, colour photographs. Pictorial french fold wrappers.

Corrigan Pat collectionview full entry
Reference: see OVER THE FENCE: CONTEMPORARY INDIGENOUS PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE CORRIGAN COLLECTION. By Gordon Craig
Publishing details: Brisbane: The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016.
First Edition.
26cm x 19.5cm. 96 pages, colour photographs. Pictorial french fold wrappers.

Marioni Joseph view full entry
Reference: Joseph Marioni: Four Paintings,
Joseph Marioni.
Publishing details: Brisbane: University Art Museum, The University of Queensland, 2000. First Edition.
29cm x 26cm. 44 pages, colour illustrations. Cloth, silver lettering.

Ref: 1000
KIRIPAPURAJUWIview full entry
Reference: KIRIPAPURAJUWI: SKILLS OF OUR HANDS: GOOD CRAFTSMEN AND TIWI ART, by Kathy Barnes
Publishing details: [Darwin]: Kathy Barnes, 1999.
First Edition.
29.5cm x 21cm. 152 pages, illustrations, some colour. Pictorial wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Tiwi artview full entry
Reference: see KIRIPAPURAJUWI: SKILLS OF OUR HANDS: GOOD CRAFTSMEN AND TIWI ART, by Kathy Barnes
Publishing details: [Darwin]: Kathy Barnes, 1999.
First Edition.
29.5cm x 21cm. 152 pages, illustrations, some colour. Pictorial wrappers.

Aboriginal art artview full entry
Reference: see KIRIPAPURAJUWI: SKILLS OF OUR HANDS: GOOD CRAFTSMEN AND TIWI ART, by Kathy Barnes
Publishing details: [Darwin]: Kathy Barnes, 1999.
First Edition.
29.5cm x 21cm. 152 pages, illustrations, some colour. Pictorial wrappers.

Inspired Dream Theview full entry
Reference: The Inspired Dream: Life as Art in Aboriginal Australia [Catalogue for the exhibition of Aboriginal Art, Qld Art Gallery 1988, held to coincide with World Expo '88; chapters on rock art, Western Arnhem Land rock paintings, women's acrylic paintings from Yuendumu, men's painting in Papunya, Namatjira and the Hermannsburg School, and more]
Publishing details: Queensland Art Gallery, 1988. 112 pages with colour illustrations. [Not located on shelves at June 2023]
Smith Edward view full entry
Reference: teacher at Julian Ashton school, teacher of Justin O’Brien. See article in Australian Women’s Weekly, 25 October, 1972, p40a, On Justin O’Brien’s return to Sydney in 1972 for Macquarie Galleries exhibition.
O’Brien Justinview full entry
Reference: See article in Australian Women’s Weekly, 25 October, 1972, p40a, on Justin O’Brien’s return to Sydney in 1972 for Macquarie Galleries exhibition.
Wager Dorothyview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, Vol. 15 No. 1 February, 1993, Dorothy M. Wager - by Deborah Cocks
Hall Edwardview full entry
Reference: see SPRING ESTATE DISCOVERY ANTIQUE AUCTION 57, US, May 29, 2022, lot 324, A black resin head sculpture of a Jewish man is attributed to Edward Hall, an Australian Born 1930 artist with a rich and varied career. Signed to the back. Vintage And Antique Judaica Sculptures For Collectors. Dimensions: H 9 3/4 in. All measurements are approximate.

Christofides Andrewview full entry
Reference: Andrew Christofides - Studio Archaeology. In this exhibition, we take as a starting point the artist’s recent series of circular paintings - more precisely, circles inside squares.  The circle in the square was explored in the 1960s by Sydney Ball in his Canto series and Alun Leach-Jones in his Noumenon series and in virtually all these cases the sheer interlocking symmetry of the two fundamentally geometric forms was enough to imbue the works with a sense of authority and calm.
Next, we included smaller versions of these works - on paper, as well as studies.  Seeing three “generations” of a painting is not only a reminder of the long term thought and development behind a large finished painting, but also a fascinating insight into the artist’s working mind and the connection between his apparently geometric compositions and the readings suggested by their titles.  In the four studies for Followers, 2019-20 (no. 9) we see the patterned section of repeating Greek crosses within circles transforming in shape and placement from a rectangular strip running the height of the image, to a central circle – and back again: studies I and IV develop into the final painting of the same title, as well as the smaller Sceptics, 2020 (no. 15), while studies II and III develop into the large painting Death of Faith, 2020 (no. 8).  The fact that Sceptics and Followers are virtually the same composition in different colours but suggest polar opposite attitudes in their titles offers one thought provoking message – further complexified by the fact that the circle is used in both the circular studies of Followers but also in Iconoclast II, 2017 (no. 16): in the former, one could interpret faith as an inviting and inclusive orb, while in the latter, one could interpret faith as a wrecking ball plunging down between the two different types of crosses.  The circular shape in Iconoclast II is in fact the dome of a church, part of a greater abstracted and simplified church floor plan: the church is flanked by two religious patterns, as if squeezed between two opposing sides of the iconoclastic debate.  The clusters of overlapping ovals and rectangles in Followers, Sceptics and Death of Faith represent Greek Orthodox patriarchs, with the check pattern referencing that of their ceremonial vestments.  Christofides came to Australia from Cyprus at the age of five with his family, and his first return journey to his place of birth as a young adult was a profound experience; the history and culture of the Orthodox Church, village life, and the archaeology of the island have emerged in his work ever since.
The religious context of the above works connects thematically with the Written Word paintings (nos. 17, 20, 21) which can be seen as depictions of an open book in an unknown script whose neat but chunky forms contrast starkly with the seductively sinuous calligraphy of the Arabic script.  The ‘script’ in these paintings is generated by a numeric pattern plotted on a grid - a process invented by the artist, and a variation of the sort of mathematical formulae (generally taking the Fibonacci series as a starting point) that he has been using and adapting for various pictorial goals since the 1980s in both paintings and relief construction works.
 Andrew Christofides is amongst those mostly abstract artists (including for example George Johnson, Roger Kemp and Leonard French) described as ‘symbolic’, ‘iconographic’ and/or ‘emblematic’ which is a way of differentiating his type of abstraction from pure or non-objective abstraction which strictly avoids any reference to the world.  Christofides’ abstraction is geometric, but every shape, colour, pictorial element and pattern has a meaning – and, as we see in this exhibition, often a long history of usage in his work.  For example, the checkerboard pattern is used to break up areas of space as well as encourage a sense of receding depth.  The ‘T and O’ composition of Grey Painting No. 81, 1997 (no. 30) and Invasion of Logic, 2019 (no. 22) originates in Medieval European maps.  By contrast, the rounded cluster forms surrounding the central circle in Intuitive Science, 2020 (no. 5) originate in the representations of islands in ancient Japanese Buddhist cartography.  From their early use in the late 1990s, the artist saw their organic form as a contrast and complement to his hard edged and mathematically derived geometric work and, as in the case of Night Thoughts, 1999 (no. 29) as the dream thought itself.  In the following the artist describes the two aspects of Intuitive Science:
 
The central part contains numerically generated images which are quite rational.  All the elements, the grid upon which they float, and the way that they visually relate to each other is predetermined and calculated.  They have a precision.  The outer circle contains the more organic elements which seem more varied and ‘felt’.  This is the intuitive side of science which is felt but is nevertheless as important as the predetermined side which we put so much faith in.
Within my work these contrasting types of images may seem to contradict each other stylistically but I see them simply as being opposing in form and it is from this opposition that I think potential meaning is generated.  In conversations I have had with Paul McGillick (who is a linguist) we have talked about opposites and opposition being a source of meaning in language.
 A tour of Andrew Christofides’ studio is to discover a history of colours, patterns, shapes and compositions re-used and re-formulated to create new visual delights with new meanings.  It is to begin to understand the artist’s visual vocabulary; a unique and personal language written in geometry.  Studio Archaeology, 2018 (no. 26) is the culmination of this idea and encapsulates the nature of this entire exhibition.

Charles & Kate Nodrum, 2022
 
Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 2022
Ref: 1000
Douglas Blakview full entry
Reference: see article in The Conversation: ‘I can’t think of a more timely painting’: Blak Douglas’s Moby Dickens is a deserving winner of the 2022 Archibald Prize, by Joanna Mendelssohn, May 13, 2022.
Edgar Johnview full entry
Reference: see Art + Object auction, NZ, Works from the Estate of John Edgar ONZM (1950 – 2021), Tuesday 6 September, 2022: Art+Object is delighted to announce that they will be auctioning approximately sixty works from the collection of legendary sculptor John Edgar.  

Originally a chemist with a B.Sc. (Hons). from the University of N.S.W. Sydney, John Edgar ultimately chose a different career trajectory.  As a largely self-taught sculptor and a passionate environmentalist, Edgar was to leave a lasting impact in all of the work he undertook. 

Edgar first began sculpting in the 1970’s and achieved international renown for his sculptures which are defined by their strong links to the environment and which balance elements of concept, materiality, duality and process in a singular and seamless convergence.  Throughout his career he travelled extensively, studying the ancient stone carving techniques practiced in China, Japan, Korea, India, Scotland, and by Maōri in Aotearoa.  Somewhat unique in his field, Edgar’s sculptures are the result of a singular and all-encompassing vision in which each piece, from the selection of the stone through to the final polishing of the fully-realized work, was entirely wrought by the sculptor himself.  His work is characterized by extreme technical sophistication and complete control over his natural media which resulted in timeless works without fault or blemish.

John Edgar is represented in innumerous public and private collections in New Zealand and overseas.  A major exhibition of his work,  ‘Ballast’  was mounted in Scotland in 2009 and his work has been toured nationally in museum exhibitions including: ‘Stone Lines’ (1989), ‘Making Amends’ (1993-1995), ‘Cross Country’ (1996), ‘Lie of the Land’ (1998-1999) and ‘Calculus’ (2004).   Edgar undertook several commissioned Public Artworks including one of his largest, Transformer, in Auckland Domain in 2004.

In his environmental work, John Edgar was chair of the Waitakere Ranges Protection Society for 22 years where he fought tirelessly and successfully to protect the forest. He was awarded the honour of being made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to Art, in particular sculpture in 2009. 

Art+Object will publish a catalogue to mark the occasion and further details will be released in due course.  
Bergner Yosl view full entry
Reference: Hagadah shel Pesah / Haggadah of Passover. Illustrations : Yosl Bergner; lettering and transliteration : Zalman Shnur.
Publishing details: [Ramat-Gan, Tel Aviv] : Masadah, 1984. Octavo, gilt-lettered blue buckram, pp. [72], text in Hebrew with romanised transliteration, illustrations by Yosl Bergner,
Ref: 1000
From the Earthview full entry
Reference: From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Alice Springs Potteryview full entry
Reference: see From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Potteryview full entry
Reference: see From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Ernabellaview full entry
Reference: see From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Hermannsburg Pottersview full entry
Reference: see From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Tiwi Islands. Pottersview full entry
Reference: see From the earth : contemporary indigenous ceramics from Alice Springs Pottery, Ernabella, Hermannsburg Potters and Tiwi Islands. Catalogue of an exhibition held at JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, Adelaide, 13 December 2008 – 25 January 2009. Exhibition concept: Stephen Bowers; exhibition and catalogue development
Publishing details: Adelaide : JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design, 2008. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 48, illustrated.
Cullen Adamview full entry
Reference: Adam Cullen : stupid heaven,
illustrated. Essay by Alan R. Dodge.
Publishing details: Adelaide : Greenaway Art Gallery, 2007. Quarto, exhibition catalogue, pp. [6],
Ref: 1000
Schmeisser Jorgview full entry
Reference: Carnival Songs. De' MEDICI, Lorenzo (1449-1492); OLDCORD, Anthony (translator); SCHMEISSER, Jorg (1942-2012) et al.
text in Italian with English translation, two original etchings by American artist William T. Wiley, one by Italian artist Mimmo Paladino, one by Australian artist Jorg Schmeisser,
Publishing details:
New York : Raphael Fodde Editions, 2001. Folio (500 x 360 mm), gilt-decorated cloth, gilt-lettered morocco spine (small bump lower corner), pp 36, printed letterpress on Hannemuhle paper,
Ref: 1000
Jacks Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Jacks. Twelve red grids
Hand stamped / Hand-printed artist’s book, a companion to others (such as Red Diagonals, Lines Dots etc.) created by the artist in small numbers in the 1970s
Publishing details: New York / 1973. New York : [the artist], 1973. Small artist’s book approximately 120mm square, staple bound with red tape, 12pp. rubber stamped with designs of red dots.
Ref: 1000
Flight Claudeview full entry
Reference: The art and craft of lino cutting and printing. By Claude Flight. Illustrated in colour and black and white by Claude Flight, C. W. Toovey, Barker Mill, Lill Tschudi, Stanislaus Brien, John Richards, Edith Lawrence, Ronald Grierson, Katherine Chombley, Margaret Barnard, Dorrit Black, Ethel Spowers, and others, including child artists.
The manual for linocutting written by Claude Flight of the Grosvenor, with numerous illustrations including some notable Australian women artists.

Publishing details: London : B. T. Batsford, 1934. Octavo, illustrated paperd boards with cloth spine (rubbed, old pencil marks, mostly erased), frontispiece by Eileen Mayo, pp. xiv; 66; (2 – note); (8 – advertisements), some old pencil marks etc.,
Ref: 1009
Black Dorrit view full entry
Reference: see The art and craft of lino cutting and printing. By Claude Flight.
illustrated in colour and black and white by Claude Flight, C. W. Toovey, Barker Mill, Lill Tschudi, Stanislaus Brien, John Richards, Edith Lawrence, Ronald Grierson, Katherine Chombley, Margaret Barnard, Dorrit Black, Ethel Spowers, and others, including child artists.
The manual for linocutting written by Claude Flight of the Grosvenor, with numerous illustrations including some notable Australian women artists.

Publishing details: London : B. T. Batsford, 1934. Octavo, illustrated paperd boards with cloth spine (rubbed, old pencil marks, mostly erased), frontispiece by Eileen Mayo, pp. xiv; 66; (2 – note); (8 – advertisements), some old pencil marks etc.,
Spowers Ethel view full entry
Reference: see The art and craft of lino cutting and printing. By Claude Flight.
illustrated in colour and black and white by Claude Flight, C. W. Toovey, Barker Mill, Lill Tschudi, Stanislaus Brien, John Richards, Edith Lawrence, Ronald Grierson, Katherine Chombley, Margaret Barnard, Dorrit Black, Ethel Spowers, and others, including child artists.
The manual for linocutting written by Claude Flight of the Grosvenor, with numerous illustrations including some notable Australian women artists.

Publishing details: London : B. T. Batsford, 1934. Octavo, illustrated paperd boards with cloth spine (rubbed, old pencil marks, mostly erased), frontispiece by Eileen Mayo, pp. xiv; 66; (2 – note); (8 – advertisements), some old pencil marks etc.,
Boyd Penleighview full entry
Reference: Sunlight and Storm : the life and art of Penleigh Boyd. By Colin G. Smith. With index. [Artists with more than one reference in the index have been included in the Scheding Index. To be indexed fully?]
Sunlight and Storm : the life and art of Penleigh Boyd is the first book to be published on this important Australian landscape painter in almost a century. While Penleigh’s life ended tragically in a car accident in 1923, in his 33 years he painted extraordinary images of Victoria’s coastline, principally Port Phillip Bay, and of the hills and valleys to the east and north-east of Melbourne. He also painted Sydney Harbour and the Blue Mountains. His paintings of wattles in full bloom are unique, as is his representation of eucalypt trees. Sunlight and Storm The Life and Art of Penleigh Boyd includes over one hundred full-colour reproductions of Penleigh’s art as well as works by his parents Emma Minnie and Arthur Merric Boyd, and his wife Edith Boyd. Better known as a model for E. Phillips Fox, Edith’s art has never been reproduced before. The book includes a highly pictorial record of Penleigh’s life and a reproduction of his extraordinary book Salvage, a record of his experiences at the Western Front during WW1. It also includes reproductions of his letters and of publications he either illustrated or that were written about him, and much more. Sunlight and Storm The Life and Art of Penleigh Boyd is Colin Smith’s third book about the Boyd family. Complimenting Merric Boyd and Murrumbeena and Lucy Boyd Beck Life and Art, his new book provides readers with new insights into the Boyd family and their remarkable artistic achievements.


Publishing details: Melbourne : the author, 2021. Quarto, illustrated laminated boards, pp. 466, illustrated.
Marawili Noŋgirrŋa view full entry
Reference: Noŋgirrŋa Marawili : daughter of the lightning snake, by Will Stubbs.
Publishing details:
Maitland : Maitland Regional Art Gallery, 2022. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. 64, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Conformview full entry
Reference: Conform by Saskia Folk.
Photobook of street art in Australia, including works by Banksy, Anthony Lister, and others.
City walls and public places provide ready-made surfaces for works by today’s migratory population of graffiti and stencil artists. This social commentary is an innovative art form. Saskia Folk has photographed it wherever she has found it. Her arrangement on the book’s pages is a work of art in itself.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Macmillan, 2004. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. [144], illustrated. New copy.
Ref: 1000
street artview full entry
Reference: see Conform by Saskia Folk.
Photobook of street art in Australia, including works by Banksy, Anthony Lister, and others.
City walls and public places provide ready-made surfaces for works by today’s migratory population of graffiti and stencil artists. This social commentary is an innovative art form. Saskia Folk has photographed it wherever she has found it. Her arrangement on the book’s pages is a work of art in itself.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Macmillan, 2004. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. [144], illustrated. New copy.
Lister Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see Conform by Saskia Folk.
Photobook of street art in Australia, including works by Banksy, Anthony Lister, and others.
City walls and public places provide ready-made surfaces for works by today’s migratory population of graffiti and stencil artists. This social commentary is an innovative art form. Saskia Folk has photographed it wherever she has found it. Her arrangement on the book’s pages is a work of art in itself.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Macmillan, 2004. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. [144], illustrated. New copy.
Pekel Hermanview full entry
Reference: Herman Pekel
Exhibition brochure from the impressionists artist’s solo exhibition,
Publishing details: Melbourne : Delshan Art Gallery, 2002. 10 x 15 cm, pp. [16], illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Art of Aboriginal Australiaview full entry
Reference: Art of Aboriginal Australia
“We gratefully acknowledge the co-operation of the Aboriginal Arts Board of the Australian Council for the Arts, and the Peter Stuyvesant Trust, for making this exhibition possible” (p.1).
Publishing details: Vancouver, BC : Vancouver Museums and Planetarium Association and Rothmans of Pall Mall Canada Limited, [1974]. Quarto, pictorial stiff wrappers, 64 pp, 130
Ref: 1000
Edwards Marjoryview full entry
Reference: Margery Edwards : New York paintings and works on paper 1976-1989
Exhibition curated by K. David G. Edwards and Jeanne Wilkinson. 
Publishing details: Washington, DC : Embassy of Australia, 2005. Quarto, pp. [4], text by Jeanne C. Wilkinson, no illustrations. Ephemera stapled to sheet.  
Ref: 1000
Cook William Delafield view full entry
Reference: William Delafield Cook : survey exhibition, Daniel Thomas

Publishing details: Melbourne : University of Melbourne, 1976. Oblong quarto, illustrated wrappers (old sticker), pp. [20], illustrated in black and white.
Ref: 1000
Marvin Hurnall Australiana collectionview full entry
Reference: The Marvin Hurnall Australiana collection. Includes Australian pottery, paintings and furniture from the dealer’s collection.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Leonard Joel Australia, 2007. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 124, illustrated.
Moss Rodview full entry
Reference: Rod Moss : Even as we speak, introduction by Philip Batty, text by the artist, CV and commentary.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Uber Gallery, 2005. Oblong octavo, illustrated gatefold wrappers, pp. 48, extensively illustrated,
Ref: 1000
Fathomview full entry
Reference: Fathom. 7 women artists working with abstraction, by Patricia Wilson-Adams.
Catalogue launched February 20, 2010 – 2 pm at Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery. Editor: Patricia Wilson-Adams. Catalogue originally created for an exhibition titled, Fathom, held at The Lock-Up Cultural Centre, Newcastle, from 9-24 October, 2009. Artists include Sally Bourke, Helen Dunkerley, Annemarie Murland, Susan Porteous, Linda Swinfield, Lezlie Tilley, Patricia Wilson-Adams.


Publishing details: [Toronto, N.S.W. : Pokataroo Press,?], 2010. Quarto, lettered wrappers, pp. 24, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
artists’ retreat The view full entry
Reference: The artists’ retreat : discovering the Mornington Peninsula, 1850s to the present, by Rodney James.Includes works by Penleigh Boyd, John Perceval, Rupert Bunny, Eugene von Guerard, Louis Buvelot, Walter Withers, Nicolas Chevalier, Rick Amor, Arthur Boyd, Arthur StreetonHugh Ramsay, Fred Williams, Violet Teague and others.
Publishing details: Mornington, Vic. : Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery, [1999]. Quarto, illustrated wrappers (lightly rubbed), pp. 40, illustrated. Printed in an edition of 2000 copies.
Ref: 1009
Macleod Nancy view full entry
Reference: Nancy Macleod : a retrospective, by Danny COwen
Publishing details: Hamilton : Hamilton Art Gallery, 2006. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. [12], illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Guppy Jamesview full entry
Reference: Passion’s end : James Guppy

Publishing details: Murwillumbah : Tweed River Regional Art Gallery, 1993. Octavo, self-wrappers, pp. [8], illustrated, essay.
Ref: 1000
Glover John view full entry
Reference: An exhibition & sale of oils & watercolours by John Glover 1767 – 1849.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Gould Galleries, 1982. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. [20], illustrated in black and white, essay.
Ref: 1009
Painting the futureview full entry
Reference: Painting the future : gifts from country to the University of Notre Dame Australia, Broome Campus, Edited by Anne Bloeman ; art text by Clare Ahern. Bequest of artworks from local indigenous painters to the University campus.
Publishing details: Broome : University of Notre Dame Australia, Broome Campus, 2000. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 104, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Notre Dame University Australia,view full entry
Reference: see Painting the future : gifts from country to the University of Notre Dame Australia, Broome Campus, Edited by Anne Bloeman ; art text by Clare Ahern. Bequest of artworks from local indigenous painters to the University campus.
Publishing details: Broome : University of Notre Dame Australia, Broome Campus, 2000. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 104, illustrated.
Mansfield Mary view full entry
Reference: Arts and Crafts Studio : Mary Mansfield.
Advertising leaflet for the arts and crafts studio of Mary Mansfield, Strand Arcade, Sydney, circa 1930, with fees for individual instruction in stencilling, raffia work, Indian basket work, pen painting, wood carving, leather work, Batik, French polishing and more. Accompanied by a second flyer for ‘The Artist’s Forum’ organised by Mary Mansfield, inviting visitors to lectures by artists on different subjects.
Little is recorded about Sydney artist Mary Mansfield, however she did write the Foreword to an exhibition catalogue on Ida Rental Outhwaite in 1917, so carried some influence in the arts community.

Publishing details: listed in Douglas Stewart Fine art catalogue, May, 2022.
Ref: 1000
Yolngu : Aboriginal cultures of North Australiaview full entry
Reference: Yolngu : Aboriginal cultures of North Australia. Brighton [England] : ‘Catalogue of items in Brighton exhibition; exhibition also includes items from Queensland such as bicornual basket from Cardwell district, and painted shields from northeastern Queensland.’ – Trove.
Publishing details: Royal Pavilion, Art Gallery & Museums, [1988]. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. 67, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal art of North Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Yolngu : Aboriginal cultures of North Australia. Brighton [England] : ‘Catalogue of items in Brighton exhibition; exhibition also includes items from Queensland such as bicornual basket from Cardwell district, and painted shields from northeastern Queensland.’ – Trove.
Publishing details: Royal Pavilion, Art Gallery & Museums, [1988]. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. 67, illustrated.
Morgan Squireview full entry
Reference: Exhibition of etchings by Sir Malcolm Osborne, R.A., P.R.E., Martin Hardie, R.E., Sydney Long, A.R.E., Squire Morgan, S.G.A. (London). To be opened by Sir Marcus Clarke, K. B. E., ad the Royal Art Society, 6th Floor, 26 Hunter Street, Sydney on Monday 25th November, 1946, at 3 pm. Exhibition manager : Estelle Andrews. (14 x 8 cos), catalogue of 55 works and supplementary insert leaf with a further 11 works, all priced.


Publishing details: RAS, 1946
Ref: 1000
Long Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of etchings by Sir Malcolm Osborne, R.A., P.R.E., Martin Hardie, R.E., Sydney Long, A.R.E., Squire Morgan, S.G.A. (London). To be opened by Sir Marcus Clarke, K. B. E., ad the Royal Art Society, 6th Floor, 26 Hunter Street, Sydney on Monday 25th November, 1946, at 3 pm. Exhibition manager : Estelle Andrews. (14 x 8 cos), catalogue of 55 works and supplementary insert leaf with a further 11 works, all priced.


Publishing details: RAS, 1946
Osborne Malcolm R.A. view full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of etchings by Sir Malcolm Osborne, R.A., P.R.E., Martin Hardie, R.E., Sydney Long, A.R.E., Squire Morgan, S.G.A. (London). To be opened by Sir Marcus Clarke, K. B. E., ad the Royal Art Society, 6th Floor, 26 Hunter Street, Sydney on Monday 25th November, 1946, at 3 pm. Exhibition manager : Estelle Andrews. (14 x 8 cos), catalogue of 55 works and supplementary insert leaf with a further 11 works, all priced.


Publishing details: RAS, 1946
Hardie Martin view full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of etchings by Sir Malcolm Osborne, R.A., P.R.E., Martin Hardie, R.E., Sydney Long, A.R.E., Squire Morgan, S.G.A. (London). To be opened by Sir Marcus Clarke, K. B. E., ad the Royal Art Society, 6th Floor, 26 Hunter Street, Sydney on Monday 25th November, 1946, at 3 pm. Exhibition manager : Estelle Andrews. (14 x 8 cos), catalogue of 55 works and supplementary insert leaf with a further 11 works, all priced.


Publishing details: RAS, 1946
Not for self but for all view full entry
Reference: Not for self but for all : a history of the Art Gallery of Ballarat Association. By Anne BEGGS-SUNTER. With Index. [’The history was commissioned by the Art Gallery of Ballarat Association, the community organisation which founded the Gallery in 1884 and still exists as a support organisation for the Gallery. The book is intended to celebrate the human story of the Gallery by paying tribute to the many people who have supported it and worked to ensure its development and growth over the years.
The title of the book, Not for self but for all, comes from an early crest of the Gallery devised by James Powell, the Association’s first secretary, who wrote an important account of the establishment of the Gallery in 1896.’]

Publishing details: Ballarat : Art Gallery of Ballarat, 2018. Quarto, laminated card wrappers, pp. 212, illustrated.
Luke Monte photographerview full entry
Reference: MONTE LUKE F.R.P.S.
Details of charges for wedding portraits
Flyer, circa 1950, single sheet, printed recto and verso for the photography studio of Monte Luke, one of Sydney’s leading society and portrait photographers, the studio still in business today. The flyer lists various packages of wedding photographs, with ‘motion pictures made of weddings in colour or black and white’.
Publishing details: listed in Douglas Stewart Fine art catalogue, May, 2022.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see This is their dreaming. Traces the stories and culture of Arnhem Land contained in two large murals in the Yirrkala Church.
Publishing details: This is their dreaming. Legends of the panels of Aboriginal art in the Yirrkala Church
Brisbane : University of Queensland Press, 1971. Small quarto, illustrated cloth in illustrated dustjacket (light handling marks), pp. 76, illustrated,
Catalogue of Centralian Artview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of Centralian Art
listing of 26 works by Rex Battarbee, Albert Namatjira, Enos, Oscar, and Ewald Namatjira, and other Aranda artists including Otto Pareroultja, Richard Moketarinja, with short biographies; the catalogue also advertises the paintings of other Aranda artists.
Publishing details: Alice Springs : Tama-Rama Galleries, c. 1961. Octavo, folded card, 4pp,
Ref: 1000
Centralian Artview full entry
Reference: see Catalogue of Centralian Art
listing of 26 works by Rex Battarbee, Albert Namatjira, Enos, Oscar, and Ewald Namatjira, and other Aranda artists including Otto Pareroultja, Richard Moketarinja, with short biographies; the catalogue also advertises the paintings of other Aranda artists.
Publishing details: Alice Springs : Tama-Rama Galleries, c. 1961. Octavo, folded card, 4pp,
Stones Margaretview full entry
Reference: Margaret Stones : retrospective
Exhibition catalogue of 82 works.
Publishing details: Melbourne : University Gallery, University of Melbourne, [1975]. Quarto, white wrappers, illustrated front, [pp. 24], some illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Djakkuview full entry
Reference: see An exhibition of paintings by Djakku (Peter Marralwanga)
Publishing details: Perth : Aboriginal Traditional Arts Gallery in conjunction with Maningrida Arts and Crafts, 1981. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, stapled spine, pp. [34], illustrated. Limited to 240 numbered copies.

Bowery Leigh view full entry
Reference: Leigh Bowery Looks, by Fergus Greer
Publishing details: London : Violette Editions, 2002. Octavo, boards in dustjacket (light handling marks), pp. 176, illustrated. Ticket stub from the 2004 MCA exhibition on Bowery loosely enclosed.
Ref: 1000
Durack Elizabethview full entry
Reference: To ride a fine horse
Illustrated by Elizabeth Durack.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Macmillan, 1965 (reprint). Octavo, boards in dustjacket , pp. 137, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Forsyth Williamview full entry
Reference: see JACOBS & HUNT auction, UK, 27.5.22. lot 323: William Forsyth 'Tumut River, New South Wales' and 'A Shady Path' a pair of watercolours, signed, 30 x 58.5 cms
AUSTRALIAN WOMEN ARTISTSview full entry
Reference: AUSTRALIAN WOMEN ARTISTS. Catalogue for an exhibition 13 March to 7 April, 2018. Features works by Margaret Preston, Cressida Campbell, Janet Cumbrae Stewart, Clarice Beckett, Bessie Gibson, Vida Lahey, Ida Rentoul Outhwaite, Grace Cossington Smith, Jean Bellette, Mitty Lee Brown, Stella Bowen, Daphne Mayo, Olive Cotton, Bessie Davidson, Kath Shillam, Hermia Boyd, Joy Hester, Joy Roggenkamp, Jean Appleton, Constance Tempe Manning, Gwyn Hanssen Pigott, Celia Perceval, Criss Canning, Margaret Olley, Dorothy Napangardi, Rosella Namok, Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Vera Moller, Anne Wallace, Lisa Adams, Kirsten Coelho, June Tupicoff, Davida Allen, and Wendy Sharpe.

Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2018.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 16.5cm. 28 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers. Price list laid in.
Ref: 1009
WOMEN ARTISTSview full entry
Reference: see AUSTRALIAN WOMEN ARTISTS. Catalogue for an exhibition 13 March to 7 April, 2018. Features works by Margaret Preston, Cressida Campbell, Janet Cumbrae Stewart, Clarice Beckett, Bessie Gibson, Vida Lahey, Ida Rentoul Outhwaite, Grace Cossington Smith, Jean Bellette, Mitty Lee Brown, Stella Bowen, Daphne Mayo, Olive Cotton, Bessie Davidson, Kath Shillam, Hermia Boyd, Joy Hester, Joy Roggenkamp, Jean Appleton, Constance Tempe Manning, Gwyn Hanssen Pigott, Celia Perceval, Criss Canning, Margaret Olley, Dorothy Napangardi, Rosella Namok, Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Vera Moller, Anne Wallace, Lisa Adams, Kirsten Coelho, June Tupicoff, Davida Allen, and Wendy Sharpe.

Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2018.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 16.5cm. 28 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers. Price list laid in.
Shepherdson Gordonview full entry
Reference: GORDON SHEPHERDSON: 13TH FEBRUARY - 10TH MARCH 2018
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2018.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 17cm. 16 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Sharpe Wendyview full entry
Reference: FRANCE: PARIS STORIES & THE WESTERN FRONT

Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2019.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 17cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Churcher Peterview full entry
Reference: WATER FALLING
Peter Churcher
Exhibition catalogue. Price list laid in.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2018.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 17cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
McWilliams Michaelview full entry
Reference: MICHAEL MCWILLIAMS: 25TH JULY - 19TH AUGUST, 2017
Michael McWilliams Exhibition catalogue

Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2017.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 17cm. 16 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Honeywill John view full entry
Reference: JOHN HONEYWILL: 25TH JULY - 17TH AUGUST, 2019
John Honeywill

Exhibition catalogue. Price list laid in.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2019.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 17cm. 8 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Boggs Peterview full entry
Reference: Peter Boggs, Exhibition catalogue, 25 June - 20 July, 2019.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2019. [8] pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Honeywill John view full entry
Reference: JOHN HONEYWILL: 28 SEPTEMBER - 23 OCTOBER, 2021
John Honeywill
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2021.
First Edition.
23.5cm x 17cm. 8 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Honeywill John view full entry
Reference: JOHN HONEYWILL: 22ND AUGUST - 16TH SEPTEMBER, 2017
John Honeywill
Exhibition catalogue
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2017.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 8 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Brownhall Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Brownhall: 16 March – 10 April, 2021. Exhibition catalogue
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2021. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Coelho Kirsten view full entry
Reference: KIRSTEN COELHO: 10 NOVEMBER - 5 DECEMBER, 2020
Kirsten Coelho
Exhibition catalogue
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2020.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Tupicoff June view full entry
Reference: THE FRENCH PAINTINGS
June Tupicoff
Exhibition catalogue
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2017.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Wilson Ralph view full entry
Reference: ISLANDS
Ralph Wilson
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2019.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Moller Vera view full entry
Reference: MARINESQUE
Vera Moller
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details:
Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2022.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Bartlett Henry view full entry
Reference: HENRY BARTLETT: 3RD - 28TH FEBRUARY, 2015
Henry Bartlett
Exhibition catalogue
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2015.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Chen Jun view full entry
Reference: JUN CHEN: 30TH APRIL - 25TH MAY, 2019
Jun Chen
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2019.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 16 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Adams Lisa view full entry
Reference: LISA ADAMS: 13 OCTOBER - 7 NOVEMBER, 2020
Lisa Adams
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2020.
First Edition.
17cm x 23.5cm. 12 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Moller Vera view full entry
Reference: AQUAFLORESCENCES
Vera Moller
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2018.
First Edition.
21cm x 30cm. 8 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Figure Theview full entry
Reference: THE FIGURE
Exhibition catalogue for a group show featuring Charles Blackman, William Strutt, Mortimer Menpes, Rupert Bunny, Norman Lindsay, Eric Wilson, Stella Bowen, George Washington Lambert, Charles Douglas Richardson, J. J. Hilder, Girolamo Pieri Nerli, Ian Fairweather, John Perceval, Russell Drysdale, Fred Williams, Jon Molvig, Charles Blackman, Ray Crooke, Robert Dickerson, Brett Whiteley, Arthur Boyd, James Gleeson, Leonard Shillam, Kathellen Shillam, Sam Fullbrook, Garry Shead, Charles Blackman, Justin O'Brien, Gordon Shepherdson, Lawrence Daws, Jeffrey Smart, John Young, Michael Zavros, Mickolaus Seffrin, Davida Allen, Tim Storrier, William Robinson, Peter Churcher, Rick Amor, Wendy Sharpe, Jun Chen, Barry Humphries, Roy de Maistre, and Arthur Murch. Invitation and price list laid in.

Publishing details: Philip Bacon Galleries
Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2021.
First Edition.
30cm x 21cm. 44 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Hirst Collectionview full entry
Reference: The Hirst Collection of Australian & International Art. Exhibition catalogue of works from the Brisbane collection of Doc and Fritzi Hirst featuring John Russel, George Lambert, Emanuel Phillips Fox, Albert Henry Fullwood, Eugene Carriere, William Dobell, Russell Drysdale, John Passmore, Lloyd Rees, Auguste Rodin, Brett Whiteley, Jacob Epstein, Arthur Boyd, Godfrey Miller, Charles Blackman, Arthur Boyd, Clifton Pugh, Jon Molvig, Lawrence Daws, Ray Crooke, David Boyd, Donald Friend, Godfrey Miller, Michael Kmit, James Gleeson, M. L. Snowden, Dylan Lewis, Frederick Hart, Richard MacDonald, Guy Boyd, Kathleen Shillam, and Leonard Shillam. Invitation and price list laid in.
Publishing details: Philip Bacon Galleries
Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2022, 56 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Paterson James Robert view full entry
Reference: see Davidson’s auction 22.5.22, lot 285, collection of 175 drawings executed 1979-80, Provenace Ray Hughes, Gallery, James Barker Collection, Brisbane, collection Adrian Mibus, art dealer, London, each 18 x 22 cm
Bucknole Edwardview full entry
Reference: see Kinghams Auctioneers
May 27, 2022, Moreton-in-Marsh, United Kingdom, lot 432:
Australian Interest (early 20th century), a quantity of architectural drawings by Edward Bucknole, Victoria etc, including woollen mill designs and plans, also some student artworks, nudes etc, note: Edward Bucknole is mentioned in the Journal of the Royal Victorian institute of architects vol. 25 (1927-1928)
Felton Myraview full entry
Reference: see Davidson Auctions, May 22, 2022, lot 162: FELTON, Myra (British/Australian 1865-1920)
Spiritualist - Portrait of the Artist, 1910.
Signed & dated indistinctly lower left; with additional inscription to stretcher.
Illustrated in 'The Exhibitionists: A History of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales,' by Steven Miller, published by the Art Gallery of NSW, 2021 (page 32).
Oil on Canvas
60x49.5cm
Dimensions
60x49.5cm
Artist or Maker
(British/Australian 1865-1920)
Medium
Signed & dated indistinctly lower left; with additional inscription to stretcher.
Illustrated in 'The Exhibitionists: A History of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales,' by Steven Miller, published by the Art Gallery of NSW, 2021 (page 32).
Trompf Percyview full entry
Reference: see HAWLEY'S AUCTIONEERS, 21 May 2022 to 22 May 2022. lot 896: Original Percy Trompf travel poster, Australia. The landing of Captain Cook at Botany Bay 1770, Australian National Travel Association, Poster Number 1, approx 62cms w x 47cms h in clip frame.
Condition Report
Central fold crease, pin holes to corners, tear to left side middle, minor stains to border, overall fairly good condition.
Wentscher Juliusview full entry
Reference: see GALERIE BASSENGE, 2.6.22, lot 6096:
Wentscher d. J., Julius -- Coastal landscape on Aegina in Greece.
Oil on canvas. 54x91 cm. Signed, dated and inscribed "J. Wentscher d. J. / Aegina (19)09" lower left.
Julius Wentscher was born the son of the landscape painter of the same name and studied both in his father's studio and at the Académie Julian in Paris before settling in Berlin. In 1914 he married the sculptor Tina Haim. In the 1920s he undertook numerous longer trips with his wife, which also took him back to Greece. Above all, he traveled to Bali and Java in 1932. On the advice of Käthe Kollwitz, he and his wife did not return to Germany because of the worsening situation for Jews. After stations in China, Indonesia, Siam, Cambodia, Singapore and Malaysia, they finally came to Australia in 1940 as enemy aliens, where they were interned until 1942. He and his wife eventually settled in Melbourne and took Australian citizenship.

Done Kenview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, 21.5.2022, Spectrum, p8-9, article by Nick Galvin, ‘The Done Thing’.
Bloggs John Kview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, ‘A presentation casket with carvings by John K. Bloggs, 1915,’ article by Sarah Guest, p10-11
traysview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on wooden trays by R. A. Fredman.
timber traysview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on wooden trays by R. A. Fredman.
wooden traysview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on wooden trays by R. A. Fredman.
La Perouse view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
DuPerry Louis Isidore expedition 1824view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
D’Urville Jules Dumontview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
de Bougainville Hyacintheview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
Crepin Louis Philippe 1772-1851 oil painting c1831view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
international exhibitionsview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
Terry Frederick C p20-21view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article on La Perouse by Peter G. Towson, p16-22. Illustrated.
Currawongview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Saving Currawong’ by Jillian Dwyer. Illustrated.
Allen George B painting of Hawthorn 1875view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Saving Currawong’ by Jillian Dwyer. Illustrated.
Lamborn William 1826-1905 jeweller 5 illustrationsview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Saving Currawong’ by Jillian Dwyer. Illustrated.
Schagen Adrien jewellerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Indigenous moyifs on a silver brooch’, by Christine Erratt, p28-34. Illustrated.
Schagen Simon Adrien jeweller 1923-2013view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Indigenous moyifs on a silver brooch’, by Christine Erratt, p28-34. Illustrated.
Maymuru Nanyin c1910-1969view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Indigenous moyifs on a silver brooch’, by Christine Erratt, p28-34. Illustrated.
Benson Michael Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Spanish Craftsmen in.\ the New Norcia Abbey in Western Australia’, by Dorothy Erickson. Illustrated.
Oriel Isidroview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Spanish Craftsmen in.\ the New Norcia Abbey in Western Australia’, by Dorothy Erickson. Illustrated.
Reidy Lillaview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, ‘Looking for paintings on gum leaves’, by John Wade. Illustrated.
Eustace Arthur William 1820-1907view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, ‘Looking for paintings on gum leaves’, by John Wade. Illustrated.
Henry Madame wife of Lucienview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Madame Henry,’ illustrated. By Yvonne Barber.
Henry Lucien 1850-96view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Madame Henry,’ illustrated. By Yvonne Barber. P44-54.
Henry Lucien 1850-96view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2022, vol 4, no. 2, article ‘Madame Henry,’ illustrated. By Yvonne Barber. P44-54.
photographyview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Annand Douglasview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Beck Richardview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Bostock Cecilview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Cazneaux Haroldview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Cotton Janetview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Cotton Florenceview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Cotton Joyceview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Illingworth Nelson p261view full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Le Guay Laurenceview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Luke Monte p 170 326view full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Moore Davidview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Parer Damienview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Poignant Axel p340 422view full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Preston Margaretview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Proctor Thea p91 114view full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Roberts Russellview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Sharp Olgaview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Sievers Wolfgangview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Smith Sydney Ureview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Smith Sydney Ureview full entry
Reference: see Olive Cotton: A Life in Photography by Helen Ennis. [’A landmark biography of a singular and important Australian photographer, Olive Cotton, by an award-winning writer – beautifully written and deeply moving.
Olive Cotton was one of Australia’s pioneering modernist photographers, a woman whose talent was recognised as equal to her first husband’s, Max Dupain, and a significant artist in her own right. Together, Olive and Max could have been Australia’s answer to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, or Ray and Charles Eames. The photographic work they produced during the 1930s and ’40s was extraordinary and distinctively their own.
But in the early 1940s Cotton quit their marriage and Sydney studio to live with second husband Ross McInerney and raise their two children in a tent on a farm near Cowra – later moving to a hut that had no running water, electricity or telephone. Despite these barriers, and not having access to a darkroom, Olive continued her photography but away from the public eye. Then a landmark exhibition in Sydney in 1985 shot her back to fame, followed by a major retrospective at the AGNSW in 2000. Australian photography would never be same.
This is a moving and powerful story about talent, creativity and women, and about what it means for an artist to manage the competing demands of art, work, marriage, children and family.
Helen’s research on Cotton has been supported by the Australia Council Literature Board and the ABR George Hicks Foundation Fellowship; and related essays have been published in Meanjin and ABR. ’]
Publishing details: HarperCollins, 2019, 544 pages, hc, dw. With Index
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Allen Mary Cecil p183view full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Archibald Prizeview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Art Gallery of New South Walesview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Atyeo Sam p180 183view full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Ashton Howard p15 29view full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Bale Alice M E p74 146view full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Bell Georgeview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Bellette Jeanview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
cartoonistsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Coen Margaret 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Cook James 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Contemporary Art Society numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Smith Grace Cossington 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Crowley Grace 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Dargie William 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Dadswell Lyndon 3 refs view full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
de Maistre Roy 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Drysdale Russell 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Dundas Douglas numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Edwards Mary numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Edwell-Burke Mary see Edwards Mary numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Eldershaw John 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Evatt Mary 7 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Friend Donald numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Gleeson James numerous numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Haefliger Paul numerous numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Heysen Hans 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Heysen Nora 9 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Jones Charles Lloyd numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Lawler Adrian 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Lindsay Daryl 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Lindsay Lionel numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Lindsay Norman numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Lister Lister W 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Long Sid 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
MacDonald J S numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Maund J W 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Medworth Frank numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Meldrum Max 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Missingham Hal 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Modernism numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Olley Margaret 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
O’Harris Pixie 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Pidgeon William 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Portrait painting numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Preston Margaret 7 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Proctor Thea 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Royal Art Society numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Smith Bernard numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Smith Joshua numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Society of Artists 7 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Streeton Arthur 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Surrealism 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Trindall Lyall 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Smith Sydney Ure numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Wakelin Roland 5 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Wilson Eric 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Wolinski Joseph numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Zander Alleyne 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Young John gallery director numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The Case that Stopped a Nation -
The Archibald Prize Controversy of 1944.
By: Peter Edwell. [’A lively and thorough telling of one of Australia's greatest front page scandals, involving key figures of the nation's art movement, politicians and business leaders, with William Dobell and Joshua Smith caught in the middle. Whilst World War II raged overseas, Australia's Archibald Prize, the wealthiest portrait prize in the world, drew huge crowds and torrents of gossip. This big illustrated book details the bizarre court case, the cast of odd characters and the aftermath, with informative context.’]
Publishing details: Halstead Press, 2021, hc, 240pp, with bibliography and index.
Art Gallery of New South Wales historyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Minns B Eview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Davison Cherylview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Montefiore E Lview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Dickens Karlaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Mullins John Laneview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Spence Benjamin (British)view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Felton Mauriceview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Felton Myraview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Piguenit W C landscape and medal won by + refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Martens Conradview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Kerry & Coview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Nettleton Charlesview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Richardson J Tview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Richards & Co photographersview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
von Guerard Eugeneview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Halswelle Keeley (British?)view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Jones Jonathan 2016view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Streeton Arthurview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Althouse & Geigerview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Alston Margaretview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Cadden Deliaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Onus Linview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Cooke Edward Williamview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Pareroultja Hubertview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Molnar Georgeview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Mulligan John photographview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Thake Ericview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Burns Timview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Nicholson Michaelview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Watkins J Sview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hawkins Weaverview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Gardner Kellyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Kerry Charles Hview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Relph George illuminated addressview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Montefiore Eliezer 1820-94view full entry
Reference: see Australian Jewish Historical Society Journal, Vol 17, no 3, Nov 2004 p311-40. ‘artist gallery director and insurance pioneer, the first significant Australian Jewish artist.’
Vernon Walter Libertyview full entry
Reference: see Noni Boyd, Phd thesis, RMIT, Melbourne, 2010.
Sulman Sir John view full entry
Reference: A Life of Purpose, a biography of John Sulman, by Zeny Edwards
Publishing details: Longueville Media, 2017
Ref: 1000
Montefiore E Lview full entry
Reference: Catalogue of the Art Gallery of New South Wales with 94 illustrations drawn by E. L. Montefiore
Publishing details: John Sands 1883
Ref: 1000
Art Gallery of New South Wales catalogueview full entry
Reference: see Catalogue of the Art Gallery of New South Wales with 94 illustrations drawn by E. L. Montefiore
Publishing details: John Sands 1883
Andersons Andrew architectview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Anivitti Giulio various refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Archibald J Fview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Arthur Tomview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Ashton Julianview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Ashton Willview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Ball Percivalview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Unbound Colleciveview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Baker Ali Gumillyaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Tribe Barbara Travelling Scholarshipview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Barnet Jamesview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Brierly Oswaldview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Buvelot Louisview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Collingridge Arthurview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Collingridge Georgeview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Combes Edwardview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Commons Donald 1855-1942view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Cook Edward Wview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Connor Kevinview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Conder Charlesview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Constable William 1906-1989view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Coutts Gordon 1868-1937view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Cowan Theodore Esther 1868-1949view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Croft Brenda Lview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Curtis J W c1839-1901view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Cusack Edith 1865-1941view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Dangar Henry C 1830-1917view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Danko Aleksview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Davies Davidview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Davison Cherylview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Docking Gil 1919-2015view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Drysdale Russellview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Du Faur Eccleston numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Dundas Douglas 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Dundas Kerry 45refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Earles Chester 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Edwell Berniceview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Eisler Billview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Evatt Mary Aliceview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Eyre Vi 1 refview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Fischer A J 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Fleming Margaret 1 refview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Frank Louis 1839-1923view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Fry Douglas 1872-1911view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Freeman Brothersview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Fuller Florence 1867-1946 1 refview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Fullwwood A H view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Gleeson Jamesview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Gruner Eliothview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
von Guerard Eugeneview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hall Bernardview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hansen Albert 1866-1914view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Herman Saliview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hern Charles Edward 1848-1894view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Heysen Hansview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hinder Frankview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hoyte J Cview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hunt C H 1857-1938view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hunt John Horbury 1838-1904view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Hutchison Noel 1940-2020view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Ironside Adelaideview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Joel Graceview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Johnstone H Jview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Jones Charles Lloydview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Jones John Llewellynview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Langker Erik 1898-1982view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Lambert Georgeview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Laverty Peterview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Laverty Ursulaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Layton George Edwardview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Lindsay Lionelview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Lister Lister William 1859-1943view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Long Sidview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Longstaff Johnview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
MacDonald J S 1878-1952view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Lovett Mildred 1 refview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Mackennal Bertramview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Macqueen Kennethview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Mahony Frank 1862-1916view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Mann G V F 1863-1948view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Manning My Matilda Lydiaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Martens Rebeccaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Maund John 1876-1962view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
McClintock Herbertview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
McCubbin Frederickview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
McCubbin Louisview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Meston Emilyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Minns B E 1868-1937view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Miller Godfreyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Missingham Hal 1906-1994view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Murch Arthurview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Muskett Alice 1869-1936view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Namatjira Albertview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Namatjira Vincent b1983view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Norton Alice 1865-1958view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Ohlfsen Dora 1869-1948view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Olley Margaretview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Pareroultja Edwinview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Parker Haroldview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Parks Tiview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Partos Paulview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Peir Cliff footnoteview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Plate Carlview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Power John Wardellview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Preston Margaretview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Proctor Theaview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Quinn Jamesview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Nicholas Hilda Rixview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Raworth William Henry 1821-1904 footnoteview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Roth Constanceview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Royal Art Societyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Simonetti Achille 1838-1900view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Smith Bernardview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Smith Sydney Ureview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Society of Artistsview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Souter D Hview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Stoddard Maryview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Strachan Davidview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Sulman Johnview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Teague Viloletview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Tischbauer Alfred 1853-1922view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Tuckson Tonyview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Vale Amy 1874-1951view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Wilson Eric 1911-1946view full entry
Reference: see The exhibitionists - A history of Sydney's Art Gallery of New South Wales, by Steven Miller. [’In 2021, the Art Gallery of New South Wales celebrates its 150th anniversary. Since its founding as an academy of art in 1871, its evolution into one of Australia’s premier public art museums is testament to the enthusiasm and ingenuity of its staff, trustees and supporters, and to the artists whose works have drawn in the people of Sydney and beyond.

The exhibitionists is the story of the people who made the Gallery. It peels away the layers of official narratives to find the often-overlooked histories bubbling beneath the surface. These are tales of big personalities and great talents, of groundbreaking exhibitions and table-thumping conflicts, all underpinned by an unwavering commitment to bringing art to the people.

Steven Miller, the Gallery’s archivist, is uniquely placed to bring these stories to light. It’s an inside view, and an outside one too, as Miller steps back to explore the society and cultural values that produced this iconic institution and tracks how it has morphed and modernised in step with those values – and ahead of them – for the last century and a half.

The exhibitionists brings to light the history of an art museum in its 150th year – an anniversary also reached by The Metropolitan Museum, New York, last year. It is both a local Sydney story but part of a broader international one in the ways public museums develop, represent and present culture and evolve with the times.

About the Author

Steven Miller is head of the National Art Archive and Capon Research Library at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. He has published widely on art, and his most recent books are Awakening: four lives in art (Wakefield Press, 2015) with Eileen Chanin, and Dogs in Australian art (Wakefield Press, 2nd ed, 2016). His book Degenerates and perverts: the 1939 Herald exhibition of French and British contemporary art with Eileen Chanin, won the NSW Premier's Australian History Award in 2006.’]
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2021, hc, 288pp, with index.
Strong Brett Livingstonview full entry
Reference: see Bradford's auction, June 26, 2022, Sun City, AZ, USA, lot 2289:
Brett Livingston Strong (1954-) "Sydney Harbour Guardian Angel" Bronze Sculpture. Cast Signature on shell. At the age of 25 as a recent arrival from Australia to the US during the '70's, Brett-Livingston Strong used a 116 ton fallen boulder on a Malibu highway to create a likeness of John Wayne in the Century Plaza Mall in full public view. The sculpture was later sold to an executive from Scottsdale, Arizona. Strong learned to carve in stone as a young boy working in a stonemason's yard carving tombstones. Born in 1954, by the age of 16 he exhibited for the first time in Sydney. Two years later as a result of winning a competition, he exhibited in a traveling national art scholarship show. In 1972 he exhibited sculptures and paintings with sculptor Henry Moore at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. By 1977, after receiving a grant from the Australian Arts Council and Trade Commission to exhibit his work around the world, he arrived in California. Over the years Strong has executed numerous portrait commissions in bronze and oils for personages from John Lennon to Dr. Armand Hammer. In the '90's his portrait of Michael Jackson was reputed to have received the largest amount paid to a living artist for a portrait; a record 2.1 million dollars. Artist: Brett Livingston Strong Title: "Sydney Harbour Guardian" Medium: Bronze Sculpture Circa/Year: 1997 Signature Type: Signed Signature Location: Shell Approx. Net Weight: 22.8lbs Keywords: Abstract Artwork, Art; Ref: BD1686
Dimensions
24 x 10 x 6in
Artist or Maker
Brett Livingston Strong
Dwyer Mikalaview full entry
Reference: NO, NOT EVER: THE NAIL POLISH SERIES - Mikala Dwyer

Publishing details: Sydney: BARBERism, 1994.
First Edition.
12.5cm x 11.5cm. [32] pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
van Noordenburg Henri view full entry
Reference: Still Water
Publishing details: Brisbane: Side Gallery, 2021.
[14] pages, colour illustrations. Lettered saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
ORNAMENTALISMview full entry
Reference: ORNAMENTALISM by Andrew McNamara
"The terms, ornament and decoration, have similar connotations. They are differentiated, however, by the fact that ornament us defined as a more or less permanent condition (ie. architectural ornament) and decoration is defined as a more transient phenomenon, usually for special occasions (hence, we speak of Christmas decorations). The essays in this publication focus on how the terms are used in modernist debates about art, which tend to use them interchangeably."
Publishing details: Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 1997.
First Edition.
25cm x 21cm. 44 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
decorationview full entry
Reference: see ORNAMENTALISM by Andrew McNamara
"The terms, ornament and decoration, have similar connotations. They are differentiated, however, by the fact that ornament us defined as a more or less permanent condition (ie. architectural ornament) and decoration is defined as a more transient phenomenon, usually for special occasions (hence, we speak of Christmas decorations). The essays in this publication focus on how the terms are used in modernist debates about art, which tend to use them interchangeably."
Publishing details: Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 1997.
First Edition.
25cm x 21cm. 44 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
McNamara Andrewview full entry
Reference: see ORNAMENTALISM by Andrew McNamara
"The terms, ornament and decoration, have similar connotations. They are differentiated, however, by the fact that ornament us defined as a more or less permanent condition (ie. architectural ornament) and decoration is defined as a more transient phenomenon, usually for special occasions (hence, we speak of Christmas decorations). The essays in this publication focus on how the terms are used in modernist debates about art, which tend to use them interchangeably."
Publishing details: Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 1997.
First Edition.
25cm x 21cm. 44 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Green Jennyview full entry
Reference: see artist’s website: Sydney sculptor, Jenny Green, explores movement & emotion using lines, curves & colour in her steel and bronze sculptures. Her work is represented in private, public & corporate collections and she has won a number of awards. She exhibits at traffic jam galleries and in group exhibitions. Jenny Green was on the Board of the National Art School (2015-2018) and was President of the Sculptors Society for five years prior to that.
Publishing details: https://jennygreen.net
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: Lysistrata.
ARTHUR MERRIC BLOOMFIELD BOYD (1920-1999)
Lysistrata 1970
a complete suite of twenty etchings in a canvas covered portfolio
1. Title Page
2. Lysistrata calls the women
3. Just as Menelaus, they say
4. The women's vow
5. The women seize the Akropolis
6. Old men enter carrying fagots to smoke out the women
7. The women defend themselves
8. Women's Chorus
9. The women driving the old men away
10. Magistrate enters
11. Magistrate to his guards
12. The Magistrate defeated
13. The women triumphant
14. Lysistrata:
15. The next hoisting herself with rope and pulley down
16. Myrrhine and Kinesias
17. Then slip your mouth aside just as he is sure of it
18. Lysistrata to the Spartan and Athenian:
19. Lysistrata:
20. Chorus
edition is limited to 65 sets
each signed and editioned on margin: Arthur Boyd 21/50
21.5 x 30.5cm (title page, image size) 56.5 x 61.5cm (title page, paper size)
35 x 40.5cm (image size), 56.5 x 61.5cm (paper size)

PROVENANCE
Greythorn Galleries, Melbourne

NOTE
In 1970, Arthur Boyd created a suite of etchings based on the Greek political comedy Lysistrata - by the playwright Aristophanes. It told the story of the women of Athens persuaded by Lysistrata to deny their husbands and lovers all sexual favours until the men had come to terms of peace.
Publishing details: [Ganymed Original Editions, 1979 [NB offered at Gibson's Auctions
June 5, 2022,
Armadale, Australia, lot 27
Ref: 1000
Ralston Robert illustratorview full entry
Reference: Katoomba & Leura, by Robert Ralston(illustrations) & Evelyne Ralston.
Publishing details: [Blackheath, N.S.W.] : Writelight Pty Ltd, 2013, 1 volume (unpaged), hc, colour illustrations
Batchelder & O'Neilview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
"Explorer William Landsborough and two Aboriginal expedition members, Jemmy and Fisherman", August 1862, carte de visite photograph, Batchelder & O'Neil, Melbourne. 10 x 6 cm.
In August 1862 William Landsborough (1825-86) and a party of four men and 20 horses arrived in Melbourne after a six-month crossing of Australia from the Gulf of Carpentaria. Called the Queensland Relief Expedition they were one of four groups sent to find Burke and Wills. Four days after returning they were presented to a meeting of the Royal Society of Victoria (who had commissioned the Burke and Wills expedition) by the Governor of Victoria, Sir Henry Barkly.
This particular carte de visite of three of the expedition members is inscribed in ink with their names. Jemmy and Fisherman’s portraits were engraved by Samuel Calvert from this photograph and published in a Melbourne illustrated newspaper. Jemmy (left) was a Native Mounted Police Trooper originally from Deniliquin while Fisherman was from Moreton Bay.
Landsborough was already a seasoned Queensland explorer with a history of travelling into remote areas to establish pastoral properties. On one expedition his group were reduced to boiling their saddlebags to eat and it was remarked that he could starve with greater cheerfulness than any man. Travelling to England in 1864 he was received by Queen Victoria and presented with a gold watch by the Royal Geographical Society. Returning to Australia he found his home property had been sold by a business partner, and thereafter other land holdings succumbed to debt and drought. He was considered more bushman than businessman and altogether too trusting of others with his financial affairs. Granted 2,000 pounds in 1882 by the Queensland Government for his part in opening up Queensland to pastoralism he purchased a station near Caboolture. He died there, aged 61, from injuries after a horse fall.
Royal Society Cook medalview full entry
Reference: The Royal Society Cook medal, by L. Richard Smith.
Publishing details: Wedgwood Press, Sydney, 1982
Ref: 1000
Resolution Medalview full entry
Reference: The Resolution & Adventure Medal, by L. Richard Smith.
Publishing details: Wedgwood Press, Sydney, 1985
Ref: 1000
Adventure Medal,view full entry
Reference: see The Resolution & Adventure Medal, by L. Richard Smith.
Publishing details: Wedgwood Press, Sydney, 1985
Stockdale John (1750-1814) view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
View in Port Jackson Published July 13 1789 by J. Stockdale
26 x 21 cm.
Print plate 4 from The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay.
Publisher: John Stockdale (1750-1814) was born in Caldrick, Cumberland and moved to London around the 1770s. In 1789, the year that he published Arthur Phillip’s Voyage to Botany Bay he was tried for libel and was acquitted.
Artist: Robert Cleveley (after). (1747-1809) was born in Deptford. Cleveley came from a family of artists, and his brother
Engraver: Thomas Prattent (1764?-1841), also known for etching and as a print seller. He
James was a carpenter on James Cook's third voyage.
Robert gained access to art produced on the voyage and subsequently created drawings based
on those art works.
was imprisoned in the Marshalsea for debt 1804 and was buried at St. James Clerkenwell.
Cleveley Robert (after) (1747-1809)view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
View in Port Jackson Published July 13 1789 by J. Stockdale
26 x 21 cm.
Print plate 4 from The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay.
Publisher: John Stockdale (1750-1814) was born in Caldrick, Cumberland and moved to London around the 1770s. In 1789, the year that he published Arthur Phillip’s Voyage to Botany Bay he was tried for libel and was acquitted.
Artist: Robert Cleveley (after). (1747-1809) was born in Deptford. Cleveley came from a family of artists, and his brother
Engraver: Thomas Prattent (1764?-1841), also known for etching and as a print seller. He
James was a carpenter on James Cook's third voyage.
Robert gained access to art produced on the voyage and subsequently created drawings based
on those art works.
was imprisoned in the Marshalsea for debt 1804 and was buried at St. James Clerkenwell.
Prattent Thomas (1764?-1841) engraverview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
View in Port Jackson Published July 13 1789 by J. Stockdale
26 x 21 cm.
Print plate 4 from The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay.
Publisher: John Stockdale (1750-1814) was born in Caldrick, Cumberland and moved to London around the 1770s. In 1789, the year that he published Arthur Phillip’s Voyage to Botany Bay he was tried for libel and was acquitted.
Artist: Robert Cleveley (after). (1747-1809) was born in Deptford. Cleveley came from a family of artists, and his brother
Engraver: Thomas Prattent (1764?-1841), also known for etching and as a print seller. He
James was a carpenter on James Cook's third voyage.
Robert gained access to art produced on the voyage and subsequently created drawings based
on those art works.
was imprisoned in the Marshalsea for debt 1804 and was buried at St. James Clerkenwell.
Gwen Barringerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
White Gum, charcoal on cartridge paper, Gwen Barringer, date unknown. 22.0 x 14.0 cm.
This lyrical drawing features the most substantial portion of a gum trunk. The artist has omitted any suggestion of the canopy and only hinted at a foreground. Instead, she has expressed the magnificence of an established tree, the mysterious semi-enclosed cavities, and the drape of fresh smelling eucalyptus foliage. This drawing represents the connection between two Adelaide artists in subject matter, location, tuition and exhibition.
6
At first glance, the subject matter falls into what could be a ‘school of Hans Heysen’ and that is not far from the truth. Gwen Adamson first learnt from H.P. Gill at the Adelaide School of Design where she developed a reputation for her bold and fresh colour choices. She then studied landscape with Hans Heysen, as did her sister-in-law, Ethel Barringer. Under Heysen’s tuition, it was noticed that Gwen's palette became muted for a duration, yet Hans Heysen’s watercolour palette was heightened. As well as being her teacher, Heysen was also a neighbour because after Gwen married Herbert Barringer in 1910, the couple purchased 80 acres of land next door to the Cedars, the well-known home of the Heysens and now a museum. Although Gwen held regular and financially successful solo exhibitions throughout her career, she also showed her work in joint exhibition with other leading South Australian artists, including Hans Heysen. Therefore, in these ways, this drawing is a reminder of the strong connection between the two artists.
Gwen’s subject matter was varied until 1910 when she began her white gum series with one critic describing her understanding of the Australian landscape in a manner that it “breathes nature and is exceptionally fine.” Her white gum series was followed by another on almond blossom; scenes and ideas from her extensive and often solo travels; and then still life and decorative subjects. Gwen continued to draw upon these subjects throughout her long career, mostly in watercolour. The Australian landscape continued to dominate her work and it should also be noted that she designed her own home in Stirling, one in which the gums and saplings almost intruded into the glass walls of the studio - such was her desire to be within the natural environment.
Hewitt Lesley view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
Sterling silver Mourning Bell from a Cabinet of Curiosities entitled “Homage to The Great Barrier Reef”. Maker: Lesley Hewitt 2021-22. Height 16cms, weight 180g.
The bell is part of the second work in a series of three entitled ‘Homage’ commemorating Australia’s natural history and environment.
It is made of sterling silver with the inclusion of electrum, opals and pink stone.
Central to the design is a sea horse (hippocampus histrix) which forms the stem of the bell, and two sea anemones which form part of the finial and bell clapper respectively. Both specimens were found washed up along the shoreline in Tasmania and later cast in sterling silver.
The silver anemone forming part of the finial was cut and splayed at its five lobes to encase the ball of the pink anemone. After annealing each lobe was then pinched into a corresponding groove of the pink anemone, (which in another life once formed part of a graduated necklace). The electrum pad supporting the crown was made by smelting gold and silver in a crucible at a ratio of 1: 8 and pouring the resultant alloy into a cuttlefish mold. It is interesting to note that electrum was commonly used in ancient coinage but is rarely seen
8
today- a pity really as the alloy can have subtle grades of colour depending on the ratio of gold to silver.
Two opals were used to form the eyes and fixed into the eye sockets using an epoxy adhesive. The topmost opal was set in a bezel soldered to a long pin passed through the whole crown and electrum pad into a socket drilled in the seahorse head.
The body of the bell was made by cutting off part of the stem from a chalice, inverting it, then annealing and hammering the rim over a stake to flare the base into a bell curve. The stump of the chalice stem was then divided by five to correspond to the five lobes of the anemone and each segment sawn then annealed, the resultant sepals beaten to curve out and down. The stem was then secured in the resultant cup on a cylindrical pedestal.
The bell clapper was made from a second casting of the sea anemone to which a stem was added. The stem was then adjusted to the correct length to produce a deadened toll when struck against the bell body and its other end connected to a loop soldered to the underside of the bell roof. The bell is date stamped inside. By holding the bell upside down, it can be filled with a libation to drink to the health and survival of the reef. The seahorse spines have been left spiky to serve as a memento mori of the reef’s fragility.
Historically, bells carry a dedication and sometimes a name. This can be included in the casting or engraved later round the waist or base of the bell. Hand engraving is a specialised and separate skill, so following construction the bell was sent to master engraver Ron Croxon, entrusted each year with engraving the Melbourne Cup. The engraving was worked out beforehand on paper in a circle using 60 Roman characters and spaces in the manner of minutes on a clock. The dedication in Roman capitals reads: HOMAGE TO THE GREAT BARRIER REEF * LESLEY HEWITT ME FECIT*
Croxon Ron master engraver view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
Sterling silver Mourning Bell from a Cabinet of Curiosities entitled “Homage to The Great Barrier Reef”. Maker: Lesley Hewitt 2021-22. Height 16cms, weight 180g.
The bell is part of the second work in a series of three entitled ‘Homage’ commemorating Australia’s natural history and environment.
It is made of sterling silver with the inclusion of electrum, opals and pink stone.
Central to the design is a sea horse (hippocampus histrix) which forms the stem of the bell, and two sea anemones which form part of the finial and bell clapper respectively. Both specimens were found washed up along the shoreline in Tasmania and later cast in sterling silver.
The silver anemone forming part of the finial was cut and splayed at its five lobes to encase the ball of the pink anemone. After annealing each lobe was then pinched into a corresponding groove of the pink anemone, (which in another life once formed part of a graduated necklace). The electrum pad supporting the crown was made by smelting gold and silver in a crucible at a ratio of 1: 8 and pouring the resultant alloy into a cuttlefish mold. It is interesting to note that electrum was commonly used in ancient coinage but is rarely seen
8
today- a pity really as the alloy can have subtle grades of colour depending on the ratio of gold to silver.
Two opals were used to form the eyes and fixed into the eye sockets using an epoxy adhesive. The topmost opal was set in a bezel soldered to a long pin passed through the whole crown and electrum pad into a socket drilled in the seahorse head.
The body of the bell was made by cutting off part of the stem from a chalice, inverting it, then annealing and hammering the rim over a stake to flare the base into a bell curve. The stump of the chalice stem was then divided by five to correspond to the five lobes of the anemone and each segment sawn then annealed, the resultant sepals beaten to curve out and down. The stem was then secured in the resultant cup on a cylindrical pedestal.
The bell clapper was made from a second casting of the sea anemone to which a stem was added. The stem was then adjusted to the correct length to produce a deadened toll when struck against the bell body and its other end connected to a loop soldered to the underside of the bell roof. The bell is date stamped inside. By holding the bell upside down, it can be filled with a libation to drink to the health and survival of the reef. The seahorse spines have been left spiky to serve as a memento mori of the reef’s fragility.
Historically, bells carry a dedication and sometimes a name. This can be included in the casting or engraved later round the waist or base of the bell. Hand engraving is a specialised and separate skill, so following construction the bell was sent to master engraver Ron Croxon, entrusted each year with engraving the Melbourne Cup. The engraving was worked out beforehand on paper in a circle using 60 Roman characters and spaces in the manner of minutes on a clock. The dedication in Roman capitals reads: HOMAGE TO THE GREAT BARRIER REEF * LESLEY HEWITT ME FECIT*
Gwynne Marjorie Bullen’s Circus and Cottage Interiorview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
Painting Bullen’s Circus, oil on board, Marjorie Gwynne, Adelaide c1950. 41.5 x 51.5 cm (sight).
Although unsigned, the painting was bought in about 1972 as part of the contents of the studio of Marjorie Gwynne (née Church, 1886-1958), and reflects her love of colour and characteristic vigorous style. The Adelaide Observer had noted the “... forceful style of her own and a love of bright colour.” when reviewing an exhibition in 1927, where her out-of- door work on show included “Beach Amusements” and “Behind the Big Tent”. When exhibiting at the Centenary Exhibition of the S.A. Society of Arts in 1936, the News noted “Of the many attractive paintings by Marjorie Gwynne I liked ‘Interior Wirth’s Circus’ (No. 69) best... her small, colorful landscapes are original and individual” The News again noted Gwynne’s predilection for such subjects in 1949 when reviewing the Royal Society of Arts showing of works by Dorrit Black, Ethleen Palmer, Ola Cohn and Gwen Barringer. With them was “... Marjorie Gwynne, who has done some colorful oils of circus scenes.” Her work was drawing similar commentary through to at least the mid-50s.
The subject of Gwynne’s painting, Bullen’s Circus, was a travelling show mounted by Alfred Bullen and his brothers which originated with a merry-go-round in NSW. By 1922 they had enough capital to take Bullen’s Circus on the road to travel Australia. Adelaide visits occurred from 1940, but mainly between 1946 and 1953, giving Gwynne the opportunity to capture the vitality of the scenes it offered. The rising popularity of television through the 1960s marked the end of Bullen’s Circus.
Painting Cottage interior, oils on board, Marjorie Gwynne, Adelaide, date unknown. 46 x 56 cm.
It is thought that the painting of a small dining room, with kitchen beyond, could be an interior view of part of the building inhabited by Gwynne’s friend Horace Trenerry at Willunga, south of Adelaide. Trenerry was a talented painter and pianist who, having fallen on hard times during the Depression moved to Willunga in 1934. Lou Klepac, his biographer in the ADB recorded him as “...witty and charming, and reckless, eccentric and temperamental.” Like Gwynne, he was encouraged by his friend Hans Heysen, and also like Gwynne, he exhibited a strong sense of design in his work.
Shown below the painting is an excerpt from the stock book of the dealer who had bought the two Gwynne paintings among works from her studio in 1972. It shows mention of some of the paintings, along with the then retail price of $30. Adjusted for inflation over the intervening years, this would equate to about $342 today.
McClelland Hugh view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
Comic strip in German of Jimpy on board a pirate ship
The cartoon strip character Jimpy was introduced to the Brisbane Sunday Mail colour comic section on 12 May 1946 as “a happy-go-lucky youth who was thrown out of the Royal College of Magicians when he failed to get his ‘magiculation’ certificate. He decided to try his luck in the world, and was always out to help someone in trouble.” The Brisbane radio station 4BK held a Saturday morning program for young people called The Sunday Mail Comics Club hour from 10 to 11am, and on 13 November 1949, a special badge (shown above) was presented to all children who attended the session. Country listeners were invited to write in to the station for their badge.
15
Hugh McClelland was the creator of Jimpy. According to the Melbourne Argus (29 July 1974) McClelland was born in South Africa in 1912, and in 1924 moved to England. Wikipedia describes Hugh McClelland as a cartoonist who headed the cartoon department of the UK Daily Mirror. In 1945 he introduced a variety of comic strips including Dan Doofer, Sunshine Falls, and that of the young magician, Jimpy. In 1956 McClelland emigrated with his family to Canada. There is no reference to McClelland having worked in Australia and so his Australian connection is solely due to the fact that Australian newspapers printed his cartoon strips under licence, as was the case with other mainly American cartoon strips like Hopalong Cassidy, Superman, and Micky Mouse, that appeared alongside Australian strips like Ginger Meggs, Uncle Joe’s Horse Radish, and the like. The colour strip illustrated above is in German language, showing that Jimpy’s popularity was not confined just to English speaking countries.
Skipper Alf view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Society, SA Australiana Study Group 77th Meeting, 5 May 2022, online report.
“Painted lady” opalescent rock samples, decorated by Alf Skipper, 2nd half of the 20thC.
Left hand example 7 x 6.5 cm (irregular)
Given to the owner over several years by Alf Skipper, an amateur opal miner who worked a claim at Coober Pedy, and who added the landscape scenes. He has made use of the “painted lady” character of the samples, an occurrence whereby a thin film of opal overlies a stone surface.
Opal was first recorded in South Australia by the German geologist and linguist Johann Menge in 1849. In 1915 a 14 year old boy camping with his father on a gold prospecting trip found opal at Coober Pedy, 846 km north of Adelaide, and by 1916 the area was established as an opal field. An influx of miners after WW1, many of them ex-servicemen, boosted production while the adoption of living in dugouts gave the field its name. The Aboriginal words “kupa piti”, meaning “white man’s burrow” was adopted as Coober Pedy.
The opal fields now extend for about 40 km around the township, with the precious stone found up to 30 metres below the surface, where it occurs in horizontal levels or steeply dipping slides. While the location of opal is very unpredictable, Coober Pedy is now regarded as the world’s largest and richest producer of precious opal.
Alfred John Skipper (1922-2010) was born at Kensington, an inner eastern suburb of Adelaide. The family moved to Bowden, where he attended the Brompton Primary School before working as a painter for Harry Hatwell. Hampered by his lack of education when he
16
tried to enlist in the RAAF as air crew in 1941, he did manage to join up as ground staff the following year, ending up as a Fitter 11A by the time he was demobilised in 1946. His war service was mainly spent in the Northern Territory, for which he received the Defence Service Medal, the Australian Service Medal, and the Returned from Active Service badge. In later years he was able to also claim the 1939-45 Star.
Lye Lenview full entry
Reference: Happy moments. Text & images by Len Lye. Edited & with an afterword by Roger Horrocks.
‘Happy Moments is the first complete publication of Len Lye’s remarkable autobiographical texts written in New York in the 1960s. The 21 texts (plus Lye’s introduction) are accompanied by eight previously unpublished drawings or ‘doodles’ as Lye called them. The book is edited and with an afterword by Roger Horrocks, author of the definitive Len Lye: a biography (Auckland University Press, 2001).
Len Lye (1901-1980) was born in Christchurch and lived in New Zealand until the age of 21. Apart from brief return visits towards the end of his life in 1968 and 1977 Lye spent the rest of his life abroad. After short periods in Australia and Samoa he went to London in 1926, and lived there until 1944 when he moved to New York where he lived for the remainder of his life. He gained an international reputation as a film-maker, painter and kinetic sculptor.
Lye was an enthusiastic writer throughout his life and was the author of a book No Trouble, a collection of his idiosyncratic letters published at the Seizen Press by his friends Robert Graves and Laura Riding in Majorca in 1930 utilising much the same letterpress technology as The Holloway Press. A selection of his writing, Figures in Motion, edited by Wystan Curnow and Roger Horrocks—including memoirs, manifestos and essays—was posthumously published in 1984 by Auckland University Press. It included some of the material included in Happy Moments but this is the first complete collection of Lye’s radiant and forceful memories of his childhood in New Zealand and his early efforts at formulating his unique theory of art. Described by the poet Alistair Reid as ‘beautifully transparent and heart-stopping’, Happy Moments will be of great interest to admirers of Lye’s sculpture and films, and to anyone who appreciates good writing.
Happy Moments is designed, letter press printed on an Asbern cylinder press, using metal types, and bound by Tara McLeod at The Holloway Press. The text is 12 pt Janson, set in Linotype by John Denny, Puriri Press. Titles are handset in 18pt Lydian italic designed by Warren Chappell. The images are printed from photopolymer plates made by Nippy Graphix. The paper is Evergreen ivory 104gsm, cover paper is Gainsborough blueweave and the end papers Stardream sapphire.’ – the publisher. [From Douglas Stewart Fine Books catalogue June 2022)

Publishing details: Auckland : The Holloway Press, 2002. Folio, lettered papered boards (lightly marked), cloth spine with paper title label, pp. 48, illustrations. Original prospectus enclosed.
Ref: 1000
Pearson Margaret Maryview full entry
Reference: Miranda-with-the-Mouse, written & illustrated by Margaret Mary Pearson

Publishing details: Sydney; Australasian Publishing Co, 1947. Oblong quarto, illustrated papered boards, endpapers, pp. 58, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Hall Dellview full entry
Reference: Where the cool Warrichi flows. By Jim Allen ; with illustrations by Dell Hall.
“The seven short stories included in this delightful book recall incidents from Jim Allen’s childhood spent in a mixed-race community in South Arfica’s rural Transvaal where his father opened a trading store. Born in 1925, Allen later studied English, Afrikaans, Latin and Greek at Witwatersrand University and English at Oxford. After migrating to Australia in 1962 he taught at the University of New South Wales. He dedicates his book to the three groups of people – Shangaan, Afrikaans and English-speaking – whose friendships and conflicts moulded him. ‘What my sister Dell and I have set out to do is to recover a lost world – in fact, two worlds: one, arising out of memories of our childhood on the farm, Marite, in the Eastern Transvaal in South Africa from the time of the Great Depression till the beginning of the Second World War: the other, including the South African War (‘Boer War’), 1900-1902, but reaching back in time to the early 1880s before my parents were born, a time when my great uncle, E. L. (Lil) Banger, adventured up northward from Durban, fired a shot at the Pietermaritzburg town hall clock to test his first rifle, and began his life as a hunter and trader, eventually buying the farm Marite for half-a-crown a morgen in 1908. In 1921 my father, R. C. Allen, joined his uncle at Marite as a partner in his native trading store. They used a purple letterhead figuring a handsome bushbuck ram reclining, and the words BANGER AND ALLEN. They also had an antique Remington typewriter.'”

Publishing details: Melbourne : Macmillan, 2003. Octavo, boards in dustjacket, pp. 144, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Leunig Maryview full entry
Reference: BLACK AND WHITE AND GREY by Mary Leunig


Publishing details: Melbourne: Penguin, 1993.
First Edition.
18cm x 18cm. [96] pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Menpes Mortimerview full entry
Reference: India through the ages : a popular and picturesque history of Hindustan, by Flora Annie Steel ; with 7 maps. illus by Mortimer Menpes
Publishing details: London, A & C Black, 1912. With 75 color plates,

Ref: 1009
Reid Eunice Rebieview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, lot 739, BILLY HUGHES pottery bust by EUNICE REBIE REID, early 20th century,

incised "E.R. Reid",

9cm high

Wunderlich Factory paperweight of George Reidview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
lot 738
GEORGE REID pair of painted cast iron paper weights by the Wunderlich Factory, circa 1910. This souvenir came onto the market shortly before Reid departed Australia to become the country's first High Commissioner to London. Sydney Evening News carried an advertisement for the pieces on the 12th of January, 1910. 12.5cm high
Reid George paperweight by Wunderlich Factory view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
lot 738
GEORGE REID pair of painted cast iron paper weights by the Wunderlich Factory, circa 1910. This souvenir came onto the market shortly before Reid departed Australia to become the country's first High Commissioner to London. Sydney Evening News carried an advertisement for the pieces on the 12th of January, 1910. 12.5cm high
Metcalfe Percyview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 743
STANLEY MELBOURNE BRUCE, (8th Prime Minister, 1925-28) porcelain character jug designed by Percy Metcalfe for Ashtead Pottery, limited edition 53/500, factory mark, signature an inscription on the base. 18.5cm high.
Frith John cartoonistview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 747
ROBERT MENZIES Bendigo Pottery character jug in original box, limited edition, designed by Melbourne Herald cartoonist John Frith in 1973, oval factory stamp with title to base, 17.5cm high
McEwan Johnview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, Lot 749
JOHN McEWAN pottery charcter jug by EWAN McDonald, circa 1967. McEwan was Prime Minister for only 22 days being appointed after the disappearance of Harold Holt. Incised "Ewan McDonlald", 15cm high
Sedgwick Terryview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 750
BILLY McMAHON (20th Prime Minister of Australia) novelty candle depicted in boxing gloves, designed by Terry Sedgwick,

15cm high

 




McLaren Gus & Bettyview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, Lot 752
HENRY BOLTE pottery face mug by GUS & BETTY McLAREN of Warrandyte, Victoria, circa 1970s. Modeled after a work by the noted political cartoonist LES TANNER. Incised "Designed By Tanner", 11cm high, 17cm wide
Tanner Lesview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 752
HENRY BOLTE pottery face mug by GUS & BETTY McLAREN of Warrandyte, Victoria, circa 1970s. Modeled after a work by the noted political cartoonist LES TANNER. Incised "Designed By Tanner", 11cm high, 17cm wide
Bugg R Wview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 776
R. W. BUGG antique Australian Colonial portrait plaque of a lady, cast plaster in circular timber frame, circa 1860s, 22cm diameter, 45cm overall
Crisp J Aview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 839
J.A. CRISP "Kookaburra" porcelain fruit bowl, signed on the side "J.A. CRISP", 7cm high, 26cm diameter
Keith-Falconer Ian Douglas Montagu view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 995
The Sketchbook of Lord Inverurie, Ian Douglas Montagu Keith-Falconer (1877 - 1897), son of Lord Kintore, Governor of South Australia from 1889 - 1895. Titled "Ian's Early Sketches", the bound volume bears a tipped-in certificate on the inside front cover, dated June 1890, advising that "Lord Douglas Montagu Inverurie" had passed a satisfactory examination in Model Drawing conducted by the Public Library, Museum and Art Gallery of South Australia. The album contains 39 tipped-in watercolours.
The Sketchbook of Lord Inverurie, Ian Douglas Montagu Keith-Falconer (1877 - 1897), son of Lord Kintore, Governor of South Australia from 1889 - 1895. Titled "Ian's Early Sketches", the bound volume bears a tipped-in certificate on the inside front cover, dated June 1890, advising that "Lord Douglas Montagu Inverurie" had passed a satisfactory examination in Model Drawing conducted by the Public Library, Museum and Art Gallery of South Australia. The album contains 39 tipped-in watercolour paintings and sketches, several annotated and dated between 1893 and 1897, being mostly scenes in Scotland and en route to or from Australia.

Wells S Gview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 1034
'Wells Cartoons, Sporting, Political and General' (2nd Edition) by S.G. Wells, cartoonist for "The Herald" newspaper (Melbourne), 136pp softbound, some light aging and minor spine damage, very good condition overall, c.1924; also "The Billy Book - Hughes Abroad" cartoons by Low, published by NSW Bookstall Co (Sydney, 1918), cover faults & spotting to cover and end pages. (2 items).
Blackburn  James(1803 – 1854)view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
An album of photographic reproductions of works by James Blackburn, compiled in 1970 by Hanley H. Preston and signed by him. The images depict plans, sketches, elevations and actual buildings erected. They include various churches, New Town Watch House, Government House, Public Schools, private homes, etc.


James Blackburn (1803 – 1854) was an English civil engineer, surveyor and architect, best known for his work in Tasmania, where he had been transported as a sentence for forgery. According to the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Blackburn "has claims to be considered one of the greatest engineers of his period in Australia, and his architectural achievements established him as Tasmania's most advanced and original architect." He was key to the formation of the Department of Public Works in 1839, serving as one of its core members under Alexander Cheyne.




WEG William Ellis Greenview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 1062
WEG (WILLIAM ELLIS GREEN), (1923-2008), group of 6 original comic artworks, the largest 50 x 66cm
Green William Ellis aka WEGview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 1062
WEG (WILLIAM ELLIS GREEN), (1923-2008), group of 6 original comic artworks, the largest 50 x 66cm
Hedges Allan Aview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, lot 1110:
ALLAN A. HEDGES (photographer),
JENOLAN CAVES, NEW SOUTH WALES poster showing "The Indian Canopy, Orient Cave", issued by the New South Wales Department of Tourist Activities. Printed by Artcarft, Sydney., circa 1950s. 100 x 61cm.


Note: We have previously only seen this image overprinted "Go there by TRAIN" for the NSW Railways Department.
Swinnerton Noel view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022,
Lot 1151
A photograph album titled "From My Camera" with photos taken by Noel Swinnerton of Balmain; each of the (32) prints is annotated and most are dated. They include the Sydney Harbour Bridge on 19th March 1932, Smithy and the Southern Cross at Mascot Aerodrome 1932, the S.S.Karoola with the Bridge behind it, other ships in Sydney Harbour, Flying Boats at Farm Cove, H.M.S. Sussex, etc.
EATON JOHN (1881 - 1966)view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, 3 works lot 1153-5
Woodthorpe Vincentview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, lot 1170
VINCENT WORDTHORPE (sic) (working in Australia (1794-1802),

I.) East View Of Sydney,

II.) Town & Cove Of Sydney,

hand-coloured engravings,

11 x 16cm each, 31 x 37cm overall

Quantity : 2


Dewey Theodoreview full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, lot 1217
THEODORE DEWEY (19th century Australian school),

Picknickers,

watercolour,
signed lower right and titled lower left,
remains of old label verso,
13 x 17cm, 32 x 34cm overall

Price Jane Rebecca 1860-1948view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, lot 1225
JANE REBECCA PRICE (1860-1948),
Sydney Harbour from Pyrmont, (nocturne),

oil on card, signed verso in white chalk "JANE.R. PRICE",

21 x 26.5cm, 31 x 37cm overall.

Jane Price painted this location several times, note another nocturne is held in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, (a larger version at 32.4 x 49.1cm). Jane Price painted in an impressionist style, a student of Frederick McCubbin, living and working as their family governess in South Yarra, Melbourne. Price also exhibited her paintings at the McCubbin’s residence. Price’s technique changed after meeting Frederick McCubbin, exhibiting confident brush strokes, a brighter palette, a square brush application with a medium impasto technique. Accompanied by a letter of authenticity from Mr Peter Perry, formerlly the Director of the Castlemaine Art Gallery. Provenance: Davidson Auction 30th March 2014, lot 209. Private Collection Melbourne.

Peters Helen Alice 1861-1923view full entry
Reference: See Leskie auction Sat 25th June 2022 - Sun 26th June, 2022, lot 1228
HELEN ALICE PETERS (1861-1923),
Australian wildflowers,

oil on canvas,

signed lower left "Helen A. Peters",

47 x 37cm, 61 x 50cm overall.

With accompanying "Keep Sake" book belonging to the artist.

Compare "Completing the Picture, Women Artists and the Heidelberg Era" by Victoria Hammond and Juliet Peers, page 59, ISBN 0.646.074.93.8.
Provenance: Private Collection Melbourne.
and
Lot 1229
HELEN ALICE PETERS (1861-1923), In The Garden, oil on canvas, signed lower left "Helen A. Peters", with exhibition label verso "In The Garden, 3.3.0 which is 3 pounds 3 shillings, Helen-A-Peters, 25 Elizabeth St. Geelong", 70 x 39cm, 84 x 53cm overall.   Provenance: Private Collection Melbourne.
L'EXPOSITION INTERNATIONALE DE PARIS 1937 PAVILLON AUSTRALIENview full entry
Reference: L'EXPOSITION INTERNATIONALE DE PARIS 1937, PAVILLON AUSTRALIEN.
A program for the Australian Pavilion of the 1937 Exposition in Paris. Written in French and English, it describes the cylindrical pavilion and the exhibits of murals, sheep, cattle, cities, wool, surfing, wheat, fauna, animals.

Cover illustration by Douglas Annand. Color illustrations of Aboriginal art, b&w photo illustrations of 'Life , Art, Architecture, Progress' plus Australian art exhibited by artist & the title of the piece by E. Buckmaster, Arnold Shore, James R. Jackson, Thea Proctor, Woodward Smith,. George Lambert, Norman Carter, A. Colquhoun, Margaret Preston, Roland Wakelin, Mary Edwards, Sydney Long, H. B. Harrison, W. B. McInnes, Robert Johnson, Elioth Gruner, Charles Wheeler, John Rowell, J. Muir Auld, Arthur Streeton, John Longstaff, Arthur Murch, John D. Moore, Will Ashton, E. Hilda Rix Nicholas, W. Lister-Lister, Hans Heysen, Douglas Dundas, E. Harvey, Norman Lindsay, Vida Lahey, Kenneth Macqueen, John Eldershaw, Maud Sherwood, Harold Herbert, A. E. Newbury, Fred Leist, Adrian Feint, Hardy Wilson, Lloyd Rees, Sydney Ure Smith, Daryl Lindsay, A. J. Munnings, H. Desbrowe Annear, Murray Griffen, Douglas Annand, Lionel Lindsay, B.E. Minns & Raynof Hoff.


Publishing details: Government of the Commonwealth of Australia, c. 1937. Staplebound Wraps. Color front, 12pp pamphlet, 7 1/4 x 9 3/4",
Ref: 1009
Paris Exposition 1937 PAVILLON AUSTRALIENview full entry
Reference: see L'EXPOSITION INTERNATIONALE DE PARIS 1937, PAVILLON AUSTRALIEN.
A program for the Australian Pavilion of the 1937 Exposition in Paris. Written in French and English, it describes the cylindrical pavilion and the exhibits of murals, sheep, cattle, cities, wool, surfing, wheat, fauna, animals.

Cover illustration by Douglas Annand. Color illustrations of Aboriginal art, b&w photo illustrations of 'Life , Art, Architecture, Progress' plus Australian art exhibited by artist & the title of the piece by E. Buckmaster, Arnold Shore, James R. Jackson, Thea Proctor, Woodward Smith,. George Lambert, Norman Carter, A. Colquhoun, Margaret Preston, Roland Wakelin, Mary Edwards, Sydney Long, H. B. Harrison, W. B. McInnes, Robert Johnson, Elioth Gruner, Charles Wheeler, John Rowell, J. Muir Auld, Arthur Streeton, John Longstaff, Arthur Murch, John D. Moore, Will Ashton, E. Hilda Rix Nicholas, W. Lister-Lister, Hans Heysen, Douglas Dundas, E. Harvey, Norman Lindsay, Vida Lahey, Kenneth Macqueen, John Eldershaw, Maud Sherwood, Harold Herbert, A. E. Newbury, Fred Leist, Adrian Feint, Hardy Wilson, Lloyd Rees, Sydney Ure Smith, Daryl Lindsay, A. J. Munnings, H. Desbrowe Annear, Murray Griffen, Douglas Annand, Lionel Lindsay, B.E. Minns & Raynof Hoff.


Publishing details: Government of the Commonwealth of Australia, c. 1937. Staplebound Wraps. Color front, 12pp pamphlet, 7 1/4 x 9 3/4",
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1939 Australiaview full entry
Reference: AUSTRALIA, NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1939.

Full and half page photo illustrations of the many 'subtle charm[s] and character of Australia and to the life of the people who live in and mould it." Images of every Australian state & territory including sailing in Sydney, farms in Tasmania, Great Barrier Reef, koala, surfing, winter sports in the Australian Alps, cattleman's carnival, Blue Mountains, Rottnest Island, hiking, landscapes, droving, gold mining, aboriginals, animals, horse racing, Lamington National Park, Porongorups Mountains, timber hauling, etc. Two color images of oil paintings by Elioth Gruner, H. Septimus Power, George Lambert, Hans Heysen, James R. Jackson

Publishing details: Sydney: Australian National Travel Association, 1938. Wraps. Large photo book published for the New York World's Fair. 9 5/8 x 13 7/8", 44pp, tan card covers, with title in red and black on front and gold embossed kangaroo. Primarily b&w illustrations.

Ref: 1000
Art Startsview full entry
Reference: Art starts, by Max Darby. Art history textbook For secondary school students.

Publishing details: Milton, Qld. : Jacaranda Press, 1993, vii, 175 p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 1000
Porcelain art in Australia todayview full entry
Reference: Porcelain art in Australia today, edited by Tricia Bradford. [Book 1 of 3] [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Kenthurst [N.S.W.] : Kangaroo Press, 1984, 104 p. : col. ill. includes index
Fisher Robertview full entry
Reference: The Painterman of William Creek - Robert Fisher
Publishing details: Wentworth Galleries, Sydney, [1980s?]
Ref: 1000
SLEIGHT: CONTEMPORARY QUEENSLAND PHOTOGRAPHYview full entry
Reference: SLEIGHT: CONTEMPORARY QUEENSLAND PHOTOGRAPHY
Steven Alderton; Camilla Birkeland
Cleveland:
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Redland Art Gallery, 2004.
First Edition.
21cm x 21cm. [12] pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
PHOTOGRAPHYview full entry
Reference: see SLEIGHT: CONTEMPORARY QUEENSLAND PHOTOGRAPHY
Steven Alderton; Camilla Birkeland
Cleveland:
Exhibition catalogue.
Publishing details: Redland Art Gallery, 2004.
First Edition.
21cm x 21cm. [12] pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial saddle-stapled wrappers.
Arnaoutopoilos Andrew view full entry
Reference: Soiled/Weathered - Andrew Arnaoutopoilos


Publishing details: Brisbane: Institute of Modern Art, 2002.
First Edition. 60 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
MORE HISTORIC HOMES OF BRISBANEview full entry
Reference: MORE HISTORIC HOMES OF BRISBANE, by Ray Sumner

Publishing details: Brisbane: The National Trust of Queensland, 1982.
First Edition.
25cm x 18cm. 120 pages, illustrations, some colour. Brown cloth, white lettering, pictorial jacket.
Ref: 1000
architecture Brisbaneview full entry
Reference: see MORE HISTORIC HOMES OF BRISBANE, by Ray Sumner

Publishing details: Brisbane: The National Trust of Queensland, 1982.
First Edition.
25cm x 18cm. 120 pages, illustrations, some colour. Brown cloth, white lettering, pictorial jacket.
Roberts Tomview full entry
Reference: Tom Roberts by Heather Gwilliam - Australian History, Livewire Real Lives series. 8 chapters, illustrated with the artist’s major works.
Publishing details: Oxford University Press, 1999, pb, 28pp
Pictorial history Shoalhaven districtview full entry
Reference: Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Shoalhaven artview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Wollongong district artview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
de Maistre Roy and familyview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Bundanonview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Boyd Arthurview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Micky of Ulladullaview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
McCrae Tommyview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Yakaduna aka Tommy McCraeview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Barry James artist Church Missionary Society p132view full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Elyard Samuel various referencesview full entry
Reference: see Pictorial history Shoalhaven district : Berry, Nowra, Kangaroo Valley, Jervis Bay, Sussex Inlet, Milton, Ulladulla, by Roger Coombs. Includes bibliographical references (page 148) and index. Some biographical information on artists within text.
Publishing details: Alexandria : Kingsclear Books, 2014, 151 pages : illustrations, 1 map, portraits
Australian porcelain, a fine art view full entry
Reference: Australian porcelain, a fine art : porcelain art in Australia today, book 3 / edited by Tricia Bradford
Publishing details: Kenthurst, N.S.W. : Kangaroo Press, 1986,103 p. : chiefly col. ill., ports. ; 30 cm. 
includes index
Contemporary Australian Craftview full entry
Reference: Contemporary Australian Craft. Exhibition catalogue. Dual text JAPANESE / ENGLISH. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Published by Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art Sapporo 1999, 1st edition softback with french flaps large octavo 165pp., colour & b/w plates,
Ref: 1000
Craft - Contemporary Australian view full entry
Reference: see Contemporary Australian Craft. Exhibition catalogue. Dual text JAPANESE / ENGLISH. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Published by Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art Sapporo 1999, 1st edition softback with french flaps large octavo 165pp., colour & b/w plates,
Records of the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land, Volume 1: Art, Myth and Symbolismview full entry
Reference: Records of the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land, Volume 1: Art, Myth and Symbolism. Copiously illustrated with examples of rock drawings & aboriginal cultural & ritual artefacts.

Publishing details: Published by Melbourne U. P. Melbourne 1956, hardback with dust jacket Nice copy large octavo xxx + 513pp., col. frontis., col. & b/w pls., maps, references, index,
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Records of the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land, Volume 1: Art, Myth and Symbolism. Copiously illustrated with examples of rock drawings & aboriginal cultural & ritual artefacts.

Publishing details: Published by Melbourne U. P. Melbourne 1956, hardback with dust jacket Nice copy large octavo xxx + 513pp., col. frontis., col. & b/w pls., maps, references, index,
Arnhem Land artview full entry
Reference: see Records of the American-Australian Scientific Expedition to Arnhem Land, Volume 1: Art, Myth and Symbolism. Copiously illustrated with examples of rock drawings & aboriginal cultural & ritual artefacts.

Publishing details: Published by Melbourne U. P. Melbourne 1956, hardback with dust jacket Nice copy large octavo xxx + 513pp., col. frontis., col. & b/w pls., maps, references, index,
Zaadstra Pieterview full entry
Reference: Our Australian Kelpie, The Elfin Story
by Tim Austin. The illustrated story of the Australian Kelpie. Illustrated by the artist Pieter Zaadstra.

Publishing details: Published by High Thunder Mt. Gambier 1991, hardback with dust jacket Near Fine folio 128pp., col. frontis., col. & b/w ills., table,
Ref: 1000
Roar and Quieter Momentsview full entry
Reference: Roar and Quieter Moments from a Group of Melbourne Artists, 1980-1993, by Traudi Allen [to be indexed]

Publishing details: Published by Craftsman House Roseville East 1995, hardback with dust jacket, large octavo 144pp., col. & b/w pls., appendix, index,
Ref: 1000
Yorro Yorro, Everything Standing up Alive. Spirit of the Kimberleyview full entry
Reference: Yorro Yorro, Everything Standing up Alive. Spirit of the Kimberley
Mowaljarlai, David, & Malnic, Jutta. Rock Art & Stories from the Australian Kimberley.

Publishing details: Published by Magabala Books Broome 2015, softback with stiff wrappers As New octavo 234pp., colour & b/w plates, maps, appends., bibliog., indexes,
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Yorro Yorro, Everything Standing up Alive. Spirit of the Kimberley
Mowaljarlai, David, & Malnic, Jutta. Rock Art & Stories from the Australian Kimberley.

Publishing details: Published by Magabala Books Broome 2015, softback with stiff wrappers As New octavo 234pp., colour & b/w plates, maps, appends., bibliog., indexes,
rock artview full entry
Reference: see Yorro Yorro, Everything Standing up Alive. Spirit of the Kimberley
Mowaljarlai, David, & Malnic, Jutta. Rock Art & Stories from the Australian Kimberley.

Publishing details: Published by Magabala Books Broome 2015, softback with stiff wrappers As New octavo 234pp., colour & b/w plates, maps, appends., bibliog., indexes,
Heideview full entry
Reference: Heide by O. Pi. 'Heide is an epic poem, by the noted Greek-Australian poet, about history, painting, painters, patrons and the people who made art happen in Australia - from Louis Buvelot to Edith Rowan, Tom Roberts and Robert Streeton to Vassilief, Nolan, Tucker, Joy Hester, the Boyds, Mirka Mora, and Albert Namatjira, with a particular focus on the artists gathered around Sunday and John Reed at Heide in Melbourne. It explores the influence of art and poetry on the psyche, and the influence of social class on both, from the upper echelons and industrialists of Melbourne, to the struggle of the working class through such artists as Alisa O'Connor, Noel Counihan and Yosl Bergner.'.
Publishing details: Giramondo Sydney 2019, softback with stiff wrappers As New octavo 555pp., index
Ref: 1000
Form in Indigenous Artview full entry
Reference: Form in Indigenous Art: Schematisation in the Art of Aboriginal Australia and Prehistoric Europe, by Peter J. Ucko (ed.)
Publishing details: Published by Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Canberra 1961, hardback with dust jacket Nice copy quarto 486pp., col. & b/w pls., text ills., maps, indexes,
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal Artview full entry
Reference: see Form in Indigenous Art: Schematisation in the Art of Aboriginal Australia and Prehistoric Europe, by Peter J. Ucko (ed.)
Publishing details: Published by Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies Canberra 1961, hardback with dust jacket Nice copy quarto 486pp., col. & b/w pls., text ills., maps, indexes,
Harding Frankview full entry
Reference: The Frank Harding Collection: They Flew for the King, Collectors Edition. Aviation Combat Paintings of Australian by Airmen during World War 2 1939-1945, Frank Harding. 35 fine colour paintings opposite photos of the pilot with service details.
Publishing details: Aviation Art Australia Renmark 1990, octavo 86pp., col. & b/w pls., text ills.,
Ref: 1000
Pickering Charles photographer view full entry
Reference: see Sloane Street AuctionsLondon, UK, 1.7.22, lot 69: An Album of Photographs of New South Wales Presented to Prince Bismarck. Oblong folio. (365 x 460 mm). [36 unnumbered leaves]. Leaf with title 'Photographs. New South Wales.' recto and 35 leaves of thick card, each with large albumen print photograph to recto and verso within printed green decorative border and with captions, the 70 photographs printed from glass negatives in sepia, several with additional captions in white in the image, each leaf mounted on canvas tab; sheet size: 348 x 418 mm, image size: 226 x 278 mm. Contemporary full red morocco, front and rear boards with elaborate decorative gilt borders, front board with additional gilt title: 'Photographs / New South Wales' and presentation: 'His Excellency Prince Bismarck / from / The Government of New South Wales', banded spine with elaborate gilt tooling in six compartments, turn-ins with decorative roll tool borders, marbled endpapers, a.e.g. [PROVENANCE: Presentation to front board to the 'Iron Chancellor', Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck-Schönhausen (1815 - 1898), Prince of Bismarck and Duke of Lauenberg]. An exceptional album of Australian photographs presented to the unifier of Germany and 'Iron Chancellor', Otto von Bismarck. This very fine album, bound in red morocco and with a gilt presentation stamped to the front board (see below), includes 70 fine albumen print photographs from glass negatives representative of early Australian subjects. The photographs include images of important buildings in Sydney ('Government House', 'Colonial Secretary's Office', 'Lands Office', 'Town Hall' etc.) as well as notable landmarks ('Prince Albert Statue', 'Captain Cook's Statue', 'Picton Viaduct', the 'Argyle Cutting', 'Saddle Cutting' etc.), particular events (the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' and a 'Naval Sham-Fight') as well as several discrete series. The first of these is an extensive depiction in 14 photographs of Sydney's 'Botanic Gardens' and the second illustrates the 'Jenolan Caves' in the Blue Mountains. The third and most extensive series, occupying the final third of the album, contains a number of panoramic views - some of breathtaking accomplishment - of the Blue Mountains, the Southern Highlands, the Nepean River and other striking areas. None of the photographs in the album are credited - it is most likely that the album was issued under the auspices of the New South Wales Government Printing Office - but the album does include images by Charles Pickering, Joseph Bischoff, Nicolas Caire, and possibly Charles Bayliss. The Government Printing Office of New South Wales employed a number of photographers in the late nineteenth century to document and promote Australia and today holds an archive of over 200,000 negatives; the majority of the negatives are uncredited, noted only as having been taken 'by the staff of the Photographic Branch'. The album is not dated, but the majority of the photographs appear to date from the 1870s with the latest likely to be the four photographs of the 'Naval Sham-Fight' which occurred on April 12th, 1881, while the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' (probably the impetus for the 'sham-fight') was also in 1881. A date in the 1880s also seems plausible in the light of the presentation to Bismarck: a firm opponent of German colonialism, Bismarck had a change of heart in 1883 - 1884 and the colonisation of German New Guinea with the annexation of the Bismarck Archipelago in 1884 are representative. Whether the Government of New South Wales sought by the presentation of the album - presumably not an isolated gift - to promote a sense of personal goodwill or as fan indirect indication that no further encroachments on a sphere that must have seemed its own would be tolerated, is a matter for speculation and further research. '[Photographs] were mostly promotional images for publications, exhibitions and presentation albums. The collection also incorporated . the work of other photographers, such as Joseph Bischoff's 1875 'Grose Valley'. As the Government Printer employed many photographers, the attribution of the photographs to any one photographer is difficult . Most of the 200,000 negatives that constitute the collection, still housed by the NSW Government Printer, are only identified as being by staff of the Photographic Branch. Contemporary prints from the negatives are rare, and very few are held by the Government Printer today. Most images were presented in albums; it is rare to find individual images of high quality.' (Alan Davies writing in 'Masterpieces of Australian Photography', 1989).
Bischoff Joseph photographer view full entry
Reference: see Sloane Street AuctionsLondon, UK, 1.7.22, lot 69: An Album of Photographs of New South Wales Presented to Prince Bismarck. Oblong folio. (365 x 460 mm). [36 unnumbered leaves]. Leaf with title 'Photographs. New South Wales.' recto and 35 leaves of thick card, each with large albumen print photograph to recto and verso within printed green decorative border and with captions, the 70 photographs printed from glass negatives in sepia, several with additional captions in white in the image, each leaf mounted on canvas tab; sheet size: 348 x 418 mm, image size: 226 x 278 mm. Contemporary full red morocco, front and rear boards with elaborate decorative gilt borders, front board with additional gilt title: 'Photographs / New South Wales' and presentation: 'His Excellency Prince Bismarck / from / The Government of New South Wales', banded spine with elaborate gilt tooling in six compartments, turn-ins with decorative roll tool borders, marbled endpapers, a.e.g. [PROVENANCE: Presentation to front board to the 'Iron Chancellor', Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck-Schönhausen (1815 - 1898), Prince of Bismarck and Duke of Lauenberg]. An exceptional album of Australian photographs presented to the unifier of Germany and 'Iron Chancellor', Otto von Bismarck. This very fine album, bound in red morocco and with a gilt presentation stamped to the front board (see below), includes 70 fine albumen print photographs from glass negatives representative of early Australian subjects. The photographs include images of important buildings in Sydney ('Government House', 'Colonial Secretary's Office', 'Lands Office', 'Town Hall' etc.) as well as notable landmarks ('Prince Albert Statue', 'Captain Cook's Statue', 'Picton Viaduct', the 'Argyle Cutting', 'Saddle Cutting' etc.), particular events (the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' and a 'Naval Sham-Fight') as well as several discrete series. The first of these is an extensive depiction in 14 photographs of Sydney's 'Botanic Gardens' and the second illustrates the 'Jenolan Caves' in the Blue Mountains. The third and most extensive series, occupying the final third of the album, contains a number of panoramic views - some of breathtaking accomplishment - of the Blue Mountains, the Southern Highlands, the Nepean River and other striking areas. None of the photographs in the album are credited - it is most likely that the album was issued under the auspices of the New South Wales Government Printing Office - but the album does include images by Charles Pickering, Joseph Bischoff, Nicolas Caire, and possibly Charles Bayliss. The Government Printing Office of New South Wales employed a number of photographers in the late nineteenth century to document and promote Australia and today holds an archive of over 200,000 negatives; the majority of the negatives are uncredited, noted only as having been taken 'by the staff of the Photographic Branch'. The album is not dated, but the majority of the photographs appear to date from the 1870s with the latest likely to be the four photographs of the 'Naval Sham-Fight' which occurred on April 12th, 1881, while the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' (probably the impetus for the 'sham-fight') was also in 1881. A date in the 1880s also seems plausible in the light of the presentation to Bismarck: a firm opponent of German colonialism, Bismarck had a change of heart in 1883 - 1884 and the colonisation of German New Guinea with the annexation of the Bismarck Archipelago in 1884 are representative. Whether the Government of New South Wales sought by the presentation of the album - presumably not an isolated gift - to promote a sense of personal goodwill or as fan indirect indication that no further encroachments on a sphere that must have seemed its own would be tolerated, is a matter for speculation and further research. '[Photographs] were mostly promotional images for publications, exhibitions and presentation albums. The collection also incorporated . the work of other photographers, such as Joseph Bischoff's 1875 'Grose Valley'. As the Government Printer employed many photographers, the attribution of the photographs to any one photographer is difficult . Most of the 200,000 negatives that constitute the collection, still housed by the NSW Government Printer, are only identified as being by staff of the Photographic Branch. Contemporary prints from the negatives are rare, and very few are held by the Government Printer today. Most images were presented in albums; it is rare to find individual images of high quality.' (Alan Davies writing in 'Masterpieces of Australian Photography', 1989).
Caire Nicolas photographer view full entry
Reference: see Sloane Street AuctionsLondon, UK, 1.7.22, lot 69: An Album of Photographs of New South Wales Presented to Prince Bismarck. Oblong folio. (365 x 460 mm). [36 unnumbered leaves]. Leaf with title 'Photographs. New South Wales.' recto and 35 leaves of thick card, each with large albumen print photograph to recto and verso within printed green decorative border and with captions, the 70 photographs printed from glass negatives in sepia, several with additional captions in white in the image, each leaf mounted on canvas tab; sheet size: 348 x 418 mm, image size: 226 x 278 mm. Contemporary full red morocco, front and rear boards with elaborate decorative gilt borders, front board with additional gilt title: 'Photographs / New South Wales' and presentation: 'His Excellency Prince Bismarck / from / The Government of New South Wales', banded spine with elaborate gilt tooling in six compartments, turn-ins with decorative roll tool borders, marbled endpapers, a.e.g. [PROVENANCE: Presentation to front board to the 'Iron Chancellor', Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck-Schönhausen (1815 - 1898), Prince of Bismarck and Duke of Lauenberg]. An exceptional album of Australian photographs presented to the unifier of Germany and 'Iron Chancellor', Otto von Bismarck. This very fine album, bound in red morocco and with a gilt presentation stamped to the front board (see below), includes 70 fine albumen print photographs from glass negatives representative of early Australian subjects. The photographs include images of important buildings in Sydney ('Government House', 'Colonial Secretary's Office', 'Lands Office', 'Town Hall' etc.) as well as notable landmarks ('Prince Albert Statue', 'Captain Cook's Statue', 'Picton Viaduct', the 'Argyle Cutting', 'Saddle Cutting' etc.), particular events (the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' and a 'Naval Sham-Fight') as well as several discrete series. The first of these is an extensive depiction in 14 photographs of Sydney's 'Botanic Gardens' and the second illustrates the 'Jenolan Caves' in the Blue Mountains. The third and most extensive series, occupying the final third of the album, contains a number of panoramic views - some of breathtaking accomplishment - of the Blue Mountains, the Southern Highlands, the Nepean River and other striking areas. None of the photographs in the album are credited - it is most likely that the album was issued under the auspices of the New South Wales Government Printing Office - but the album does include images by Charles Pickering, Joseph Bischoff, Nicolas Caire, and possibly Charles Bayliss. The Government Printing Office of New South Wales employed a number of photographers in the late nineteenth century to document and promote Australia and today holds an archive of over 200,000 negatives; the majority of the negatives are uncredited, noted only as having been taken 'by the staff of the Photographic Branch'. The album is not dated, but the majority of the photographs appear to date from the 1870s with the latest likely to be the four photographs of the 'Naval Sham-Fight' which occurred on April 12th, 1881, while the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' (probably the impetus for the 'sham-fight') was also in 1881. A date in the 1880s also seems plausible in the light of the presentation to Bismarck: a firm opponent of German colonialism, Bismarck had a change of heart in 1883 - 1884 and the colonisation of German New Guinea with the annexation of the Bismarck Archipelago in 1884 are representative. Whether the Government of New South Wales sought by the presentation of the album - presumably not an isolated gift - to promote a sense of personal goodwill or as fan indirect indication that no further encroachments on a sphere that must have seemed its own would be tolerated, is a matter for speculation and further research. '[Photographs] were mostly promotional images for publications, exhibitions and presentation albums. The collection also incorporated . the work of other photographers, such as Joseph Bischoff's 1875 'Grose Valley'. As the Government Printer employed many photographers, the attribution of the photographs to any one photographer is difficult . Most of the 200,000 negatives that constitute the collection, still housed by the NSW Government Printer, are only identified as being by staff of the Photographic Branch. Contemporary prints from the negatives are rare, and very few are held by the Government Printer today. Most images were presented in albums; it is rare to find individual images of high quality.' (Alan Davies writing in 'Masterpieces of Australian Photography', 1989).
Bayliss Charles. photographer view full entry
Reference: see Sloane Street AuctionsLondon, UK, 1.7.22, lot 69: An Album of Photographs of New South Wales Presented to Prince Bismarck. Oblong folio. (365 x 460 mm). [36 unnumbered leaves]. Leaf with title 'Photographs. New South Wales.' recto and 35 leaves of thick card, each with large albumen print photograph to recto and verso within printed green decorative border and with captions, the 70 photographs printed from glass negatives in sepia, several with additional captions in white in the image, each leaf mounted on canvas tab; sheet size: 348 x 418 mm, image size: 226 x 278 mm. Contemporary full red morocco, front and rear boards with elaborate decorative gilt borders, front board with additional gilt title: 'Photographs / New South Wales' and presentation: 'His Excellency Prince Bismarck / from / The Government of New South Wales', banded spine with elaborate gilt tooling in six compartments, turn-ins with decorative roll tool borders, marbled endpapers, a.e.g. [PROVENANCE: Presentation to front board to the 'Iron Chancellor', Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck-Schönhausen (1815 - 1898), Prince of Bismarck and Duke of Lauenberg]. An exceptional album of Australian photographs presented to the unifier of Germany and 'Iron Chancellor', Otto von Bismarck. This very fine album, bound in red morocco and with a gilt presentation stamped to the front board (see below), includes 70 fine albumen print photographs from glass negatives representative of early Australian subjects. The photographs include images of important buildings in Sydney ('Government House', 'Colonial Secretary's Office', 'Lands Office', 'Town Hall' etc.) as well as notable landmarks ('Prince Albert Statue', 'Captain Cook's Statue', 'Picton Viaduct', the 'Argyle Cutting', 'Saddle Cutting' etc.), particular events (the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' and a 'Naval Sham-Fight') as well as several discrete series. The first of these is an extensive depiction in 14 photographs of Sydney's 'Botanic Gardens' and the second illustrates the 'Jenolan Caves' in the Blue Mountains. The third and most extensive series, occupying the final third of the album, contains a number of panoramic views - some of breathtaking accomplishment - of the Blue Mountains, the Southern Highlands, the Nepean River and other striking areas. None of the photographs in the album are credited - it is most likely that the album was issued under the auspices of the New South Wales Government Printing Office - but the album does include images by Charles Pickering, Joseph Bischoff, Nicolas Caire, and possibly Charles Bayliss. The Government Printing Office of New South Wales employed a number of photographers in the late nineteenth century to document and promote Australia and today holds an archive of over 200,000 negatives; the majority of the negatives are uncredited, noted only as having been taken 'by the staff of the Photographic Branch'. The album is not dated, but the majority of the photographs appear to date from the 1870s with the latest likely to be the four photographs of the 'Naval Sham-Fight' which occurred on April 12th, 1881, while the visit of the 'Detached Squadron' (probably the impetus for the 'sham-fight') was also in 1881. A date in the 1880s also seems plausible in the light of the presentation to Bismarck: a firm opponent of German colonialism, Bismarck had a change of heart in 1883 - 1884 and the colonisation of German New Guinea with the annexation of the Bismarck Archipelago in 1884 are representative. Whether the Government of New South Wales sought by the presentation of the album - presumably not an isolated gift - to promote a sense of personal goodwill or as fan indirect indication that no further encroachments on a sphere that must have seemed its own would be tolerated, is a matter for speculation and further research. '[Photographs] were mostly promotional images for publications, exhibitions and presentation albums. The collection also incorporated . the work of other photographers, such as Joseph Bischoff's 1875 'Grose Valley'. As the Government Printer employed many photographers, the attribution of the photographs to any one photographer is difficult . Most of the 200,000 negatives that constitute the collection, still housed by the NSW Government Printer, are only identified as being by staff of the Photographic Branch. Contemporary prints from the negatives are rare, and very few are held by the Government Printer today. Most images were presented in albums; it is rare to find individual images of high quality.' (Alan Davies writing in 'Masterpieces of Australian Photography', 1989).
Bailey H H photographer Hobartview full entry
Reference: see Sloane Street AuctionsLondon, UK, 1.7.22, lot 55:
A collection of oversized albumen prints, some mounted to original board; some late 19th century. Including photographs of: Honolulu, Emma Square, Magepa 1889;Australia, including:Bondi;Manly (x3);St Patrick's College;Botanic Gardens, Sydney;Circular quay;St Andrew's Cathedral;Paramatta River (x2);a Kangaroo and an Emu (both signed jp);Cape Raoul (with 'H. H. Bailey Hobart' stamp); Banjarmasin;A portrait of four Ainu men (historically called Ezo) (19th century);Four Polynesian (?) men;Ships off a tropical coast;A portrait of a Burmese couple with a child;an interesting photograph (x 4).
Walter Alfred Wishart view full entry
Reference: see Vintage and Antique Fine Art and Decor
by District Auction
June 12, 2022, Seattle, US, lot 56: Landscape view of the Hawkesbury river, Austrailia. Signed lower right (partially hidden by frame). Canvas laid on dense cardstock panel. Appears in good condition; a few light spots. Gilded wood frame. Board 14 1/4" x 18". Frame 17 7/8" x 21 5/8". Walter (1887-1964) was active / lived in Austrailia. He studied under Will Ashton.
Voltz Fview full entry
Reference: see Luis Porretta Fine Arts Nanaimo, Canada, 1 July, 2022, lot 171: F. VOLTZ - AUSTRALIAN BUSH LANDSCAPE. This oil on board painting dates to c1975 and is described, signed and dated on its back, artists signature on the painting. The board measures 20" x 16" and overall framed size is 24" x 20". It depicts a view in Victoria with a gum tree and the Grampian mountains in the background.
Rowan Ellisview full entry
Reference: THE BIRDS OF AUSTRALIA
A. H. S. Lucas; W. H. Dudley Le Souef
6 colour plates, black and white illustrations. Colour plates by Ellis Rowan.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Whitcombe & Tombs, 1911.
First Edition.
22.5cm x 14cm. xii, 489 pages,
Ref: 1000
BIRDS OF BRISBANE AND ENVIRONSview full entry
Reference: BIRDS OF BRISBANE AND ENVIRONS (QUEENSLAND MUSEUM BOOKLET NO. 5), by Donald P. Vernon
Illustrations by Mary E. McKenzie and Susan M. Hiley.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Queensland Museum, 1968.
First Edition.
24cm x 18cm. 130 pages, black and white illustrations.
Ref: 1000
McKenzie Mary E view full entry
Reference: see BIRDS OF BRISBANE AND ENVIRONS (QUEENSLAND MUSEUM BOOKLET NO. 5), by Donald P. Vernon
Illustrations by Mary E. McKenzie and Susan M. Hiley.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Queensland Museum, 1968.
First Edition.
24cm x 18cm. 130 pages, black and white illustrations.
Hiley Susan Mview full entry
Reference: see BIRDS OF BRISBANE AND ENVIRONS (QUEENSLAND MUSEUM BOOKLET NO. 5), by Donald P. Vernon
Illustrations by Mary E. McKenzie and Susan M. Hiley.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Queensland Museum, 1968.
First Edition.
24cm x 18cm. 130 pages, black and white illustrations.
Medland Lilianview full entry
Reference: BIRDS OF NEW GUINEA, by Tom Ireland. Illustrations by Lillian Medland. 2 Volumes.
Publishing details: Melb. Georgian House. 1956. Or. qt. morocco and cloth sides. Dustjackets. 230,261pp. Illustrated with 35 plates in colour figuring 347 birds. Folding map of New Guinea.
Ref: 1000
Portraits of the Famous and Infamousview full entry
Reference: Portraits of the Famous and Infamous, Australia; New Zealand and the Pacific 1492-1970, by Rex Nan Kivell and Sydney Spence. "The Portraits compiled in this book are in the Portraits Section of the Rex Nan Kivell Collection of Australiana except those in the possession of Galleries or Museums, or held privately.  The Collection is now in the possession of The National Library, Canberra, Australia." [to be indexed urgently]
Publishing details: Lond. 1970. Elephant folio. Or.cl. Clear wrapper 332pp. col. & b/w. ills.
Governor Davey's Proclamationview full entry
Reference: see Governor Davey's Proclamation: Comics and Social Contract during Colonial War against Aboriginal Australians, by Breixo Harguindey

Publishing details: 2017, Revista Sans Soleil
Crawford Benview full entry
Reference: see DREWEATTS 1759, UK, 21.6.2022, lot 54-57
eg lot 54
Ben Crawford
Tell My Sister, 2022
Oil, Acrylic, Oil Stick, Charcoal on Gesso
Signed on Verso
10 x 15cm (3¾ x 5¾ in.)
About
 
Ben Crawford is a figurative painter. He mostly paints about his life, exploring the story telling possibilities of distorted memories and dreams. Surreal elements transform the landscapes he paints into somewhat mystical realms, bursting with colour and charged with mystery. Figures, architecture and landmarks drawn from his life imbue Ben's paintings with a sense of narrative, anchoring his work tentatively to reality.
 
Education
 
Born in Cork, Ireland, Ben studied painting at The Crawford College of Art & Design and graduated with a first class honours degree in fine art in 2007.
 
Select Exhibitions/Awards
 
The Unwritten Places
Solo show with Boom Gallery Geelong AUS.
February 2022

Darlings
Group show with Curatorial and Co, Sydney AUS. December 2021.

Natura Morta
Group show with Boom Gallery Geelong AUS.
December 2021

Art for Charity Collective
Online art auction.
November 2021

Big Boom Selection of works alongside other Boom artists, Boom Gallery Geelong AUS. October 2021.

An Outlaw for My Love
Solo show with Curatorial and Co, Sydney AUS.
August 2021.

Top 100
Group show with The Auction Collective, London UK.
June 2021.

Bucolia
Group show with Blue Shop Cottage, London UK.
June 2021.

A Space Between,
Online art auction with Art For Charity Collective, UK.
March 2021.

Darlings
Group Show with Curatorial and Co, Sydney AUS. December 2020.

Eighty Eight Miles Per Hour
Solo show with Boom Gallery, Victoria AUS. November 2020

Art For Charity Online Art Auction,
Instagram September 2020
 
Gallery Representation
 
Boom Gallery Australia.

Curatorial and co. Australia.
 
Statement about AOAP Submitted Artwork
 
These paintings are little vignettes from my life: 'Tell my sister' is about my mother and aunt, but by extension it's also about my two daughters and that special bond siblings have. 'History repeating itself'. The house in this painting is referencing a lot of the houses I grew up in. My parents enjoyed renovating, and as a kid these old crumbling structures had a warm association with the idea of home. These buildings were homes to many generations before us and will be for a long time to come, so that idea of layers of history in a place really intrigues me. 'Starting line' is based on a photo from my primary school. It's sports day and the kids are lining up to start a race. The 'starting line' refers to this event, but also to this time in our lives when we're so young and impressionable. 'Short cut' is about walking back to a friend's house after school. It always seemed to take ages and there would always be elaborate 'short cuts' through fields and convents.
 
 
You must not reproduce, duplicate, copy, sell, resell or exploit any works. In doing so, you endanger our relationships with artists, and directly jeopardizes the charitable work we do. Anyone found doing will subject to legal action.
Barker-Mill Peterview full entry
Reference: THE FIRST FLEET. The record of the foundation of Australia from its conception to the settlement at Sydney Cove. From the original documents in the Public Record Office, with extracts from the log-books of H.M.S. Sirius, and an introduction and notes by Owen Rutter. with wood-engravings by Peter Barker-Mill and facsimiles;
Publishing details: [London], Golden Cockerel Press, 1937. Small folio, original gilt-decorated cloth. Slight foxing. Edition limited to 375 numbered copies on handmade paper.
Ref: 1000
Gill S Tview full entry
Reference: GILL, Samuel Thomas (1818-1880) - Nicholas CHEVALIER (1828-1902), and Others.
Victoria Illustrated. Second Series, with Descriptive Letterpress.

Comparable: Australian Book Auctions, 2016 - AUD 1,137.60

Oblong 4to., (6 3/8" x 9 3/4"). Additional engraved title-page with fine vignette of Point Gellibrand, 41 steel engraved plates on heavy stock all with ORIGINAL HAND-COLOR HEIGHTENED WITH GUM ARABIC, interleaved with pages of descriptive text (last plate with vertical crease, some offsetting of plates onto text, one or two pale stains, some light toning). Original maroon morocco, gilt, all edges gilt (extremities a bit scuffed).

Provenance: from the library of Jacques Levy, his sale, Sotheby's, 20th April 2012, lot 335 (Group Lot).

RARE COLORED COPY. The very successful first series, after drawings by Gill, was published in 1857, and this the much rarer second series was designed as a companion volume. As Gill had since moved to Sydney, and was in decline, this second volume included the work of a number of other artists as well, including the celebrated Nicholas Chevalier, who is credited on the title-page vignette, all other plates are unsigned. This is an important historical record of Victorian Victoria in Australia, including detailed images of prominent and important buildings such as Banks, the Melbourne Club, hospitals, schools, the Bridge over the Yarra, and many river views. Gill emigrated to Australia with his family in 1839, by 1852 he had arrived at the Victorian gold diggings, "and in the next twenty years produced drawings of Victoria and New South Wales, many published as lithographs. Evidence of visits to New South Wales in 1856 and 1861 exists in the form of lithographs of scenes in that colony in those years. Twenty-four lithographed sketches by Gill, 'Victoria Gold Diggings and Diggers As They Are', were published in Melbourne and London in 1853; moreover, most of the illustrations in 'The Gold-Finder of Australia; How He Went, How He Fared, And How He Made His Fortune' (London, 1853), said to have been edited but probably actually written by John Sherer, were taken from the book. In the 1850s Gill had a studio in Collins Street, Melbourne, over the premises of James J. Blundell & Co., booksellers and publishers. 'Victoria Illustrated', a book of steel engravings, not engraved by Gill but after his drawings, was published in Australia in 1857, and the colour lithographs in Edward Wilson's 'Rambles at the Antipodes' (London, 1859) are after Gill's drawings. Gill's 'Scenery in and Around Sydney' (1856) appeared in two parts, each including six 'lithographic sketches'. Several editions were published of 'The Australian Sketchbook' by S. T. G., a portfolio of lithographed views, mostly of rural life. In 1869 he was commissioned by the trustees of the Melbourne Public Library to do forty sketches of the Victorian goldfields during 1852-53" (Australian Dictionary of Biography online). Chevalier emigrated from Russia to Australia in 1855, and while illustrating for Punch and exhibiting his watercolours introduced chromolithography Victoria "where it became an important and flourishing art. He exhibited some of his delicately painted water- colours in December 1856 at the exhibition in Melbourne from which sprang the Society of Fine Arts. As an oil painter he was less successful, although his oil, 'The Buffalo Ranges', was selected as the best painting by a resident Victorian in an exhibition sponsored by the government in 1864. It was bought for ?200, the first Australian painting obtained for the new National Gallery of Victoria. He continued to paint in oil and water-colour, often travelling about the countryside. His rather grandiose works in the style of the later Romantics were then popular, but his skilled technique, attention to detail and prolific output did not produce great painting. Although he had opportunities to observe much of interest, his over-conventionalized works lacked the atmosphere and inspiration of some contemporaries; probably his influence and importance as a personality were greater than his ability as an artist" (Australian Dictionary of Biography online).Ferguson, 9924b; Wantrup, 261.[72lib762]
(information from Arader Galleries, New York, NY, United States. Jun 26, 2022, lot 80)
Publishing details: Melbourne: Sands, Kenny & Co., 1862.
Ref: 1000
Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see GILL, Samuel Thomas (1818-1880) - Nicholas CHEVALIER (1828-1902), and Others.
Victoria Illustrated. Second Series, with Descriptive Letterpress.

Comparable: Australian Book Auctions, 2016

Oblong 4to., (6 3/8" x 9 3/4"). Additional engraved title-page with fine vignette of Point Gellibrand, 41 steel engraved plates on heavy stock all with ORIGINAL HAND-COLOR HEIGHTENED WITH GUM ARABIC, interleaved with pages of descriptive text (last plate with vertical crease, some offsetting of plates onto text, one or two pale stains, some light toning). Original maroon morocco, gilt, all edges gilt (extremities a bit scuffed).

Provenance: from the library of Jacques Levy, his sale, Sotheby's, 20th April 2012, lot 335 (Group Lot).

RARE COLORED COPY. The very successful first series, after drawings by Gill, was published in 1857, and this the much rarer second series was designed as a companion volume. As Gill had since moved to Sydney, and was in decline, this second volume included the work of a number of other artists as well, including the celebrated Nicholas Chevalier, who is credited on the title-page vignette, all other plates are unsigned. This is an important historical record of Victorian Victoria in Australia, including detailed images of prominent and important buildings such as Banks, the Melbourne Club, hospitals, schools, the Bridge over the Yarra, and many river views. Gill emigrated to Australia with his family in 1839, by 1852 he had arrived at the Victorian gold diggings, "and in the next twenty years produced drawings of Victoria and New South Wales, many published as lithographs. Evidence of visits to New South Wales in 1856 and 1861 exists in the form of lithographs of scenes in that colony in those years. Twenty-four lithographed sketches by Gill, 'Victoria Gold Diggings and Diggers As They Are', were published in Melbourne and London in 1853; moreover, most of the illustrations in 'The Gold-Finder of Australia; How He Went, How He Fared, And How He Made His Fortune' (London, 1853), said to have been edited but probably actually written by John Sherer, were taken from the book. In the 1850s Gill had a studio in Collins Street, Melbourne, over the premises of James J. Blundell & Co., booksellers and publishers. 'Victoria Illustrated', a book of steel engravings, not engraved by Gill but after his drawings, was published in Australia in 1857, and the colour lithographs in Edward Wilson's 'Rambles at the Antipodes' (London, 1859) are after Gill's drawings. Gill's 'Scenery in and Around Sydney' (1856) appeared in two parts, each including six 'lithographic sketches'. Several editions were published of 'The Australian Sketchbook' by S. T. G., a portfolio of lithographed views, mostly of rural life. In 1869 he was commissioned by the trustees of the Melbourne Public Library to do forty sketches of the Victorian goldfields during 1852-53" (Australian Dictionary of Biography online). Chevalier emigrated from Russia to Australia in 1855, and while illustrating for Punch and exhibiting his watercolours introduced chromolithography Victoria "where it became an important and flourishing art. He exhibited some of his delicately painted water- colours in December 1856 at the exhibition in Melbourne from which sprang the Society of Fine Arts. As an oil painter he was less successful, although his oil, 'The Buffalo Ranges', was selected as the best painting by a resident Victorian in an exhibition sponsored by the government in 1864. It was bought for ?200, the first Australian painting obtained for the new National Gallery of Victoria. He continued to paint in oil and water-colour, often travelling about the countryside. His rather grandiose works in the style of the later Romantics were then popular, but his skilled technique, attention to detail and prolific output did not produce great painting. Although he had opportunities to observe much of interest, his over-conventionalized works lacked the atmosphere and inspiration of some contemporaries; probably his influence and importance as a personality were greater than his ability as an artist" (Australian Dictionary of Biography online).Ferguson, 9924b; Wantrup, 261.[72lib762]
(information from Arader Galleries, New York, NY, United States. Jun 26, 2022, lot 80)
Publishing details: Melbourne: Sands, Kenny & Co., 1862.
Kelly John view full entry
Reference: John Kelly: The Lazarus Series will open on Monday 20 June, 2022, at 30 Queen Street, Woollahra. 
During the past two and a half decades, John Kelly has developed a distinguished reputation in Australia and internationally for his work which combines his unique intellect and humour.  Featuring 16 new works, the present exhibition includes major paintings and sculptures that include the most prominent motifs in his oeuvre.  In the artist's words, it marks the moment 'the kangaroo met the cow – a marriage of old ideas with new ideas and everything in-between.'
Born from adversity, John Kelly: The Lazarus Series shows Kelly's renowned sense of humour and irreverent 'culture-jamming' are as fierce as ever in his practice.  It will be open to the public Monday-Friday, 10 am – 5 pm, 20 June – 8 July 2022 at 30 Queen Street, Woollahra.
To enquire about the exhibition, please contact our specialists below.
Publishing details: Smith & Singer, 2022, online catalogue
Ref: 1000
Whiteley Brettview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald front page article 20.6.2022 re Wendy Whiteley giftingvworks to AGNSW
Publishing details: SMH, 20.6.22, page 1 and page 4 [a copy inserted in Brett Whiteley - A Sensual Line 1957-67, by Kathy Sutherland]
Lanceley Colinview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald article 20.6.2022 on upcoming exhibition at National Art School (interview with Kay Lanceley)
Publishing details: SMH, 20.6.22, page 14 [a copy inderted in Colin Lanceley by Robert Hughes, 1987]
Lahey Vidaview full entry
Reference: see Menzies auction 29 June, 2022, lot 6:
VIDA LAHEY
Brisbane From South Bank c1930

oil on plywood
24.5 x 29.5 cm

signed lower right: V. LAHEY.
Provenance:
Collection of Dr V.N.B. Willis, Queensland
Gift from the above to Mrs Conde, Queensland
Thence by descent, private collection, Queensland
Private collection, Queensland
Menzies, Sydney, 23 September 2014, lot 89
Collection of Geoffrey Villiers Lahey, Melbourne
While the later years of Vida Lahey’s career were characterized by still lifes and flower studies, her impetus throughout the 1920s and 30s was landscape painting. As a Queenslander, her paintings of Brisbane are undoubtedly among her most coveted, as exemplified by the recent auction result for of Fig.1. Waterfronts and architecture are recurrent elements in her landscapes, both of which we see skillfully executed here. The composition of Brisbane from South Bank is like that of her 1928 Italian landscapes, where architecture is set against a high-horizon line in morning or afternoon light.1 Lahey returned to Brisbane in 1929, and this work comes from a group of her city landscapes from 1930-31 which depict buildings with a European ambience.
The key component of Lahey’s artistic practice is undoubtedly her use of colour. The forms, patterns and space within her paintings derive chiefly from colour, so that if we were to view a desaturated reproduction, it would become difficult to read the composition. As author Bettina MacAulay explains, ‘It is colour that is the dictionary and grammar of her ‘language of art,’ the visual lexicon to her artistic world.’2 This consummate use of colour is seen in the brilliant aqua and deep green of the river that immediately draw the viewer into the painting. Poet Martin Haley described Lahey’s paintings aptly as ‘songs of colour.’3
Lahey’s parents were unusual in their day in allowing their daughters to follow professional careers of their choosing. Accordingly, Lahey was among the first wave of Queensland artists who superseded the amateur lady artists of the nineteenth century, instead seeing themselves as professionals, seeking to earn a living from practicing art. As an exhibiting painter, art educator and advocate, Lahey became one of the most influential figures in the history of art in Queensland.
Art education was central to Lahey’s life, beginning primarily with her own training. Lahey was tutored in drawing and painting at Brisbane’s Technical College under Godfrey Rivers (1858-1925), before studying at the preeminent National Gallery School in Melbourne in 1905 and 1909, under Frederick McCubbin (1855-1917) and Bernard Hall (1859-1935).4 Lahey also took private lessons in watercolour from Walter Withers (1854-1914). After three years of war work in London during World War One, Lahey travelled to broaden her artistic and cultural horizons, and joined Ethel Carrick’s (1872-1952) still life classes in Paris and absorbed aspects of Modernism from New Zealand artist Frances Hodgkins (1869-1947) in Cornwall.5
Upon returning to Queensland, the deficiencies in art education and the availability of art publications appeared glaringly obvious. Lahey immediately sought to change this by giving lectures and arguing publicly for art to be an integral part of life in Queensland. Her greatest initiatives include the establishment of the Queensland Art Fund and the Queensland Art Library, which offered free access to Australian and international art to the then ‘culturally and artistically deprived citizens of Brisbane’.6 After World War Two Lahey began teaching children’s art classes at Queensland Art Gallery – an initiative still thriving today at QAGOMA’s Children’s Art Centre. Her legacy as an art educator and advocate in early twentieth century Queensland is unparalleled.
Unsurprisingly, with this persistent advocacy work, her own artistic practice suffered; between 1921 and 1936, she was prolific with twenty three solo exhibitions (including shows in Paris, London, and the United States) but from 1946 to 1963 she had just eleven solo exhibitions, only two of which were outside Queensland. We can only speculate on the artistic heights she would have reached had she not been distracted by her cause. Certainly, her mid-career works, including the present lot, are equal in quality to those being painted by the highly praised artists from the dominant Melbourne-Sydney axis.
FOOTNOTES
1. MacAulay, B., Songs of Colour: The Art of Vida Lahey, Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, 1989, p.59
2. Ibid., p.33
3. Haley, M., ‘In Memoriam’, The Catholic Leader, 1968; reproduced in Ibid., p.14
4. Ibid., p.15
5. Ibid., p.19
6. Ibid., p.24
Asta Cameron
Wallace Anneview full entry
Reference: see Menzies auction 29 June, 2022,
LOT 86
ANNE WALLACE
Sour The Boiling Honey 1991

oil on canvas (triptych)
200.0 x 325.5 cm (overall); (i) 200.0 x 100.0 cm; (ii) 200.0 x 129.5 cm; (iii) 200.0 x 99.0 cm

(i) signed and inscribed verso: ANNE WALLACE/ (LEFT PANEL)
(ii) signed and dated verso: ANNE WALLACE/ NOVEMBER 1991
(iii) signed and inscribed verso: ANNE WALLACE/ (RIGHT PANEL)
Provenance:
Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney
Collection of Louis Nowra and Mandy Sayer, Sydney
Literature:
Butler, R., 'Anne Wallace's Confessions,' Art & Australia, Autumn 1995, vol.32, no.3, p.392 (illus. p.393)
Brown, G., Plagne, F. & Van Ooyen, V., Anne Wallace: Strange Ways, Queensland University of Technology Art Museum, Brisbane, 2019 (illus. pp.38-39)
Moore, T., 'Brisbane Painter Anne Wallace's Strange Ways in their Final Days,' Brisbane Times, Brisbane, 20 February 2020 (illus.)
Sawyer, H., 'Some Notes on Anne Wallace's "Strange Ways",' Art Monthly Australia, Winter 2020, p.68 (illus. p.70)
Exhibited:
Inaugural Exhibition, Darren Knight Gallery DKW, Melbourne, 12 September - 4 October 1992
Private Rooms: 10 Years of Painting by Anne Wallace, Brisbane City Gallery, Brisbane, 28 July - 28 September 2000
Anne Wallace: Strange Ways, Queensland University of Technology Art Museum, Brisbane, 9 November 2019 - 23 February 2020; Art Gallery of Ballarat, Victoria, 28 March - 14 June 2020; Samstag Museum of Art, Adelaide, 16 October - 28 November 2020
The two-metre high, three-metre-wide triptych, Sour the Boiling Honey 1991, is the work that introduced Anne Wallace to the Australian art scene. Completed at the age of just twenty-one, the work is an ambitious, early example of Wallace’s figurative painting and singular commitment to contemporary realism.
‘I wanted to create something so big in a way I couldn't back down from it.’1
With three decades of practice to her credit, Wallace has been securing her name as a notable figure in Australia’s contemporary art world and has earned a reputation as one of Queensland’s ‘quintessential’ artists.2 Her work features in the collections of major Australian galleries, including the National Gallery of Victoria and the National Gallery of Australia as well as the Macquarie Bank Collection. In addition to her recent touring retrospective Strange Ways (2019-20), Wallace has also been included in prominent exhibitions such as Know My Name — Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now (2020), National Gallery of Australia, with her work, She Is (2001), a painting noted in several publications.3
First displayed at Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney 1992, Sour the Boiling Honey had rarely been seen until Wallace’s retrospective Strange Ways, where it enjoyed centre-stage as one of the exhibition’s highlights.
The work depicts groupings of adolescent boys and girls by the sea – inspired by Dylan Thomas’ 1934 poem I See the Boys of Summer. In sharp contrast to the sparsely dressed and nude figures enjoying each other’s company is the central androgynous figure, who is almost fully clothed and facing the viewer. This figure is thought to be Wallace, herself. The tension and isolation between the lone figure and the beach goers is palatable – they seem to belong to different worlds.
Sour the Boiling Honey laid the foundation for Wallace’s unique practice. In it, we can see elements that have since gone on to define her oeuvre: a strong reference to poetry and contemporary, popular source material, an overarching sense of tension, and representational images which curiously defy simple narrative readings.
The basis of my practice is about using clear representational imagery…I’m using that in a way that is deliberately not supplying straightforward meaning to create an experience that is part of life.4
Wallace enjoys the status of one of Australia’s great figurative painters alongside Jeffrey Smart (1921-2013).5 It is a style that is often associated with antiquated, unmodern art forms. And yet, artists like these demonstrate that style can not only be contemporary, but that it is also timeless.
 
FOOTNOTES
1. Anne Wallace, quoted in Moore, T., ‘Brisbane Painter Anne Wallace’s Strange Ways in their Final Days’, Brisbane Times, 20 February 2020
2. Llewellyn, J., ‘Anne Wallace: Real and Unreal’, The Adelaide Review, issue 448, 28 September 2020
3. McDonald, J., ‘A Spectacle Worth Seeing: Celebrating the Vitality of Women Artists’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 7 January 2022; Higgie, J., ‘A New Kind of History: `Know My Name’’, The Monthly, April 2022; Gaskin, S., ‘National Gallery of Australia Launches `40:40:20; Gender Equity Plan’’, Ocula Magazine, 8 March 2022
4. Anne Wallace, quoted in Llewellyn, op. cit.
5. Wallace, A., ‘From the Side of the Road – Jeffrey Smart and Painting’ in Hart, D., and Edwards, R., Jeffrey Smart, edited by Armstrong, C., National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 2021
Alice Evatt
Boyd Danielview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, interview with Daniel Boyd and his selection of art from the Gallery, p16-25 and article by Isobel Parker Philip and Erin Pink p35-39
de Souza Kegview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, article by June Miskell
Boyd Danielview full entry
Reference: Daniel Boyd - Treasure Island
Daniel Boyd (b 1982) is one of Australia’s most acclaimed young artists. His practice is internationally recognised for its manifold engagement with the colonial history of the Australia–Great Ocean (Pacific) region. Drawing upon intermingled discourses of science, religion and aesthetics, Boyd’s work reveals the complexities through which political, cultural and personal memory is composed. With both Aboriginal and ni-Vanuatu heritage, Boyd’s work traces this cultural and visual ancestry in relation to the broader history of Western art.
Working with an idiosyncratic painting technique that partially obscures the composition, Boyd refigures archival imagery, art historical references and his family photographs, forcing us to contend with histories that have been hidden from view. His recent work draws on Gestalt theory, the allegory of Plato’s cave, dark matter and the Necker cube.
Daniel Boyd: Treasure Island unpacks the ways Boyd holds a lens to colonial history, explores multiplicity within narratives, and interrogates blackness as a form of First Nations’ resistance. It provides a thoughtful and thought-provoking response to the current moment where critical dialogues on ideas of community, connectivity and cultural repatriation carry particular urgency.
With new writing by the exhibition curators and commissioned First Nations authors, the book offers both critical insight into Daniel Boyd’s practice as well as creative and experimental responses to his work.
Boyd has exhibited widely in Australia and recognised internationally with his Up in smoke tour exhibition at the Natural History Museum, London in 2011 (following his artist-in-residence there); inclusion in the 56th Venice Biennale All The World’s Futures exhibition in 2015; and solo exhibition Treasure Island at the Kukje Gallery, Seoul, South Korea in 2021.
Daniel Boyd: Treasure Island is published in conjunction with the artist’s first major exhibition to be held in an Australian public institution. The book will feature over 100 works from across his nearly two-decade career and includes new work and commissioned spatial interventions.
Edited by Isobel Parker Philip and Erin Vink with essays by Daniel Browning, Léuli Eshrāghi, Isobel Parker Philip, Michael Mossman, Nathan ‘mudyi’ Sentance and Erin Vink, poems by Jazz Money and Ellen van Neerven.
Publishing details: AGNSW, 2022, hc 240pp
Ref: 1000
Atem Atongview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, article by Tony Magnusson p45-7
Ramsay Hugh Lady in Blue restorationview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, article by Denise Mimmocchi p49-52
Publishing details: a copy inserted in Hugh Ramsay by Deborah Hart
Whiteley Brett ceramicsview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, article by Leanne Santoro p54-5
Ref: 145
Rodway Florence portrait of Stella Rodwayview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, article by Leanne Santoro p66-7
Ref: 145
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see Look - AGNSW Members magazine, June - July, 2022, article by Anabel Dean p70-3
Publishing details: a copy inserted in Grace Cossington Smith by Bruce James
White Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see artist’s website at https://www.anthonywhite.art
BIOGRAPHY

Anthony White’s artwork has been exhibited in Australia, Europe, and Asia. He has received support through cultural agencies such as The Trust Company Australia, The National Association for the Visual Arts,(NAVA) and The Copyright Agency Limited (CAL). He has also received critical acclaim by recognition in the form of art prizes and reviews most notably The Marten Bequest Travelling Scholarship (2007) The Creative Art Fellowship at The National Library of Australia (2020) and acknowledgements in The Australia Financial Review, Art Collector Magazine Australia and also Elle Décor US edition

Anthony White’s artistic work revolves around the notion of reclaiming the act of dissent through the production of cultural objects. His research is situated at the intersection of several fields in the social space including, politics, human rights, and postcolonialism. His practice is centered around concepts of design and its history as a form of social and political expression. He works with painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking. Through this practice, he tackles relevant questions to our time, to encourage emancipation and new ways of thinking.

  In 2020 White was the recipient of The Creative Arts Fellowship at the National Library of Australia. This fellowship is to research the library’s archive material related to the Australian artist Sir Sidney Nolan (1917-1992) The research will inform a new body of work examining sovereign power, dissent, and the efficacity of civil disobedience. During his career White has been the recipient of The Marten Bequest Travelling Scholarship to the United States (2007), The Vermont Studio Centre Residency U.S.A. (2008), The National Art School Paris Studio Award at La Cite Internationale Des Arts (2009), The Leipzig International Art Programme Residency, Germany (2010) and the International Painting Symposium at The Mark Rothko Centre in Latvia during (2017) 

 The work that he has produced as a result of these residencies has led to critical recognition in Australia’s national prizes including from the Churchie Emerging Art Award (2005, 2007) and The Paddington Art Prize (2005,2016,2017), and The Glover Prize (2018) and (2021) 
White has shown throughout Europe Australia, Asia, and the UK. His work has been collected by public institutions such as The Mark Rothko Art Center in Latvia and The Tweed Heads Regional Gallery in Australia.
The artwork Flight (After Exodus) 2015 a painting informed by themes of historical and contemporary developments in migration was shortlisted in The Royal Academy’s annual Summer Exhibition during 2015


Campbell Cressidaview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article by Elizabeth Fortescue in upcoming exhibition at NGA, p10-15
Ref: 145
Newton Helmutview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article by Margot Riley p38-45
Ref: 145
Smith’s Weeklyview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7.
Ref: 145
Smith’s Weeklyview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to in this article.
Ref: 145
Endean Johnview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
Begg Bruceview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
Dixon Lesview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
Hallett Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
Morrison Joanview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
White Unkview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
cartooningview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of NSW, Winter 2022, article ‘The life and death of Smith’s Weekly’, by Robert Phiddian. p74-7. The cartoonist is referred to and illustrated in this article.
Grand Vistasview full entry
Reference: Grand Vistas - panoramas from the collection, introduction by Richard Neville. Exhibition at SLNSW, (the inaugural exhibition of the State Library’s new Drawings, Watercolours and Prints Gallery. 2022)
Publishing details: SLNSW, 2022, 24pp
Ref: 1
Janssen Jacobview full entry
Reference: see Grand Vistas - panoramas from the collection, introduction by Richard Neville. Exhibition at SLNSW, (the inaugural exhibition of the State Library’s new Drawings, Watercolours and Prints Gallery. 2022)
Publishing details: SLNSW, 2022, 24pp
Rae Johnview full entry
Reference: see Grand Vistas - panoramas from the collection, introduction by Richard Neville. Exhibition at SLNSW, (the inaugural exhibition of the State Library’s new Drawings, Watercolours and Prints Gallery. 2022)
Publishing details: SLNSW, 2022, 24pp
Close Edward Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Grand Vistas - panoramas from the collection, introduction by Richard Neville. Exhibition at SLNSW, (the inaugural exhibition of the State Library’s new Drawings, Watercolours and Prints Gallery. 2022)
Publishing details: SLNSW, 2022, 24pp
Feint Adrian bookplatesview full entry
Reference: see EWBANK'S auction, 23 Jun 2022 Woking, Surrey, UK, lot 2106:
Adrian Feint (Australian 1894-1971). 3 bookplates, one for Richard Smart, depicting a sailing ship. Wood engraving, signed lower right. 8 x 7cm, one for Patrick White, classical maidens by a temple, initialled in the plate 10 x 8.5cm and another for Elizabeth Watson Diamond depicting leaves/pages falling from a tree, signed in the plate. 12 x 9.5cm. Plus one created for Elizabeth Diamond by an unknown artist (M). 8 x 7cm. (4). 
Catalogue notes; The collection of Ernest Pearce (1930-2012) a dedicated art collector and connoisseur of the bookplate.
His files of letters reveal that he was in regular correspondence with many well-known artists and fellow collectors from the 1950s onwards, sharing with them his in-depth knowledge and often exchanging rare prints and other works of art. Of particular note is his collection of works by the Romanticist artist Samuel Palmer many of which were purchased from Carlos Peacock, author of 'Samuel Palmer, The Shoreham Years' who himself acquired a number from AH Palmer, Samuel's son. Also works by well-known 20thcentury artists, some, unusually, accompanied by personal notes or cards. Finally, of course, his extensive collection of bookplates including British and Continental artists and some illustrious libraries.
Ewbank's is delighted to have this opportunity to bring Ernest Pearce's lifelong collection to the market. 
Provenance: The family of Ernest Pearce.

Hansen Peter decoratorview full entry
Reference: see VICKI SHUTTLEWORTH
In search of ‘Hansen, decorator’: finding Peter Hansen.
Publishing details: The La Trobe Journal No 102 September 2018
Potage Michaelview full entry
Reference: FauveParis auction, Paris, France,2.7.22, lot 141: Michel Potage (1949-2020)
Laughter in the desert - Aborigines series 1982 Acrylic and mixed media on cardboard panel signed, titled and dated on the back 15,5 x 22,5 cm "To paint is to face the impossible." Michel Potage went to Australia in 1978, and his ambition was to represent "the aboriginal dream".
Condition report : Framed (frame 31,5 x 39 cm)
Wetzel Fview full entry
Reference: see Leski Auction, 26 June, 2022, lot 1263: F. WETZEL, (Australia, 19th Century),
Western Port Bay, 1892,
oil on board,
signed lower left, titled at lower centre,
46 x 86cm, framed 84 x 104cm overall.

Anderson Theoview full entry
Reference: see see Leski Auction, 26 June, 2022, lot 1266:
THEO ANDERSON (working in Australia 1900-1915),
(river scene landscape),
oil on board,
signed lower right "Theo Anderson",
Whitelaw's framing label verso,
30 x 40cm, 38 x 47cm overall
Watkins Paulview full entry
Reference: A Portrait of the City of Blue Mountains, by Paul Watkins
Publishing details: Bathurst, N.S.W. : Robert Brown & Associates, c1988 
64 p. : chiefly ill.
Ref: 1000
Schmidt Basilview full entry
Reference: see Elder Fine Art auction see Elder Fine Art auction, 10 July, 2022,
Lot 132
LIEUTENANT BASIL HENRY SCHMIDT (1909-1987)
"The 148th Australian General Transport Company AIF Dance Band 1944"
Pen and Watercolour
30.5x39cm
Signed Lower Left Dated 1944, Titled Lower Right.
=Condition: No foxing, some minor discolouration. Some tears to paper near margins in various spots, with centre crease line.
Frame Size: 43x52cm
Estimate: $2,500-3,500
Prov: Private Collection, Adelaide
Note: This ink and watercolour painting depicting the AIF 148th Australian General Transport Company Dance Band, which is signed by all the band members and dated 17/4/1944, is a wonderful historical record of some enjoyment afforded the personnel who were a vital supply link in the Oceania region during World War 2.
A photograph in the collection of the Australian War Memorial and also dated 17/4/1944 by official war photographer Gordon Herbert Short, entitled “Rest Day” shows some band members with Australian Army Medical Women’s Service Members, participating in a rehearsal or impromptu performance. Photograph and more information Verso.
Gordon Herbert Shortview full entry
Reference: see Elder Fine Art auction, 10 July, 2022,
Lot 132
LIEUTENANT BASIL HENRY SCHMIDT (1909-1987)
"The 148th Australian General Transport Company AIF Dance Band 1944"
Pen and Watercolour
30.5x39cm
Signed Lower Left Dated 1944, Titled Lower Right.
=Condition: No foxing, some minor discolouration. Some tears to paper near margins in various spots, with centre crease line.
Frame Size: 43x52cm
Estimate: $2,500-3,500
Prov: Private Collection, Adelaide
Note: This ink and watercolour painting depicting the AIF 148th Australian General Transport Company Dance Band, which is signed by all the band members and dated 17/4/1944, is a wonderful historical record of some enjoyment afforded the personnel who were a vital supply link in the Oceania region during World War 2.
A photograph in the collection of the Australian War Memorial and also dated 17/4/1944 by official war photographer Gordon Herbert Short, entitled “Rest Day” shows some band members with Australian Army Medical Women’s Service Members, participating in a rehearsal or impromptu performance. Photograph and more information Verso.
Wilkie Leslieview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
Leslie Wilkie’s artist’s palette 1908, Cedar, width 495 mm, height 330 mm.
An artist’s palette is a thin, flat board that has a hole for the thumb at one end and is used by the painter to mix colours during painting. This cedar example has the artist’s name and date 1908 incised on the reverse.
Leslie Andrew Alexander Wilkie (1878–1936) was born in Melbourne where he attended the National Gallery schools 1896–1901 followed by two years study in Britain and Europe.
On his return he worked for the Age as an art critic and later for both the Argus and the Australasian. Wilkie was described as ‘a conscientious and careful painter of portraits, he painted in the tradition of the Royal Scottish Academy’ though he also painted still life and landscapes.
The artist’s name and date 1908 are incised on the reverse when he was acting master of drawing at the NGV (1907–1908) while Frederick McCubbin was overseas.
Wilkie was also a teacher, illustrator and curator. During WWI he painted banners for the Australian Red Cross.
In 1926 he was appointed curator (and later director) of the National Art Gallery of South Australia, now the Art Gallery of South Australia. In 1934 he joined an Adelaide anthropological expedition to Central Australia and painted portraits of Aborigines near Cooper Creek which were later exhibited in AGSA.
He is represented in numerous state and regional galleries including NLA and AWM.

Fischer E silversmithview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
Silver Cup by E Fischer, Geelong presented by David Munro
Inscription: ‘Awarded to W.G. Williams for best model of Automatic Gate for Farm or Station purposes. The Gift of David Munro Melbourne, Member of the Council of the National Agricultural Society.’ Edward Fischer, Geelong, c 1879 Sterling silver, height 18.4 cm, diam of base 8.8 cm, diam of gilded bowl 8.5 cm, weight 221.3g.
David Munro (1844–1898), engineer, speculator, and contractor, was born in Kirkintilloch, Dunbartonshire, Scotland, son of a blacksmith. The family and some close relatives migrated to Victoria in 1854 on the Tudor.
After working for his father for some years, he started his own engineering business. His trademark was a phoenix arising from the flames and his motto Resurgum. In the construction and railway boom of the 1870s and 1880s David Munro and Co. was one of the colony’s biggest employers of labour. Two of his best works still carry traffic across the Yarra: Queen’s Bridge built on the site of the old Falls bridge for £45,000 and opened in April 1890 and the new Princes Bridge built in 1888 for £137,000.
Munro sold every type of sawmilling, threshing and mining equipment, either for cash or on his new ‘Purchasing Lease System.’
His patented or improved machines were used by selectors and included a post-boring machine, the ‘Victory Self-adjusting Windmill’ and portable engines using ‘the colonial fire-box, the steam jacketed cylinder, the variable expansion gear, the sliding crank shaft bracket, the three-way force – pumps’.
This cup was presented at the Intercolonial Juvenile Industrial Exhibition, Melbourne, 1879/1880 in the section Class 1- Machinery of every description as follows: ‘W.G. Williams, Melbourne, model of automatic gate for farm, silver medal and silver cup, value £5,5s, the gift of Mr D Munro.’
Like many capitalists Munro was harsh on his employees and in the temporary slump of 1887 cut their wages from 7s. to 6s. 6d. a day. Unmoved by protests he told the men that their union leaders were ‘vermin to be squelched’.
Kangaroo Art view full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
BETA Airship by Kangaroo Art.
Crested china miniature BETA airship with the hand coloured 1912 Commonwealth Australian Coat of Arms, marked on base: ’Kangaroo” Art, China, Valentine & Sons Ltd, Melbourne. Length 8 cm, width 4 cm, height 6 cm.
The BETA was a pre-WWI British non-rigid airship constructed by the Army Balloon Factory in 1910 with a rubberized fabric skin and was prone to accidents. It was followed by BETA II, with a new design ‘envelope’ of goldbeaters skin (processed animal gut skin gut membrane), with four bladed propellers and took part in 1912 manoeuvres.
It was later used by the Royal Naval Air as HMA 17. With a Clerget engine and a crew of three, the airship had a maximum speed of 35 mph, could reach an altitude of 400 feet and had an endurance of five hours.
After time doing air reconnaissance over enemy
lines during WWI, she escorted ships across the English Channel and returned to Britain where she was used for preliminary training for all airship pilots. The BETA was retired in 1916.
Valentine & Sons Ltd Melbourne was originally known as a postcard company, founded in Dundee, Scotland in 1850.
It is very likely that the Melbourne company commissioned Willow Art of Longton, Staffordshire to produce these items, with hand-coloured transfer prints, to be sold under the Valentine name.
Valentine & Sons Ltd, Melbourneview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
BETA Airship by Kangaroo Art.
Crested china miniature BETA airship with the hand coloured 1912 Commonwealth Australian Coat of Arms, marked on base: ’Kangaroo” Art, China, Valentine & Sons Ltd, Melbourne. Length 8 cm, width 4 cm, height 6 cm.
The BETA was a pre-WWI British non-rigid airship constructed by the Army Balloon Factory in 1910 with a rubberized fabric skin and was prone to accidents. It was followed by BETA II, with a new design ‘envelope’ of goldbeaters skin (processed animal gut skin gut membrane), with four bladed propellers and took part in 1912 manoeuvres.
It was later used by the Royal Naval Air as HMA 17. With a Clerget engine and a crew of three, the airship had a maximum speed of 35 mph, could reach an altitude of 400 feet and had an endurance of five hours.
After time doing air reconnaissance over enemy
lines during WWI, she escorted ships across the English Channel and returned to Britain where she was used for preliminary training for all airship pilots. The BETA was retired in 1916.
Valentine & Sons Ltd Melbourne was originally known as a postcard company, founded in Dundee, Scotland in 1850.
It is very likely that the Melbourne company commissioned Willow Art of Longton, Staffordshire to produce these items, with hand-coloured transfer prints, to be sold under the Valentine name.
Plate Margoview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
Pottery bowl hand painted with flannel flowers, signed Margo Plate. Base marked Margo’s Pottery 26. Diameter 18 cm.
Hettie Margaret (Margo) Lewers nee Plate (1908– 1978) was born in Perth, the daughter of German born grazier-artist Adolf Plate who died soon after the family returned to Sydney in 1914. She met
her husband
Gerald Lewers (1905-1962) at
Antonio Dattilo-Rubbo’s evening art-classes in the
late 1920s and they married in 1932. In 1934 they
went overseas and enrolled at the Central School
of Arts and Crafts, London. Gerald studied under
John Skeaping and Margo worked at textile design,
painting and drawing with John Farleigh.
On their return to Sydney in 1935, Margo set up her own studio printing textiles and made hand painted pottery; this piece probably dates from that period. Until 1939 she operated the Notanda Gallery, a fashionable interior decorating shop in Rowe Street.
Her brother painter Carl Plate r
gallery in 1940, where he exhibited British and
Australian modern art, and sold art books and
posters.
e-established the

Margo Lewers' career continued to develop and she became one of the most influential figures in the Sydney art scene.

Lewers’ house in Emu Plains became a popular meeting place for the close modernist arts circle in NSW much like the Reeds’ Heide in Victoria. When Margo died in 1978 her daughters Darani and Tanya gave the family home to Penrith City Council on behalf of the local community as a heritage site and arts centre. Largely funded from the family’s construction, concrete and quarry business, Farley and Lewers, it was opened as The Lewers Bequest & Penrith Regional Gallery in 1981.
Plate Carlview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
Pottery bowl hand painted with flannel flowers, signed Margo Plate. Base marked Margo’s Pottery 26. Diameter 18 cm.
Hettie Margaret (Margo) Lewers nee Plate (1908– 1978) was born in Perth, the daughter of German born grazier-artist Adolf Plate who died soon after the family returned to Sydney in 1914. She met
her husband
Gerald Lewers (1905-1962) at
Antonio Dattilo-Rubbo’s evening art-classes in the
late 1920s and they married in 1932. In 1934 they
went overseas and enrolled at the Central School
of Arts and Crafts, London. Gerald studied under
John Skeaping and Margo worked at textile design,
painting and drawing with John Farleigh.
On their return to Sydney in 1935, Margo set up her own studio printing textiles and made hand painted pottery; this piece probably dates from that period. Until 1939 she operated the Notanda Gallery, a fashionable interior decorating shop in Rowe Street.
Her brother painter Carl Plate r
gallery in 1940, where he exhibited British and
Australian modern art, and sold art books and
posters.
e-established the

Margo Lewers' career continued to develop and she became one of the most influential figures in the Sydney art scene.

Lewers’ house in Emu Plains became a popular meeting place for the close modernist arts circle in NSW much like the Reeds’ Heide in Victoria. When Margo died in 1978 her daughters Darani and Tanya gave the family home to Penrith City Council on behalf of the local community as a heritage site and arts centre. Largely funded from the family’s construction, concrete and quarry business, Farley and Lewers, it was opened as The Lewers Bequest & Penrith Regional Gallery in 1981.
Lewers Margoview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
Pottery bowl hand painted with flannel flowers, signed Margo Plate. Base marked Margo’s Pottery 26. Diameter 18 cm.
Hettie Margaret (Margo) Lewers nee Plate (1908– 1978) was born in Perth, the daughter of German born grazier-artist Adolf Plate who died soon after the family returned to Sydney in 1914. She met
her husband
Gerald Lewers (1905-1962) at
Antonio Dattilo-Rubbo’s evening art-classes in the
late 1920s and they married in 1932. In 1934 they
went overseas and enrolled at the Central School
of Arts and Crafts, London. Gerald studied under
John Skeaping and Margo worked at textile design,
painting and drawing with John Farleigh.
On their return to Sydney in 1935, Margo set up her own studio printing textiles and made hand painted pottery; this piece probably dates from that period. Until 1939 she operated the Notanda Gallery, a fashionable interior decorating shop in Rowe Street.
Her brother painter Carl Plate r
gallery in 1940, where he exhibited British and
Australian modern art, and sold art books and
posters.
e-established the

Margo Lewers' career continued to develop and she became one of the most influential figures in the Sydney art scene.

Lewers’ house in Emu Plains became a popular meeting place for the close modernist arts circle in NSW much like the Reeds’ Heide in Victoria. When Margo died in 1978 her daughters Darani and Tanya gave the family home to Penrith City Council on behalf of the local community as a heritage site and arts centre. Largely funded from the family’s construction, concrete and quarry business, Farley and Lewers, it was opened as The Lewers Bequest & Penrith Regional Gallery in 1981.
Taylor & Sharp jewellers Tasmaniaview full entry
Reference: see 17th Australiana Virtual Show and Tell Report MAY/JUNE 2022, on line: https://www.australiana.org.au/news
Taylor & Sharp Tasmania snake or tendril, silver spoon, Engraved ‘Tasmania’, maker’s mark T & S, Stg Silver, length 12.5 cm
Taylor and Sharp were a substantial jewellery
manufacturing, watchmaking and engraving
business based in Hobart from 1894 into the
1950s. Their stock included ‘a choice assortment of
diamond goods, modern designs in Art jewellery,
Sterling Silverware, Novelties and the latest Melba
bracelet’ (Advertisement in Hobart Mercury in
January 1903).
Perhaps the addition of the snake was as a
souvenir of a medical conference held in Tasmania
or possibly a conference for herpetologists?
There was a medical conference held in Hobart in
February 1902 which discussed the formation of
the Australian Medical Association.
From the description supplied by the owner, ‘the
snake is held in place by its shape but is not
actually attached and is slightly mobile’ may suggest that the snake is ‘an addition’ to a standard stock spoon sold by Taylor and Sharp. Perhaps the addition of the snake was as a
souvenir of a medical conference held in Tasmania
or possibly a conference for herpetologists?
There was a medical conference held in Hobart... The Ancient Greeks regarded snakes as sacred and used them in healing rituals to honour Asclepius, as snake venom was thought to be remedial and their skin-shedding was viewed as a symbol of rebirth and renewal. It is a traditional symbol of medicine used by many medical organisations around the world.
Barak Williamview full entry
Reference: William Barak - Remembering. By Judith Ryan, Carol Cooper, Joy Murphy-Wandin. [Remembering Barak celebrates the memory of a remarkable Aboriginal leader, William Barak, Yarra Yarra chief (1824 - 1903), a man whose troubled but dignified life bridged two very disparate cultures and whose art has not only survived but strengthened over this past century, continuing to communicate something both unique and significant about Aboriginal life.]

Publishing details: Melbourne, National Gallery of Victoria, 2003, 64 pages, paperback, soft cover,
Numerous illustrations in and out of the text
Ref: 1009
Heilview full entry
Reference: see NIGEL WARD & COMPANY, auction, UK, 2.7.22, lot 1259 A tablecloth designed in Australia by Heil 4' 2" x 3' 11" depicting Australian wild flowers together with an embroidered square cloth, an embroidered picture (unframed), etc.
Bridgeland Judithview full entry
Reference: see BENTLEY'S AUCTION ROOMS, 2.7.22. lot 541, Judith Bridgland (Scottish/Australian, b. 1962) - 'Lochranza, Arran', oil on canvas, signed, label verso, 80cm x 120cm, framed. NB: For further info please see www.jibridgland.com Condition report: Large, bright and vibrant, no issues.
Wells Samuel cartoonistview full entry
Reference: see KNIGHTS SPORTING AUCTIONS, UK, 8-10 July, 2022, lot 543 and 544
Samuel Wells cartoons. Victoria 1956/57 and 1959/60. Three excellent large original pen and ink caricature/ cartoon artworks by artist Samuel Wells, two with blue shading, presumably for the Age newspaper, Australia. In one, the top portion reports on the Sheffield Shield matches played 29th December 1956- 2nd January 1957, commenting on 'Centuries from Shield Games which we never expected to see again in our cricket', the highest being a 'Bradman like' 198 by Willie Watson to save New South Wales 'from the jaws of the Q'land alligator'. Also featured is the athlete, Betty Cuthbert, winner of the 'Sportsman of the Year' award for 1956. Another relates to the Victoria v South Australia match at Melbourne, South Australia captain, 'McRidings' and bowler, 'McDrennan' are depicted 'Piping in the "Sag"gis' having reduced Victoria from 202/3 to 252/8 at the close of the first day's play, Barry Jarman who 'did a good "bottling good job"' having taking five catches and a stumping. Don Bradman is depicted below in suit and trilby 'smackin' 'em to the boundary as of yore'. Victoria went on to win by 152 runs. Both 11.25"x18". The third cartoon reports on Victoria v South Australia at Melbourne, 1st- 5th January 1960, in which '[J.C.] Lill scored 176 in South Australia's first innings, in reply Bill Lawry is seen at the end of the second day's play singing 'Anything they can do we can do better' having scored 85, Furlong 68, Wildsmith 22no etc. Below are depicted 'New (South) Australians', Ray McCormick, Howard Mutton, Brian Quigley, Mick Clingly etc. Victoria won by six wickets. 14.5"x21". The cartoons signed by Wells. Excellent images. G/VG - cricket
Ainsworth Kerriview full entry
Reference: ADAMS, L. & G. THE BLACK SWANS. Illustrated by Kerri Ainsworth. Tells the story of how Australian swans were originally white, but after a flock of eagles is hunted with boomerangs, a group of crows band together to help camouflage them with their crow feathers.
Publishing details: SRA Australian Stories. Syd. Science Research Associates 1979. 4to. Col.ill.bds. 24pp. Profusely illustrated in colour.
Ref: 1000
Olive Barryview full entry
Reference: ADAMS, L. & G. THE BUTTERFLIES OF SPRING. Illustrated by Barry Olive. The story of how the very first butterflies appeared in Australia begins when a young parrot falls out of a tree & dies. A wise lizard tells the bush animals that its spirit will return in a new form.

Publishing details: SRA Australian Stories. Syd. Science Research Associates 1979. 4to. Col. ill. bds. 24pp. Profusely illustrated in colour.
Ref: 1000
Riordan Chrisview full entry
Reference: ADAMS, L. & G. THE WHIRLWIND AND THE FROGS. Illustrated by Chris Riordan. Tells the story of how frogs went from being quite bold & brave to timid & frightened creatures after a big whirlwind sweeps
through their pond.
Publishing details: SRA Australian Stories. Syd. Science Research
Associates 1979. 4to. Col.ill.bds. 24pp. Profusely illustrated in colour.
Ref: 1000
Olley Margaret calendar for Home exhibitionview full entry
Reference: OLLEY, Margaret. MARGARET OLLEY: HOME. Interiors at Duxford Street. Museum of Sydney, 10 November 2012 to 2 April 2013. Exhibition Catalogue. An exhibition of paintings, photographs & memories of the artist Margaret Olley’s house in Duxford Street, Paddington that was organised as part of the Sydney Open 2012 event that opened many houses.
Publishing details: Syd. Museum of Sydney. 2012. Col.Ill.wrapps. 48pp. col & b/w ills
Ref: 1000
Olley Margaretview full entry
Reference: Margaret Olley 1923 - 2011, by Barry Pearce, foreword by Edmund Capon,
Publishing details: Beagle Press 2012 1st Ed Hardcover with dustjacket, 264pp
Ref: 1009
Collecting Australian Pot Lids view full entry
Reference: Collecting Australian Pot Lids and the Lives of Our Early Pharmacists by Robert Keil ‘What a fabulous contribution to Australian social history concerning the history of medicinal drugs in colonial Australia and the men and occasional woman who sold them.’

Publishing details: Published by the Author in Whyalla in 1981. Hardback Dustwrapper, illustrations, special limited edition
Ref: 1000
Pot Lids view full entry
Reference: see Collecting Australian Pot Lids and the Lives of Our Early Pharmacists by Robert Keil ‘What a fabulous contribution to Australian social history concerning the history of medicinal drugs in colonial Australia and the men and occasional woman who sold them.’

Publishing details: Published by the Author in Whyalla in 1981. Hardback Dustwrapper, illustrations, special limited edition
Lids for potsview full entry
Reference: see Collecting Australian Pot Lids and the Lives of Our Early Pharmacists by Robert Keil ‘What a fabulous contribution to Australian social history concerning the history of medicinal drugs in colonial Australia and the men and occasional woman who sold them.’

Publishing details: Published by the Author in Whyalla in 1981. Hardback Dustwrapper, illustrations, special limited edition
Australian War Photographs view full entry
Reference: Australian War Photographs A Pictorial Record from November 1917 to the End of the War. Edited by Captain Geo H Wilkins.
Publishing details: Published by A.I.F 1919.
Ref: 1000
War Photographs view full entry
Reference: see Australian War Photographs A Pictorial Record from November 1917 to the End of the War. Edited by Captain Geo H Wilkins.
Publishing details: Published by A.I.F 1919.
Photographs of warview full entry
Reference: see Australian War Photographs A Pictorial Record from November 1917 to the End of the War. Edited by Captain Geo H Wilkins.
Publishing details: Published by A.I.F 1919.
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: see EARLE: HIS BUNGAREE, Augustus Earle, Bungaree, a native of New South Wales, c.1826, by Roy Forward, National Gallery of Australia Research Paper no. 19
Publishing details: https://www.academia.edu/3962120/EARLE_HIS_BUNGAREE_Augustus_Earle_Bungaree_a_native_of_New_South_Wales_c_1826_by_Roy_Forward_National_Gallery_of_Australia_Research_Paper_no_19?email_work_card=thumbnail
Michelmore Maryview full entry
Reference: see Asian Antiques and Estate Auction, Columbia, MD, United States, 7/10/2022, lot 2327: Bronze Wombat Sculpture by Mary Michelmore, Australia.. L 7 cm
Tracker Natview full entry
Reference: see The Conversation, Rediscovering the art of Tracker Nat: ‘the Namatjira of carving’
Published: July 4, 2022, by Darren Jorgensen Senior lecturer in art history, The University of Western Australia, and Joseph Yugi Williams Artist and Men’s Art Facilitator, Nyinkka Nyunyu, Indigenous Knowledge. ‘A tribal painter, said to be more famous than the late Albert Namatjira, has just died at Warrabri welfare settlement, near Tennant Creek. He was Nat Warano, of whose skill few white men had heard.
Locally, Warano is remembered as Tracker Nat. Born in the 1880s, Nat worked as a drover during the 1930s, before becoming a police tracker. He was also a leader and diplomat of the Warumungu people during a tumultuous period of their history.
During the 1940s and 1950s Nat was a prolific carver of coolamons, spearthrowers, shields and water carriers, painting them with men dancing in ceremonial dress and body paint, as well as men hunting with boomerangs and spears...’
Nat - Tracker Natview full entry
Reference: see The Conversation, Rediscovering the art of Tracker Nat: ‘the Namatjira of carving’
Published: July 4, 2022, by Darren Jorgensen Senior lecturer in art history, The University of Western Australia, and Joseph Yugi Williams Artist and Men’s Art Facilitator, Nyinkka Nyunyu, Indigenous Knowledge. ‘A tribal painter, said to be more famous than the late Albert Namatjira, has just died at Warrabri welfare settlement, near Tennant Creek. He was Nat Warano, of whose skill few white men had heard.
Locally, Warano is remembered as Tracker Nat. Born in the 1880s, Nat worked as a drover during the 1930s, before becoming a police tracker. He was also a leader and diplomat of the Warumungu people during a tumultuous period of their history.
During the 1940s and 1950s Nat was a prolific carver of coolamons, spearthrowers, shields and water carriers, painting them with men dancing in ceremonial dress and body paint, as well as men hunting with boomerangs and spears...’
Warano Nat , - Tracker Natview full entry
Reference: see The Conversation, Rediscovering the art of Tracker Nat: ‘the Namatjira of carving’
Published: July 4, 2022, by Darren Jorgensen Senior lecturer in art history, The University of Western Australia, and Joseph Yugi Williams Artist and Men’s Art Facilitator, Nyinkka Nyunyu, Indigenous Knowledge. ‘A tribal painter, said to be more famous than the late Albert Namatjira, has just died at Warrabri welfare settlement, near Tennant Creek. He was Nat Warano, of whose skill few white men had heard.
Locally, Warano is remembered as Tracker Nat. Born in the 1880s, Nat worked as a drover during the 1930s, before becoming a police tracker. He was also a leader and diplomat of the Warumungu people during a tumultuous period of their history.
During the 1940s and 1950s Nat was a prolific carver of coolamons, spearthrowers, shields and water carriers, painting them with men dancing in ceremonial dress and body paint, as well as men hunting with boomerangs and spears...’
Wendt jewellers Adelaideview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 79th Meeting, 2 June 2022:
Silver polo trophy in the form of a hydria, by Wendt, Adelaide, c1902. Height 19 cm. The inscription reads: “SOUTH AUSTRALIAN POLO ASSOCIATION / CHALLENGE CUP / Presented by / R. Barr-Smith / Won by / ADELAIDE POLO CLUB / 1902”. Robert Barr Smith (1824-1915) was a Scotsman who came to Australia in 1854, becoming in 1863 with Thomas Elder one of the two partners in the firm of Elder Smith & Co. With its widespread pastoral, mining and shipping interests the firm generated a vast amount of wealth for Smith and Elder, who were brothers-in-law, both of whom were renowned for their support of charitable causes. Both were keen sportsmen, with Smith playing in Adelaide’s first polo match in 1876, and his sons Tom and Bertie following suite.
There was considerable interest in Adelaide at the time in the archaeological relics being found in excavations at Pompeii, and when Smith presented a “cup” for polo in 1901 the Advertiser newspaper described it as “...a perfect piece of silverware, but it represents, in shape and form, a rare and old relic saved from the ruins of Pompeii, the original being rightly carefully and jealously kept by the Adelaide School of Art.” The following year when he presented this prize for the same competition it seems likely that the same design would have been adopted. In 1903 Brig.-Gen. Gordon presented a “handsome cup” but its form is not known to the writer.
Attempts to find the model for these trophies have been unsuccessful, and it could well be hidden away in the collection of the Adelaide University’s (now closed) Museum of Classical Archaeology. As late as 1927 the jewellery firm of Wendt’s presented another such hydria to the Adelaide Hunt Club, to be the Hunt Club Cup for that year. With similar markings to the trophy above, it could well have been old stock.
Matthews Peterview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 79th Meeting, 2 June 2022:
Oil painting on board, Elder Range from Arkapena, signed Peter Matthews, 1970.
Sight 38 x 68 cm.
Painted by Peter Matthews (1934-2022), a farmer near Victor Harbor, who often as here used a palette knife for his paintings. His main body of work was produced between 1968 and 1979. The current owners had mentioned to an Adelaide neighbor that they would like to have a painting of the Flinders Ranges, a place they had loved to visit over a married lifetime. The neighbor had a holiday house near the Matthews farm, knew of his skills, and arranged it all. And on Christmas Eve of 1970 Peter turned up on their doorstep holding the still wet painting, with instructions to let it dry out for three weeks undisturbed. No mean feat in a house with four small children. He suggested that if they decided they liked it, they could post him a cheque, otherwise he would pick it up later, saying “... it will probably do for now until you find a better painting to replace it.”
Although details of Peter’s life are scanty, the Victor Harbor Council named a street after him, and described him as a farmer, artist, inventor, councilor and the builder of an industrial complex in Maude Street. One of the tributes at his funeral in March this year was from another artist who “... was originally inspired by observing Peter Matthews, who used to paint in a camping ground outside the shop at Wilpena. He was an oil painter that absolutely fascinated me.” Peter’s son Christopher, a watercolourist, was born in 1958.
Matthews Christopher son of Peterview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 79th Meeting, 2 June 2022:
Oil painting on board, Elder Range from Arkapena, signed Peter Matthews, 1970.
Sight 38 x 68 cm.
Painted by Peter Matthews (1934-2022), a farmer near Victor Harbor, who often as here used a palette knife for his paintings. His main body of work was produced between 1968 and 1979. The current owners had mentioned to an Adelaide neighbor that they would like to have a painting of the Flinders Ranges, a place they had loved to visit over a married lifetime. The neighbor had a holiday house near the Matthews farm, knew of his skills, and arranged it all. And on Christmas Eve of 1970 Peter turned up on their doorstep holding the still wet painting, with instructions to let it dry out for three weeks undisturbed. No mean feat in a house with four small children. He suggested that if they decided they liked it, they could post him a cheque, otherwise he would pick it up later, saying “... it will probably do for now until you find a better painting to replace it.”
Although details of Peter’s life are scanty, the Victor Harbor Council named a street after him, and described him as a farmer, artist, inventor, councilor and the builder of an industrial complex in Maude Street. One of the tributes at his funeral in March this year was from another artist who “... was originally inspired by observing Peter Matthews, who used to paint in a camping ground outside the shop at Wilpena. He was an oil painter that absolutely fascinated me.” Peter’s son Christopher, a watercolourist, was born in 1958.
Rieken Gladys view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 79th Meeting, 2 June 2022:
Student’s Brushwork Exercise Book, Class 1, published by the Education Department of South Australia, 1906. Price 2d, 28 x 19 cm high.
Comprising sixteen pages of brush and watercolour exercises begun on 24.8.1910 and completed 12.5.1911 by student Gladys Rieken, each exercise marked in pencil by the teacher. The back cover has five printed illustrations as well as instructions on how to hold a brush and mix the colours; the front cover has an elaborate design incorporating the piping shrike. In small letters bottom left are the designer’s initials H.P.G. (Harry Pelling Gill).
8
HP Gill was an English born and trained artist, a capable art teacher and curator who in 1882 came to South Australia and was appointed master of the Adelaide School of Design and in 1892 appointed honorary curator of the Art Gallery of South Australia.
The name of the school handwritten on the cover of the book tells us that Gladys Rieken attended the Le Fevre Peninsula Primary School (established 1878); the suffix Peninsula was used for the name of the primary school—it was omitted from the name of the high school, gazetted in 1911 as LeFevre High School.
Gill H P art teacherview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 79th Meeting, 2 June 2022:
Student’s Brushwork Exercise Book, Class 1, published by the Education Department of South Australia, 1906. Price 2d, 28 x 19 cm high.
Comprising sixteen pages of brush and watercolour exercises begun on 24.8.1910 and completed 12.5.1911 by student Gladys Rieken, each exercise marked in pencil by the teacher. The back cover has five printed illustrations as well as instructions on how to hold a brush and mix the colours; the front cover has an elaborate design incorporating the piping shrike. In small letters bottom left are the designer’s initials H.P.G. (Harry Pelling Gill).
8
HP Gill was an English born and trained artist, a capable art teacher and curator who in 1882 came to South Australia and was appointed master of the Adelaide School of Design and in 1892 appointed honorary curator of the Art Gallery of South Australia.
The name of the school handwritten on the cover of the book tells us that Gladys Rieken attended the Le Fevre Peninsula Primary School (established 1878); the suffix Peninsula was used for the name of the primary school—it was omitted from the name of the high school, gazetted in 1911 as LeFevre High School.
Mora Mirka 1928-2018view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 79th Meeting, 2 June 2022:
Mirka Madeleine Mora, nee Zelik (1928-2018) “29.6.81 - 2 Heures pm” (1981)
20.00 (h) x 13.00 (w) cm.
Pen and ink on paper
Mirka was born in Paris to a Romanian seamstress mother, and a Lithuanian father who loved antiques, armoury and rare books. Both fled their homelands to escape the persecution of Jewish people in World War One. As a child, Mirka loved learning and thrived at school. During World War Two, she narrowly escaped the holocaust and in 1951, she and her husband Georges arrived in Melbourne. He became an art dealer and together, they operated three significant cafes: the Mirka Café in Exhibition St, Cafe Balzac in East Melbourne and Tolarno in St Kilda.
Mirka Mora’s mosaics, paintings, drawings, textiles and painted dolls became part of the visual landscape in Melbourne over seven decades and are still ever present today in public spaces such as the large mixed media mural at Flinders Street Station. She was part of a close artistic circle at Heide with the Reeds and the Heide Museum has held regular exhibitions of
10
her work. Only a few years ago, she collaborated with fashion designer Lisa Gorman for a range of clothing that has become increasingly valuable.
This pen and ink drawing is of a female being cuddled by a male figure at 2pm in the afternoon on the 29th of June, 1981. It is an example of Mirka Mora’s intimate subjects where we interpret the scene from the perspective of the female figure. An elongated goose neck and head extends from the female which Mirka explained as part of her own sexuality. The male is afforded the patterned clothing, just as in nature a male bird is often more elaborate. Mirka explained to the owner of the drawing that there were two things they should be sure to do in life: 1. Have lots of lovers and 2. Read widely, particularly on subjects in which they were unfamiliar. At the time of the advice, Mirka was reading the work of Stephen Hawking, Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University.In Melbourne, she lived in a number of well-known studios, the last being a purpose built space in Richmond, characteristically crammed with her treasures. She painted her own windows with curvilinear coloured strokes and she typically had two canvasses on the go at once so as not to waste paint.
Lanceley Colinview full entry
Reference: see ‘Memories of a Dreamer, by John McDonald in Sydney Morning Herald, Spectrum, p11, 2 July, 2022, on Lanceley’s exhibition at the National Art School
Lanceley Colinview full entry
Reference: Colin Lanceley - Earthly Delights, introduction by Kay Lanceley, essay by Sioux Garside, curator. Includes chronology.
Publishing details: National Art School, 2022, hc, 152pp
White Anthonyview full entry
Reference: As the sleeper wakes - Anthony White, essay by Ashley Crawford. 13 wowks illustrated.
Publishing details: Metro Gallery, Melbourne, pb, 16pp
Ref: 145
Bramley-Moore Mostynview full entry
Reference: see Discrepant Subjects, exhibition of works by Mostyn Bramley-Moore, Anthony White and Miles Hall
Publishing details: Pave d’Orsay, 2019 [catalogue details unknown
Discrepant Subjectsview full entry
Reference: Discrepant Subjects, exhibition of works by Mostyn Bramley-Moore, Anthony White and Miles Hall
Publishing details: Pave d’Orsay, 2019 [catalogue details unknown
Ref: 1000
White Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see Discrepant Subjects, exhibition of works by Mostyn Bramley-Moore, Anthony White and Miles Hall
Publishing details: Pave d’Orsay, 2019 [catalogue details unknown
Hall Milesview full entry
Reference: see Discrepant Subjects, exhibition of works by Mostyn Bramley-Moore, Anthony White and Miles Hall
Publishing details: Pave d’Orsay, 2019 [catalogue details unknown
Young Guns Summer Showview full entry
Reference: Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Ref: 145
COMODAAview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Contemporary Modern Australian Artview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
White Anthonyview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Fontane Janeview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Kitson Juzview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
MacDonell Zoeview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Smith Erinview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Vextaview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
Meagher Lintonview full entry
Reference: see Young Guns Summer Show, exhibition at Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, June 21-26 2011. (Exhibition by COMODAA Contemporary Modern Australian Art), featuring 7 artists. An essay and at least one illustration for each artist.
Publishing details: Gallery Maya, Notting Hill London, 2011, 20pp, pb.
White Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Anthony White - Signs of Civilization, nanda/hobbs gallery catalogue, April, 2018, essay by Robert Maconachie, 4 illustrations.
Publishing details: nanda’hobbs gallery, 2018, 6-page folding card.
Ref: 145
Martens Conrad and Beagle scrimshawview full entry
Reference: see Eldred's
August 4, 2022, 9:30 AM EST
East Dennis, MA, US, lot 3031:
IMPORTANT SCRIMSHAW WHALE'S TOOTH ATTRIBUTED TO JAMES ADOLPHUS BUTE, CREW MEMBER ON CHARLES DARWIN'S EXPEDITION
Circa Early 1830s
Believed to be engraved aboard the H.M.S. Beagle during Charles Darwin's second voyage, the 1831-1836 expedition. Obverse depicts "Natives of Tierra del Fuego.", a scene of two figures on a mountainous coastline, one holding a spear and the other paddling a canoe. Signed lower right "J.A. Bute". Reverse depicts a bust portrait of a "New Zealander" with barbed spears and a hatchet. Edge with "Britons United" in a banner below a floral motif. Wide feathery fan-like borders at tip and base.
Dimensions
Length 6.25". Includes a glass and wood case with mirrored base. Case height 5.5". Width 8.75".
Condition Report
Inking faint in some places. Typically uneven base. Slight fracture at tip.

The absence of a condition report does not imply an object is free of defects. All items may have normal signs of age and wear commensurate with their age; these issues will likely not be mentioned in the condition report. Please contact Eldred's before the auction with any condition questions. Questions about condition will not be answered after purchase. Condition reports are provided as a courtesy, and we are not responsible for any errors or omissions. Important note on frames: Frames are not guaranteed to be in the same condition as they are in the item photograph. Due to handling and shipping, many frames, especially antique ones, are prone to losses. If you have questions about the condition of a frame, please contact us prior to the auction. 
Provenance
Notes:
Accompanied by copies of correspondence between William J. Boylhart and Dr. Stuart M. Frank, Senior Curator Emeritus of the New Bedford Whaling Museum and founder of the Scrimshaw Forensics Laboratory, discussing the tooth's authenticity and attribution to Bute, in which Frank writes "I do believe that it's authentic ...".

The signature, lettering and style of workmanship on this tooth are identical to a tooth by James Adolphus Bute that is part of the collection of the Western Australia Museum in Perth and two Bute examples sold at Eldred's, The Marine Sale, July 19, 2018, Lots #76 and #109.

According to the Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists by Stuart M. Frank (Mystic, Ct.: Mystic Seaport Museum, 1991), p. 24, Englishman James Adolphus Bute was born around 1799 and joined the Royal Navy around 1819. There was great crossover of personnel between whaling and naval service in England, much more so than in the United States, and Bute may have been introduced to scrimshaw during a whaling voyage in between stints on naval vessels. "The Journal of Syms Covington", assistant to Darwin on his second voyage aboard the "Beagle", December 1831-September 1836, lists James Bute as a crew member, one of six crew members listed as a Royal Marine. Given the similarities between images on this and other Bute teeth and drawings by Conrad Martens, the official artist onboard the "Beagle", it is possible Bute was influenced by or collaborated with the artist in creating his pieces of scrimshaw.

Bute James Adolphus scrimshawview full entry
Reference: see Eldred's
August 4, 2022, 9:30 AM EST
East Dennis, MA, US, lot 3031:
IMPORTANT SCRIMSHAW WHALE'S TOOTH ATTRIBUTED TO JAMES ADOLPHUS BUTE, CREW MEMBER ON CHARLES DARWIN'S EXPEDITION
Circa Early 1830s
Believed to be engraved aboard the H.M.S. Beagle during Charles Darwin's second voyage, the 1831-1836 expedition. Obverse depicts "Natives of Tierra del Fuego.", a scene of two figures on a mountainous coastline, one holding a spear and the other paddling a canoe. Signed lower right "J.A. Bute". Reverse depicts a bust portrait of a "New Zealander" with barbed spears and a hatchet. Edge with "Britons United" in a banner below a floral motif. Wide feathery fan-like borders at tip and base.
Dimensions
Length 6.25". Includes a glass and wood case with mirrored base. Case height 5.5". Width 8.75".
Condition Report
Inking faint in some places. Typically uneven base. Slight fracture at tip.

The absence of a condition report does not imply an object is free of defects. All items may have normal signs of age and wear commensurate with their age; these issues will likely not be mentioned in the condition report. Please contact Eldred's before the auction with any condition questions. Questions about condition will not be answered after purchase. Condition reports are provided as a courtesy, and we are not responsible for any errors or omissions. Important note on frames: Frames are not guaranteed to be in the same condition as they are in the item photograph. Due to handling and shipping, many frames, especially antique ones, are prone to losses. If you have questions about the condition of a frame, please contact us prior to the auction. 
Provenance
Notes:
Accompanied by copies of correspondence between William J. Boylhart and Dr. Stuart M. Frank, Senior Curator Emeritus of the New Bedford Whaling Museum and founder of the Scrimshaw Forensics Laboratory, discussing the tooth's authenticity and attribution to Bute, in which Frank writes "I do believe that it's authentic ...".

The signature, lettering and style of workmanship on this tooth are identical to a tooth by James Adolphus Bute that is part of the collection of the Western Australia Museum in Perth and two Bute examples sold at Eldred's, The Marine Sale, July 19, 2018, Lots #76 and #109.

According to the Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists by Stuart M. Frank (Mystic, Ct.: Mystic Seaport Museum, 1991), p. 24, Englishman James Adolphus Bute was born around 1799 and joined the Royal Navy around 1819. There was great crossover of personnel between whaling and naval service in England, much more so than in the United States, and Bute may have been introduced to scrimshaw during a whaling voyage in between stints on naval vessels. "The Journal of Syms Covington", assistant to Darwin on his second voyage aboard the "Beagle", December 1831-September 1836, lists James Bute as a crew member, one of six crew members listed as a Royal Marine. Given the similarities between images on this and other Bute teeth and drawings by Conrad Martens, the official artist onboard the "Beagle", it is possible Bute was influenced by or collaborated with the artist in creating his pieces of scrimshaw.

Martens Conradview full entry
Reference: see Conrad Martens & the Picturesque: Precursor to Australian Impressionism
Michael Organ 1 July 1993. ‘When Conrad Martens arrived in Sydney Harbour in 1835 aboard the Black Warrior from Tahiti via New Zealand, he brought with him the experiences of a professional landscape painter who had spent the previous two years travelling to South America and the Pacific as a member of the crew of the HMS Hyacinth and HMS Beagle, following on a decade of painting in his native England..
Publishing details: 1993
https://www.academia.edu/2799058/Conrad_Martens_and_the_Picturesque_Precursor_to_Australian_Impressionism
Yandell Christianview full entry
Reference: see Christian Yandell's illustrations for Alice in Wonderland 1924, by Michael Organ

‘In 1924 New Zealand publishing house Whitcombe & Tombs, based in Auckland, issued an edition of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland for the Australasian education market. This small, 64 page primary school reader was edited by EA Stewart and featured an original cover design by the Carlton Studio of Melbourne plus twelve black and white engraved line drawings by Australian artist Christian Yandell (1894-1954).’
Publishing details: https://www.academia.edu/2799067/Christian_Yandells_illustrations_for_Alice_in_Wonderland_1924
Wallace Anneview full entry
Reference: Anne Wallace: Strange Ways, Curated by
Vanessa Van Ooyen. Samstag Museum of Art, 2020. [’On the surface, Anne Wallace's figurative paintings might seem conventional, however they are anything but ordinary. Her meticulously painted canvases satisfy our visual habits and conform to our expectations of paintings, leading us to expect a narrative; however, on a deeper level, they conspire to deny us the satisfaction. They exude a strangeness derived from her unusual use of perspectives, the superimposing of images, and the borrowing of disparate sources.
Wallace's paintings are at times difficult to look at. She combines the familiar with the unfamiliar, capturing a tension between the real and the imagined to create slightly awkward moments. Like any good 'story', there is sexual and social confusion, vulnerability and violence, alienation and loneliness, feelings of the abject, or fantasies of power and revenge. Wallace's paintings have an uncanny ability to tap into a shared psyche, drawing upon the language of pop culture.
Bringing together more than 80 works from public and private collections, and spanning three decades, this is the most comprehensive survey of Wallace's practice to date. The exhibition will include a screening program of films selected by the artist, and is accompanied by a major publication, featuring new essays by Gillian Brown, Francis Plagne and Vanessa Van Ooyen.’]

Publishing details: Samstag Museum of Art, 2020.

Ref: 1000
Binns Vivienne view full entry
Reference: On and through the surface - Vivienne Binns. Publication coincides with exhibition at MUMA, Melbourne, until April 14, 2022, then the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, from July 15 to September 25, 2022.
Vivienne Binns is an important and singular figure in the history of Australian visual art. Her groundbreaking and experimental work has tested the philosophical underpinnings of art itself, both preempting and participating in the most significant cultural discourses of our times: from women's social and sexual liberation to Australia's regional identity.
Her outstanding, multifaceted and sustained contribution to Australian art was recognized in 2021 with an Australia Council Award for Visual Arts.
Vivienne Binns: On and Through the Surface is the first monograph on the artist's six-decade career and accompanies a major survey presented at Monash University Museum of Art, Melbourne, and Museum of Contemporary Art Australia, Sydney, in 2022.
Edited by Anneke Jaspers and Hannah Mathews, the publication charts the dynamism of Binns's conceptual and material investigations with an extensive, full-colour plate section; new essays by writers and art historians Terence Maloon, Kyla McFarlane, Gemma Weston, Quentin Sprague and Helen Hughes; a 2021 interview by Merryn Gates; a detailed chronology by Penny Peckham; and historic interviews and texts with and by the artist. Design by Stuart Geddes and Ziga Testen.
Publishing details: Monash University Museum of Art, softback, 280 pages
Ref: 1009
Binns Vivienneview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald article by Anfrew Stephens on Vivienne Binns’ exhibition at MCA - On and through the surface - Vivienne Binns
Publishing details: SMH Spectrum, 9.7.22 p7
Ricard-Cordingly Georgesview full entry
Reference: see Pichon & Noudel-Deniau (Azur Enchères) auction, Wednesday 20 July 2022, Cannes, France, lot 174
Georges RICARD-CORDINGLEY (1873-1939)
Travel notebook
Studies and sketches
BLACK PEN
Titled and dated by his daughter "The trip to Australia on the Warpara - 1909
18,5 x 11,5 cm
Provenance: Estate of the painter's daughter, Gabrielle Ricard-Cordingley
and lot 203
Georges RICARD-CORDINGLEY (1873-1939)
Large notebook of drawings
Studies and sketches
BLACK PENCIL AND HIGHLIGHTS
Entitled "Towards Australia" by his daughter
30,5 x 24 cm
Provenance: Estate of the painter's daughter, Gabrielle Ricard-Cordingley



Quilty Benview full entry
Reference: Free Fall. A stunning art book of Quilty's most recent collection of paintings from his series 'Free Fall'. 'This series, titled "Free Fall", was heavily influenced by American realist George Bellows' early 20th-century boxing series. Where Bellows looked to boxing, the premier bloodsport of his age, Quilty has turned to the modern phenomenon of the Ultimate Fighting Championships (UFC). Looking back on Quilty's work in recent years, his ongoing exploration of heavily abstracted, tortured anatomies, perhaps it was inevitable these figures, or their kin, would end up in a fighting pit, aka the 'UFC Octagon'. Crucially, while studying Bellows, Quilty revisited the iconic images taken by photojournalist (and cousin) Andrew Quilty of the 2005 Cronulla riots. Here, the beach and the Octagon are corresponding zones, symbolically potent places steeped in friction, violence and ritual.' -- from the Foreword by Milena Stojanovska.
Publishing details: Lantern and Art Ink, 2022 , hc, 112 pages : colour illustrationsLantern and Art Ink, 2022 
©2022 
112 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Pike Jimmyview full entry
Reference: Ngirramanujuwal : the art and country of Jimmy Pike.
Ngirramanujuwal is one who adds colour. Walmajarri man Jimmy Pike (c. 1940–2002) manifests colour as strokes of ink on paper: the saturated hues of the desert sky at dusk, and the glimmers of the sun on the water’s surface. His vivid and exceptional drawing, painting and printing skills reveal the desert as a place teeming with colourful life, history and stories. Ngirramanujuwal: The Art and Country of Jimmy Pike is a specially curated selection of the internationally renowned artist’s work from the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies collection. It invites the reader to journey through the Great Sandy Desert, experiencing the Walmajarri seasons – makurra, parranga, yitilal and jutalkarra – as revealed through Pike’s art and intimate relationship with Country. (from back cover).
Full contents • Kurntikujarra Jimmy Pike
• Makurra
• Parranga
• Yitilal
• Jutalkarra.
Contains selected Walmajarri and Juwaliny wordlist.
Bibliography: pages 125-126.
Publishing details: Canberra, ACT : Aboriginal studies Press, 2022,
127 pages : colour illustrations, map, portraits
Ref: 1000
Queerview full entry
Reference: Queer : stories from the NGV collection / edited by Ted Gott, Angela Hesson, Myles Russell-Cook, Meg Slater, and Pip Wallis with contributors. [To be indexed]
QUEER: Stories from the NGV Collection is more than an exhibition catalogue. This 628-page publication expands on the themes explored in the NGV’s QUEER exhibition to document the queer past, present and future of the NGV collection. More than 60 essays from authors with comprehensive knowledge of the historical and contemporary subjects encompassed by the NGV’s QUEER project are presented along side stunning reproductions of more than 200 works from the NGV collection, either by queer artists or engaging with queer issues. The essays in QUEER: Stories from the NGV Collection explore the history of LGBTQ+ activism; the creation of queer spaces and communities; queerness as an artistic strategy; the expression of love, desire and sensuality; queer aesthetics; and the concepts of camp and the fantastic.
Notes Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Melbourne, Victoria : National Gallery of Victoria, 2021,
xxvii, 598 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Balgo : creating country view full entry
Reference: Balgo : creating country / John Carty
In the early days we did painting. Cultural way. For ourselves. Then on the mission Sister Alice was working with the young men and women, like Gracie Green and Matthew Gill. We did a lot of landscapes at the start. Then after that people did a lot of paintings for the church. Then we decided we gotta do our own painting now. About ngurra and tjukurrpa. Ngurra are the places we came from, our Country. We came to the mission from Kiwirrkurra, from Canning Stock Route, from Mulan lake Country. All the different families. All now to this Country we call Balgo. And we have always enjoyed our culture. We never stopped. Always dancing and singing, teaching our kids and keeping our culture strong. Here in Balgo. We keep our ceremonies, we visit our Country. That's why we still live here. That's why we paint. That story from our Tjamu and Tjatja (grandfather and grandmother). Our rockholes and waters where we used to live. We paint that. This monograph features countless images of full colour artworks from communities including Birrundudu, Papunya, Yuendumu and Balgo and language groups including Kukatja, Djaru, Warlpiri, Nyining, Ngarti, Wangkajunga and Manjilyjarra. It is deeply grounded in country has been put together in conjunction with the Warlayirti Arts Centre.
Notes This book was supported in its creation and production by the Australia Council for the Arts.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 387-391)
Publishing details: Crawley, Western Australia : UWA Publishing, 2021  
vii, 395 pages : colour illustrtions
Ref: 1000
Justin Miller Art,view full entry
Reference: Justin Miller Art, - Autumn Winter exhibition 2022
Publishing details: Justin Miller Art, 2022, pb 58 pp,with price list inserted
Ref: 133
Gabori Sallyview full entry
Reference: see ‘The Art of the Steal’ article by Gabriella Coslovich in Spectrum, Sydney Morning Herald, 16.7.22, p12-16
Publishing details: [copy in The Corrigan Collection of Paintings by Sally Gabori]
Hobson Naomiview full entry
Reference: see Geelong Art Gallery press release, 15.7.22: ‘Congratulations to the recipient of our 2022 Geelong Contemporary Art Prize, Naomi Hobson. Naomi is a  Kaantju/Umpila woman and lives and works on the traditional lands of the Southern Kaantju people in Coen, Queensland.
The selection panel included Lisa Byrne, Director, McClelland Sculpture Park+Gallery, Kyla McFarlane, Senior Academic Programs Curator, Museums & Collections, The University of Melbourne, and Lisa Sullivan, Senior Curator, Geelong Gallery, who were drawn to the energy and structural complexity of Hobson’s interpretation of the natural world.  

Sand dunes on the coast is representative of the artist’s distinctive style: her vibrant multi-layered compositions emerge from and convey a deep ancestral connection to the traditional lands of the Kaantju/Umpila people.
Come and visit the Prize open until Sunday 11 September and have your chance to vote in the People's Choice Award. 
Rielly Henryview full entry
Reference: see Lauraine Diggins Fine Art press release, 15,7.22:
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art continues our ongoing series taking a closer look at a variety of artworks available to view at the Gallery. In the Spotlight today, a painting by colonial artist Henry Rielly. 

Henry Rielly arrived in Australia with his family as a child. He was a foundation member of the Victorian Academy of Arts in 1870 and exhibited with them between 1870 – 1895. His work was also included in the Melbourne Exhibition Building in 1872, an exhibition which toured to London the following year; the Sydney International Exhibition in 1879; and the Calcutta Exhibition in 1883-84. He later moved to Queensland, in 1885, probably to be closer to his sisters, Louisa and Isa (who were  both also artists) and exhibited with the Queensland Art Society between 1892 – 1902. The move may also have been prompted to seek a warmer climate following tuberculosis. Rielly died in Brisbane Hospital, aged only 47.

Rielly is known to have exhibited watercolours and oils depicting landscapes, around Melbourne, north-east Victoria and later Stanthorpe, Qld. His work has been compared with other nineteenth century artists including Buvelot, H.J. Johnstone and J.W. Curtis and described as being expressive, intimate and at times, having an air of melancholy. 

His work is represented in the National Gallery of Victoria (Bush Scene Near Ballan 1877) and the Queensland Art Gallery (including Ghost Gully evening 1894) .


HENRY RIELLY 1845 – 1905
Shooting Near Heidelberg  1875
oil on canvas
53 x 82 cm
signed lower right: Henry Rielly
 
Provenance:
unknown
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, Nov 1985
private collection, Melbourne
Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 1988
private collection, Melbourne
 
Exhibited:
19th and 20th Century Australian Painting, Sculpture and Decorative Arts 1998, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 1998

Brown Eileen illustratorview full entry
Reference: Flying South. llustrated by Aileen Brown.
‘This fable, written by Loretta Re, tells of the search by two pelicans WIlli and Millimurro for a new home. Their flight from Central Australia to the South Coast and the impact of their arrival on the local wildlife is poignantly told in word and image.’ – from the prospectus.


Publishing details: Port Kembla, N.S.W. : Southern Typothetae, 1987. Folio, binding by Tony Anderson in pure cotton duck with covers decorated and pink endpapers screen printed by Aileen Brown, pp. [24], with ten hand-printed and stencilled linocuts by Aileen Brown, each signed by the artist. Limited to 45 signed and numbered copies. Enclosed is a hand-printed bookmark and prospectus.
Ref: 1000
Books and Boatsview full entry
Reference: Exhibition of books and boats . Jay Arthur, Alexander Hamilton, Petr Herel, Paul Uhlmann, an introductory essay by Alex Selentisch, biographies and checklist of works, for folded sheets, each pp. 6, on each of the artists, illustrated. Fine copy. Layout and design by Paul Uhlmann (Trembling Hand Books) and Jay Arthur, Canberra.
A finely printed book exhibition catalogue.


Publishing details: Melbourne : State Library of Victoria, 1991. Octavo, printed card folio containing loose sheets.
Ref: 1000
Arthur Jayview full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of books and boats . Jay Arthur, Alexander Hamilton, Petr Herel, Paul Uhlmann, an introductory essay by Alex Selentisch, biographies and checklist of works, for folded sheets, each pp. 6, on each of the artists, illustrated. Fine copy. Layout and design by Paul Uhlmann (Trembling Hand Books) and Jay Arthur, Canberra.
A finely printed book exhibition catalogue.


Publishing details: Melbourne : State Library of Victoria, 1991. Octavo, printed card folio containing loose sheets.
Hamilton Alexander view full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of books and boats . Jay Arthur, Alexander Hamilton, Petr Herel, Paul Uhlmann, an introductory essay by Alex Selentisch, biographies and checklist of works, for folded sheets, each pp. 6, on each of the artists, illustrated. Fine copy. Layout and design by Paul Uhlmann (Trembling Hand Books) and Jay Arthur, Canberra.
A finely printed book exhibition catalogue.


Publishing details: Melbourne : State Library of Victoria, 1991. Octavo, printed card folio containing loose sheets.
Herel Petrview full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of books and boats . Jay Arthur, Alexander Hamilton, Petr Herel, Paul Uhlmann, an introductory essay by Alex Selentisch, biographies and checklist of works, for folded sheets, each pp. 6, on each of the artists, illustrated. Fine copy. Layout and design by Paul Uhlmann (Trembling Hand Books) and Jay Arthur, Canberra.
A finely printed book exhibition catalogue.


Publishing details: Melbourne : State Library of Victoria, 1991. Octavo, printed card folio containing loose sheets.
Uhlmann Paul ,view full entry
Reference: see Exhibition of books and boats . Jay Arthur, Alexander Hamilton, Petr Herel, Paul Uhlmann, an introductory essay by Alex Selentisch, biographies and checklist of works, for folded sheets, each pp. 6, on each of the artists, illustrated. Fine copy. Layout and design by Paul Uhlmann (Trembling Hand Books) and Jay Arthur, Canberra.
A finely printed book exhibition catalogue.


Publishing details: Melbourne : State Library of Victoria, 1991. Octavo, printed card folio containing loose sheets.
Norman Lindsay Does Not Careview full entry
Reference: Norman Lindsay does not care
An outburst by P. R. Stephenson. A humorous outburst by Stephenson (who, with Norman’s son Jack Lindsay, founded the Fanfrolico Press),
Publishing details: London: Fanfrolico Press, [1928]. Price one farthing. Duodecimo, folding sheet, cover illustration, text. No other Fanfrolico pamphlets were issued.
Ref: 1000
Moffatt Traceyview full entry
Reference: Tracey Moffatt. Edited by Paula Savage and Lara Strongman.
Publishing details: Wellington, NZ : City Gallery Wellington, 2002. Oblong quarto, illustrated wrappers, previous owner’s name to half-title, pp. 103, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Bedford Paddy view full entry
Reference: Paddy Bedford : crossing frontiers. PETITJEAN, Georges et al.
Bedford’s work transcends the levels of the local and the culturally determined in a surprising and convincing way. In 2006, Paddy Bedford’s oeuvre was honoured with a grand retrospective in the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney. This book was published for the occasion of his first solo exhibition outside Australia, in the AAMU Museum of contemporary Aboriginal art in Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Publishing details: Utrecht : AAMU–Museum of Contemporary Aboriginal Art ; [Heule, Belgium] : Snoeck, 2009. Octavo, illustrated wrappers, pp. 95, illustrated. Text in French. New copy.


Ref: 1000
Borland Pollyview full entry
Reference: Polly Borland : Australians.Essay by Peter Conrad, biographies and interviews by Virginia Ginnane. Foreword by Nick Cave. Includes portraits of Barry Humphries, Ron Mueck, Marc Newson, Harry Kewell, Clive James, Elisabeth Murdoch, Germaine Greer, Natalie Imbruglia, Richie Benaud, Cate Blanchett, Kylie Minogue and many others.
$50.00 AUD

Publishing details:
London : National Portrait Gallery, 2000. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 120, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Oppen Margaret view full entry
Reference: Do not lament (The song of the axe)
Publishing details:
Sydney : the artist, 2018. Oblong quarto, drum-leaf binding (330 x 450 mm), decorated bookcloth, each copy unique, cloth covered clamshell box. Printed in an edition of 7 copies of which 6 are for sale.
Ref: 1000
Selenitsch Alexview full entry
Reference: Delta blocks

Publishing details: Melbourne : the artist, 2009. Small quarto, diet black wrappers, pp. [8], graphically designed text. Artist’s book limited to 26 copies.

Ref: 1000
Moffatt Traceyview full entry
Reference: Visionaire 30 : the game. Australia edition
Publishing details: [New York] : Visionaire Publishing, 1999. Limited to 6000 numbered copies. A couple of minor cracks to the perspex box. Issue 30 of the avant garde photography magazine, presented in the form of a game, featuring photographs by Australian artists and sitting in a box designed by Louis Vuitton.
Ref: 1000
Tipoti Alickview full entry
Reference: Alick Tipoti : Malungu (from the sea).Alick Tipoti was born in 1975 on Thursday Island in the Torres Strait. He has completed an Associate Diploma of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art at Tropical North Queensland Institute of TAFE.
Publishing details:
Brisbane : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, 2007. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. [24], illustrated. Biography. Printed in an edition of 1000 copies. ‘
Ref: 1000
Beck Lucy Boydview full entry
Reference: Lucy Boyd Beck : Life and Art. By Colin G. Smith.
Lucy Boyd Beck Life and Art is the first biography of this member of Australia’s foremost artistic family – the Boyds. Her parents, Merric and Doris Boyd raised Lucy and her siblings, Arthur, Guy, David and Mary in a highly creative environment at their home in Murrumbeena. Lucy developed a strong sense of line in her art which she applied to her drawing and painting. Later, she worked with her husband Hatton Beck to create the highly expressive ceramic paintings she is most remembered for, continuing a family tradition of artistic innovation and excellence.
Lucy Boyd Beck Life and Art provides a comprehensive overview of the artist’s family history, her career in art and the major influences on her life. It is a highly pictorial book that features many of her drawings and paintings. It also includes countless photographs of Lucy throughout her life, many never published before.
Colin Smith met Lucy Boyd Beck in 1996 whilst carrying out research into his first book on the life of renowned Australian potter, Merric Boyd. In 1997 he interviewed Lucy about the life of her father and her time growing up at their family home, Open Country in Murrumbeena. It was through this meeting that he established a friendship with Lucy that would endure until her death in 2009. Borne of that friendship Lucy Boyd Beck Life and Art is her story.


Publishing details: Melbourne : the author, 2021. Quarto, illustrated laminated boards, pp. 340, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Over the Fenceview full entry
Reference: Over the fence : contemporary indigenous photography from the Corrigan collection Includes works by Dr. Christian Thompson, Michael Riley, Fiona Foley, Ricky Maynard, James Taylor, Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Brook Andrew, Tracey Moffatt, Leah King-Smith and others.
Publishing details:
[Brisbane, Queensland] : The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016. Quarto, illustrated wrappers by Destiny Deacon, pp. 93, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
photographyview full entry
Reference: see Over the fence : contemporary indigenous photography from the Corrigan collection Includes works by Dr. Christian Thompson, Michael Riley, Fiona Foley, Ricky Maynard, James Taylor, Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Brook Andrew, Tracey Moffatt, Leah King-Smith and others.
Publishing details:
[Brisbane, Queensland] : The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016. Quarto, illustrated wrappers by Destiny Deacon, pp. 93, illustrated.
Aboriginal photographyview full entry
Reference: see Over the fence : contemporary indigenous photography from the Corrigan collection Includes works by Dr. Christian Thompson, Michael Riley, Fiona Foley, Ricky Maynard, James Taylor, Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Brook Andrew, Tracey Moffatt, Leah King-Smith and others.
Publishing details:
[Brisbane, Queensland] : The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2016. Quarto, illustrated wrappers by Destiny Deacon, pp. 93, illustrated.
Panting Johnview full entry
Reference: John Panting : a record of structure
Publishing details: Brisbane : Andrew Baker Art Dealer, 2013. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 24, illustrated. Printed in an edition of 500 copies.
Ref: 1000
Robinson G printer Londonview full entry
Reference: Robinson, G. (Printer).
VIEW OF BOTANY BAY. COPPER ENGRAVING.
[London]: Published by G. Robinson & Co., (1790). First printing. Print. Published in the Ladies Magazine, this early engraving of Sydney features three ships of the First Fleet in Botany Bay (one in the far distance) with two aboriginals in a canoe in the foreground, one fishing and two other canoes to the right. It varies from a similar drawn by Clevely for the "View of Botany Bay" include in Phillip's "The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay with an Account of the Establishment of the Colonies of Port Jackson & Norfolk Island..." published in 1789. The Phillip image has the ships in a very different configuration and a single aboriginal in a canoe in the foreground. Both images show the shore behind with some agricultural developement. The 1790 date is stated by the "dictionaryofSydney.org" website.

6 3/4 x 4 3/4" tipped on paper 8 3/4 x 11 1/4", laid paper, Libraries Australia ID 8417226, in the Dixson Collection at the SLNSW. Faint thin line of glue residue in upper margin from placemnt on an album page. [From Antipodean Books, July 2022]

Clevely - related printview full entry
Reference: Robinson, G. (Printer).
VIEW OF BOTANY BAY. COPPER ENGRAVING.
[London]: Published by G. Robinson & Co., (1790). First printing. Print. Published in the Ladies Magazine, this early engraving of Sydney features three ships of the First Fleet in Botany Bay (one in the far distance) with two aboriginals in a canoe in the foreground, one fishing and two other canoes to the right. It varies from a similar drawn by Clevely for the "View of Botany Bay" include in Phillip's "The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay with an Account of the Establishment of the Colonies of Port Jackson & Norfolk Island..." published in 1789. The Phillip image has the ships in a very different configuration and a single aboriginal in a canoe in the foreground. Both images show the shore behind with some agricultural developement. The 1790 date is stated by the "dictionaryofSydney.org" website.

6 3/4 x 4 3/4" tipped on paper 8 3/4 x 11 1/4", laid paper, Libraries Australia ID 8417226, in the Dixson Collection at the SLNSW. Faint thin line of glue residue in upper margin from placemnt on an album page. [From Antipodean Books, July 2022]

Obarzanek Alexandra view full entry
Reference: Alexandra Obarzanek.
Finkelstein Gallery is honoured to announce a posthumous representation of Mrs. Alexandra Obarzanek. Mrs. Obarzanek was born in Bailystok Poland at the end of the war in 1945. She grew up in Communistic Poland until the age of 13 and immigrated with her mother to Melbourne in 1958 where she attended Elwood high school. She immigrated to Israel just after the six-day war in 1967 and lived and worked on Kibbutz Gal-On until 1974 when she returned to Melbourne. Back in Melbourne she enrolled to RMIT completing a BA in fine arts followed by a Masters in painting.
Obarzanek exhibited commercially in the eighties. Prone to periods of depression, she struggled with her painting and the isolation it entailed she incorporated ceramics in her practice as a social and craft activity, which later in her career became a dominant art form of her practice. The WWII shaped Obarzanek’s life and the outcome of the holocaust in Eastern Europe was the sole driver for her to immigrate to Australia. Obarzanek’s creativity and struggles were directly influenced by the dominant past and to a great extent, her art was a way to make sense of things that could not be reconciled.Mrs. Obarzanek's works are featured in the Jewish Museum of Australia, where they embrace their respected and inestimable permanent collection.
Publishing details: Finkelstein Gasllery, Melbourne 2022, 13pp (downloaded from Fin Gallery website]
Ref: 146
Cadorin Ettoreb sculptorview full entry
Reference: see references p25 in THEO SCHARF - NIGHT IN A CITY, exhibition catalogue, Art Gallery of New South Wales 5 April to 14 May, 2006. Essay by Anne Ryan, listing of the 20 etchings from the ‘Night in the City’ series, biography, etc
Scharf Theoview full entry
Reference: Theo Scharf, Oil paintings, watercolours drawings and prints
Publishing details: Melbourne, 1914
Ref: 1009
White Anthonyview full entry
Reference: Anthony White - Mobilising Materials. At the Mark Rothko Art Centre, Daugavpils, Latvia. With biography and cv and essay. 20 works.
Publishing details: Mark Rothko Art Centre, 2022, hc, 20pp
Ref: 145
Prenzel Robertview full entry
Reference: see Joel’s press release July, 2022:
Leonard Joel is honoured to offer the Laidlaw bedroom suite by Robert Prenzel (1866–1941) in our August Decorative Arts auction.
The suite, made circa 1908, is one of five similar suites made by Prenzel between 1905 and 1910, all to commission for prominent Western District patrons, that, together, form one of the most important bodies of work in earlier Australian furniture design. The suite has remained within the Laidlaw family since its creation and is perhaps the last of these suites to remain intact in original ownership.

A Carved Australian Blackwood Dressing Table by Robert Prenzel, Circa 1908 $20,000 – 25,000
Born and trained as a carver in Germany, Prenzel arrived in Melbourne in 1888. For the next thirteen years, he worked as a designer and carver of decorative elements for use on furniture and in architectural schemes, mostly in fashionable historically-inspired styles. Around 1900, Prenzel turned to new, seemingly disparate sources of inspiration; the European Art Nouveau and Australian fauna and flora, the latter reflecting the current of national pride in Australia surrounding federation in 1901.
These interests are evident, usually separate from each other, in Prenzel’s work in the following years but came together in a more substantial and dramatic way in his 1905–1910 bedroom suites. The first of these was that commissioned by Steuart and Isabella Black as part of a major renovation of their historic Western District homestead ‘Glenormiston’. The Glenormiston suite is, however, only partly a precursor of the following suites for while it is generally similar to these in composition and design, its carved decoration is entirely in the Art Nouveau idiom with no Australian motifs at all.
The change was to come with Prenzel’s next bedroom suite, the ‘Mathias suite’ of 1906–1907, now in the National Gallery of Victoria. This was commissioned by Isabella Black’s visiting sister May, who, despite being Canadian, requested that her suite be decorated with Australian fauna and flora. This suite attracted much attention in Prenzel’s Melbourne workshop before being shipped off and was replicated for another Western District patron (this latter suite now dispersed).
Next was the Laidlaw suite of 1908, commissioned as a gift to Thomas Haliburton Laidlaw, a prosperous auctioneer, station agent, and pastoralist, by his wife Margaret for ‘Kilora’, their fine house in Hamilton for which Prenzel also provided architectural woodwork.
The decoration of the Laidlaw suite is the richest and most exuberant of Prenzel’s 1905–1910 suites. The design and carving of the Glenormiston suite is restrained even by comparison with some of Prenzel’s earlier work, restraint he continued in the Mathias suite even with its introduction of Australian motifs, but Prenzel seems to have cast this restraint aside for the Laidlaws, in so doing reaching for the first time the full-blown style for which he is best known. More boldly carved overall in deeper relief than its predecessors, the Laidlaw suite is also richer in faunal decoration, including, most spectacularly, near-freestanding figures perched atop three pieces in the suite that are not found on any of the other suites.

A Carved Australian Blackwood Wardrobe By Robert Prenzel
Circa 1908 $50,000 – 70,000
In its freedom, Prenzel’s work for the Laidlaws marks a high point among these suites. The last of these, the ‘Davies suite’ of 1910 for another part of the Black family, retains much of the character of the Laidlaw suite but at a more subdued level.
It appears Prenzel made no further suites, turning instead to producing the smaller works – stand-alone faunal panels and occasional single pieces of furniture – that are now the most commonly seen of his work. Typically carved in deep relief, and sometimes surmounted with figures carved almost in the round, these relate most closely to the particular manner of the Laidlaw suite.
Seen in this context, the Laidlaw suite may fairly be regarded as the fullest expression of what we now associate with Robert Prenzel.
DAVID PARSONS / Head of Decorative Arts
Reference: Terence Lane, Robert Prenzel 1866–1941: His Life and Work (National Gallery of Victoria, 1994)
Banner Image (detail): A Carved Australian Blackwood Chest of Drawers by Robert Prenzel, Circa 1908. $20,000 – 25,000
July 2022
Thomas Davidview full entry
Reference: When a still painting shows us that we are moving : Impermanences and other projects 2010-2016, by David Thomas.
"When a still painting shows us that we are moving' presents Melbourne painter and installation artist David Thomas' latest body of work, Impermanences. Featuring contributions from Kit Wise, Professor of Fine Art and Director of the Tasmanian College of the Arts, University of Tasmania; Dr Michael Graeve, a visual and sound artist; and David Thomas."--Website.
Publishing details: Surpllus Pty Ltd, 2016.
Ref: 1000
When a still painting shows us that we are moving : Impermanences and other projects 2010-2016,view full entry
Reference: see When a still painting shows us that we are moving : Impermanences and other projects 2010-2016, by David Thomas.
"When a still painting shows us that we are moving' presents Melbourne painter and installation artist David Thomas' latest body of work, Impermanences. Featuring contributions from Kit Wise, Professor of Fine Art and Director of the Tasmanian College of the Arts, University of Tasmania; Dr Michael Graeve, a visual and sound artist; and David Thomas."--Website.
Publishing details: Surpllus Pty Ltd, 2016.
Namadbara Paddy Compass view full entry
Reference: Clever Man, the life of Paddy Compass Namadbara, by Big Bill Neidjie (Narrator), Bluey Ilkgirr (Narrator), Jacob Nayinggul (Narrator), Jim Wauchope (Narrator), Johnny Williams Snr. (Narrator), Ron Cooper (Narrator), Thompson Yuludjiri (Narrator), and others (Narrator), Ian White (Compiler).
Clever Man: The Life of Paddy Compass Namadbara offers a unique perspective on the life and making of this Aboriginal Western Arnhem clever man or marrkidjbu.
Born at the end of the 19th Century when the Western world had scarcely touched Arnhem Land, Paddy Compass Namadbara acted as a healer for his countrymen and became a powerful and revered leader. Using his clever abilities and wisdom to nurture his community, he enabled the community to deal with the cultural and social changes of the encroaching Western world. He achieved the reputation of being one of the most powerful and clever of traditional marrkidjbu described as 'a proper number one champion!'
Based on stories told by the people he helped, some profoundly and in extraordinary ways. This unique biography looks at his life through the eyes of his Western Arnhem countrymen who witnessed his extraordinary abilities. Ian White, researcher and compiler for Clever Man: The Life of Paddy Compass Namadbara, encourages readers to give greater consideration to the reality of the extraordinary abilities of clever people such as Paddy Compass.
'Ian White's book offers a unique historical glimpse into an Aboriginal world on the cusp of change due to European incursion; it reveals an authentic insight into the special relationship of the 'clever man' with his Dreaming spirits and his process of initiation into the special knowledge of a marrkidjbu. White compiled his generalised account of 'Old Paddy', aka Paddy Compass Namadbara, from a number of West Arnhem people for whom Old Paddy had been a major figure in their lives. Recording various accounts, White's extraordinary work shows Old Paddy's special talent for healing the sick, exercising wisdom, and having visions in which he foresaw future events, for which he offered guidance and strategies for dealing with Western encroachment. Old Paddy's visions of the future foretold major events that were astonishing in the 1950s: Aborigines would get paid for their work, would own land and cars, and that money issues would bring division. All of his predictions came true. A rare insight into the world of the Dreaming, this book is unique and essential reading.' ― Susan Greenwood, University of Sussex

'Forty years since the passing of Paddy Compass Namadbara, his legacy still looms large amongst the people of western Arnhem Land. Ian White has dedicated decades to recording the story of Namadbara's life and here he presents an extraordinary biography as told by the people of this region of the Northern Territory. The anecdotes about Namadbara's exceptional powers as a 'clever man' portray him as a community leader, teacher, sage, mystic, counsellor and healer. These are however more than just marvellous stories that defy explanation and evoke our wonder. The events of Namadbara's life, described by so many witnesses from both sides of the cultural divide, and collated so respectfully in this book, are an ongoing challenge to how various fields of the social and cognitive sciences should deal with such matters.' ― Dr Murray Garde OAM, ANU

Publishing details: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2020, 128pp
Ref: 1000
Ormandy Stephenview full entry
Reference: Stephen Ormandy - Only Dancing.
With decades of international recognition as one half of Dinosaur Designs, Australian artist and designer Stephen Ormandy has spent the past 15 years expanding on his personal artistic practice to further acclaim. Only Dancing is the first publication dedicated to surveying Ormandy's vibrant, large-scale oil painting and the playfulness he brings to everything he does. This latest Formist Edition(Sydney) is produced with a screenprinted PVC dust jacket, metallic reproductions and features an essay by New York-based curator and critic Lilly Wei. The book is a tactile, elegant, and slightly mischievous take on the traditional monograph — an object that catches the eye and keeps it moving, much like Ormandy's seductive paintings.

Publishing details: Formist Editions (Sydney), 96 pages, hardcover,
Ref: 1000
Done Kenview full entry
Reference: Reef by Ken Done
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson Australia, 2020
Ref: 1000
Done Kenview full entry
Reference: Beach by Ken Done
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson Australia, 2020
Ref: 1000
Done Kenview full entry
Reference: Sydney by Ken Done
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson Australia, 2020
Ref: 1000
Identity, Community and Australian Artists, 1890-1914view full entry
Reference: Identity, Community and Australian Artists, 1890-1914, Paris, London and Further Afield, by Kate R. Robertson.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: An Edwardian Excursion?: Identity, Belonging and Community for Australian Artists Abroad
Chapter 2: Widening the Circle of Art: The Voyage to Europe and the Melbourne National Gallery Travelling Scholarship
Chapter 3: From Paris to London: Australians in Ateliers, Clubs and Societies
Chapter 4: The Lure of London: Portraits, Performances and the Australian Brethren of the Brush
Chapter 5: Performing the Role of the Artist: Bohemia, Self-portraits and Dressing-up
Chapter 6: Women outside bohemia: Suffrage, Travel and Imagined Worlds
Chapter 7: Flying Further Afield: Authenticity, the Bush and Artist Colonies in England and France
Epilogue: A Transformed World

An irresistible call lured Australian artists abroad between 1890 and 1914, a transitional period immediately pre- and post-federation. Travelling enabled an extension of artistic frontiers, and Paris – the centre of art – and London – the heart of the Empire – promised wondrous opportunities. These expatriate artists formed communities based on their common bond to Australia, enacting their Australian-ness in private and public settings.

Yet, they also interacted with the broader creative community, fashioning a network of social and professional relationships. They joined ateliers in Paris such as the Académie Julian, clubs like the Chelsea Arts Club in London and visited artist colonies including St Ives in England and Étaples in France. Australian artists persistently sought a sense of belonging, negotiating their identity through activities such as plays, balls, tableaux, parties, dressing-up and, of course, the creation of art. While individual biographies are integral to this study, it is through exploring the connections between them that it offers new insights.

Through utilising extensive archival material, much of which has limited or no publication history, this book fills a gap in existing scholarship. It offers a vital exploration re-consideration of the fluidity of identity, place and belonging in the lives and work of Australian artists in this juncture in British-Australian history.

Reviews
‘Robertson provides a rich survey of key itinerant episodes in the lives of an important generation of Australian artists. She analyses in-depth how these men and women travelled to access the treasures and opportunities afforded by Europe, transforming their identities as they rebalanced their national and international artistic ideals, which her readers will find informative and illuminating.
Matthew C. Potter, Associate Professor of Art and Design History, Northumbria University, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK 
‘Expatriatism is often seen as a blight on a nation's cultural development: Kate Robertson turns that notion on its head and convincingly places fin de siècle painters in Europe at the very centre of Australian art.
Richard White, Associate Professor, History, University of Sydney, Australia 




Publishing details: Bloomsbury, 2022, 256pp, 10 colour and 40 bw illus, pb.
Dowling W Paul photographerview full entry
Reference: see WALKER, Anna Frances (1830-1913); PERRY, George William (photographer)
Studio portrait of botanical artist Anna Frances Walker. Taken in Melbourne, circa 1865. [with Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August, 2022]

ster, Adela (1847-1932), taken in Launceston, Tasmania, 1864. Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 106 x 63 mm (mount); verso imprinted ‘W. Paul Dowling, Photographic Artist. Quadrant, Launceston’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in ink ‘Adela Russell Walker. Rhodes, 1864’ (the Walker family’s Van Diemen’s Land property, near Longford, was called Rhodes House); the print a little pale and with a couple of tiny marks.
A rare mid-1860s portrait photograph of one of the most significant Australian women artists of the nineteenth century, Anna (Annie) Frances Walker, of Rhodes (Sydney) and Longford, Tasmania. 
Another example of this studio portrait of the botanical artist and plant collector is held in a Walker family album in the Mitchell Library, Sydney.
From the Australian National Herbarium website:
Walker, Anna (Annie) Frances (1830-1913). Born in June, 1830, at Rhodes, the family home on Parramatta River, Concord, NSW. She died there in 1913. Her father Thomas Walker was deputy assistant Commissary General in charge of stores at Paramatta and Port Jackson; her mother Anna Elizabeth Blaxland belonged to the high society Blaxland family, famous for the explorer Gregory Blaxland. Her parents married in 1823 and took their young family to Van Diemen’s Land in 1832 to another family property.
Anna inherited her mother’s interest in botany and botanical illustration. When she was about 16 or 17 she spent about two years living with her grandmother at Newington, the Blaxland family’s home on the Parramatta River, who further encouraged her interest in botany. At Newington she received instruction in watercolour painting from Henry Curzon Allport (once a pupil of John Glover).
Thomas Walker died in 1861, and in 1870 the family returned permanently to Rhodes in Concord. Annie remained there with her two unmarried sisters for the rest of their lives. A few years after Anna appears to have begun exhibiting her artwork. In 1873 she submitted ten wildflower works to the NSW Academy of Art exhibition and the Agricultural Society’s show. That same year she won a gold medal in the London Internatiional Exhibitiion for her watercolours of Tasmanian flowers. When the Internatiional Exhibition was held in Sydney in 1879 her collection of wildflower paintings garnered her a ‘Highly Commended’.
In 1881 she sought and received help from Ferdinand von Mueller to annotate some of her paintings in an effort to have them published. In 1887, having had no luck with publishers, she self-funded the publication of Flowers of New South Wales, a small collection of her many flower paintings, perhaps intending to add further volumes if the venture was successful. The poor quality of the ten chromolithographs did not do justice to her paintings.
Over the years she amassed eight volumes of botanical watercolours, some 1,700 illustrations, done in Tasmania and NSW between 1875 and 1910, which she hoped to publish. In this venture she was unsuccessful. In the end she sold her extensive collection to David Scott Mitchell, the founder of the Mitchell Library in NSW for 70 pounds.
“I let it go at the absurd price being too annoyed, & disheartened to trouble any more about the matter.”‘

Perry George William photographerview full entry
Reference: see WALKER, Anna Frances (1830-1913); PERRY, George William (photographer)
Studio portrait of botanical artist Anna Frances Walker. Taken in Melbourne, circa 1865. [with Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August, 2022]

ster, Adela (1847-1932), taken in Launceston, Tasmania, 1864. Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 106 x 63 mm (mount); verso imprinted ‘W. Paul Dowling, Photographic Artist. Quadrant, Launceston’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in ink ‘Adela Russell Walker. Rhodes, 1864’ (the Walker family’s Van Diemen’s Land property, near Longford, was called Rhodes House); the print a little pale and with a couple of tiny marks.
A rare mid-1860s portrait photograph of one of the most significant Australian women artists of the nineteenth century, Anna (Annie) Frances Walker, of Rhodes (Sydney) and Longford, Tasmania. 
Another example of this studio portrait of the botanical artist and plant collector is held in a Walker family album in the Mitchell Library, Sydney.
From the Australian National Herbarium website:
Walker, Anna (Annie) Frances (1830-1913). Born in June, 1830, at Rhodes, the family home on Parramatta River, Concord, NSW. She died there in 1913. Her father Thomas Walker was deputy assistant Commissary General in charge of stores at Paramatta and Port Jackson; her mother Anna Elizabeth Blaxland belonged to the high society Blaxland family, famous for the explorer Gregory Blaxland. Her parents married in 1823 and took their young family to Van Diemen’s Land in 1832 to another family property.
Anna inherited her mother’s interest in botany and botanical illustration. When she was about 16 or 17 she spent about two years living with her grandmother at Newington, the Blaxland family’s home on the Parramatta River, who further encouraged her interest in botany. At Newington she received instruction in watercolour painting from Henry Curzon Allport (once a pupil of John Glover).
Thomas Walker died in 1861, and in 1870 the family returned permanently to Rhodes in Concord. Annie remained there with her two unmarried sisters for the rest of their lives. A few years after Anna appears to have begun exhibiting her artwork. In 1873 she submitted ten wildflower works to the NSW Academy of Art exhibition and the Agricultural Society’s show. That same year she won a gold medal in the London Internatiional Exhibitiion for her watercolours of Tasmanian flowers. When the Internatiional Exhibition was held in Sydney in 1879 her collection of wildflower paintings garnered her a ‘Highly Commended’.
In 1881 she sought and received help from Ferdinand von Mueller to annotate some of her paintings in an effort to have them published. In 1887, having had no luck with publishers, she self-funded the publication of Flowers of New South Wales, a small collection of her many flower paintings, perhaps intending to add further volumes if the venture was successful. The poor quality of the ten chromolithographs did not do justice to her paintings.
Over the years she amassed eight volumes of botanical watercolours, some 1,700 illustrations, done in Tasmania and NSW between 1875 and 1910, which she hoped to publish. In this venture she was unsuccessful. In the end she sold her extensive collection to David Scott Mitchell, the founder of the Mitchell Library in NSW for 70 pounds.
“I let it go at the absurd price being too annoyed, & disheartened to trouble any more about the matter.”‘

Walker Anna Frances 1830-1913 botanical artist view full entry
Reference: see WALKER, Anna Frances (1830-1913); PERRY, George William (photographer)
Studio portrait of botanical artist Anna Frances Walker. Taken in Melbourne, circa 1865. [with Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August, 2022]

ster, Adela (1847-1932), taken in Launceston, Tasmania, 1864. Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 106 x 63 mm (mount); verso imprinted ‘W. Paul Dowling, Photographic Artist. Quadrant, Launceston’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in ink ‘Adela Russell Walker. Rhodes, 1864’ (the Walker family’s Van Diemen’s Land property, near Longford, was called Rhodes House); the print a little pale and with a couple of tiny marks.
A rare mid-1860s portrait photograph of one of the most significant Australian women artists of the nineteenth century, Anna (Annie) Frances Walker, of Rhodes (Sydney) and Longford, Tasmania. 
Another example of this studio portrait of the botanical artist and plant collector is held in a Walker family album in the Mitchell Library, Sydney.
From the Australian National Herbarium website:
Walker, Anna (Annie) Frances (1830-1913). Born in June, 1830, at Rhodes, the family home on Parramatta River, Concord, NSW. She died there in 1913. Her father Thomas Walker was deputy assistant Commissary General in charge of stores at Paramatta and Port Jackson; her mother Anna Elizabeth Blaxland belonged to the high society Blaxland family, famous for the explorer Gregory Blaxland. Her parents married in 1823 and took their young family to Van Diemen’s Land in 1832 to another family property.
Anna inherited her mother’s interest in botany and botanical illustration. When she was about 16 or 17 she spent about two years living with her grandmother at Newington, the Blaxland family’s home on the Parramatta River, who further encouraged her interest in botany. At Newington she received instruction in watercolour painting from Henry Curzon Allport (once a pupil of John Glover).
Thomas Walker died in 1861, and in 1870 the family returned permanently to Rhodes in Concord. Annie remained there with her two unmarried sisters for the rest of their lives. A few years after Anna appears to have begun exhibiting her artwork. In 1873 she submitted ten wildflower works to the NSW Academy of Art exhibition and the Agricultural Society’s show. That same year she won a gold medal in the London Internatiional Exhibitiion for her watercolours of Tasmanian flowers. When the Internatiional Exhibition was held in Sydney in 1879 her collection of wildflower paintings garnered her a ‘Highly Commended’.
In 1881 she sought and received help from Ferdinand von Mueller to annotate some of her paintings in an effort to have them published. In 1887, having had no luck with publishers, she self-funded the publication of Flowers of New South Wales, a small collection of her many flower paintings, perhaps intending to add further volumes if the venture was successful. The poor quality of the ten chromolithographs did not do justice to her paintings.
Over the years she amassed eight volumes of botanical watercolours, some 1,700 illustrations, done in Tasmania and NSW between 1875 and 1910, which she hoped to publish. In this venture she was unsuccessful. In the end she sold her extensive collection to David Scott Mitchell, the founder of the Mitchell Library in NSW for 70 pounds.
“I let it go at the absurd price being too annoyed, & disheartened to trouble any more about the matter.”‘

Rae Iso 1860 - 1940view full entry
Reference: RAE, Iso (1860 - 1940), The Cook, Étaples, 1917 [with Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August, 2022]
Pastel, pencil and wash on cream paper, 23 x 12.5 cm, signed in ink lower left, inscribed in pencil lower centre ‘Cook at Canteen behind convent run by ‘Officer’s Club’ Mrs. Marcus Peterson’, framed.
Iso Rae was born in Melbourne in 1860 and trained at the National Gallery School alongside fellow students Rupert Bunny and John Longstaff from 1877 to 1887. In 1887 she moved to Paris with her mother and sister, before settling in 1890 in the artists’ colony at the fishing village of Étaples. She was a long term resident in the village, painting with fellow Australians Hilda Rix Nicholas and Rupert Bunny, exhibiting works in Australia as well as Europe. When war broke out in 1914 a number of artists fled to England, however Rae remained in Étaples, becoming (along with Jessie Traill) the only Australian woman artist to document wartime in France. Despite this, she was not selected as one of the sixteen official Australian War Artists during the First World War, in fact when assembled in 1918, no woman was represented in that group.
Since then, her work has been collected by a number of Australian museums, including the Australian War Memorial. Curator Betty Snowden observes:
‘In her drawings she uses black outlines filled with flat areas of colour, a post-impressionist technique reminiscent of some of the French poster artists of the late nineteenth century…The regular patterning of men, tents and buildings in many of the works suggests the control that was imposed by the vast machine of men and modern war. In many drawings there is a strong sense of waiting: waiting to move into battle, waiting for the war to end, waiting to be sent home.’ Betty Snowden, “Iso Rae in Étaples: another perspective of war”. Australian War Memorial. p. 37 https://www.awm.gov.au/sites/default/files/121426/files/isorae0.pdf
Intimate and direct, Iso Rae’s works rarely appear in the market, and are first hand impressions from an Australian woman of daily camp life during the First World War.
Howe George Government Printer, printed 1802-06view full entry
Reference: [EARLY SYDNEY PRINTING] Receipt for payment of quit rent made to the Crown by Edward Robinson. Sydney, 29 January 1806. [with Douglas Stewart Fine Books, August, 2022]
Sydney, NSW : [George Howe, Government Printer], [printed 1802-06]. Printed in black ink on laid paper, 40 x 98 mm; manuscript date of 29 January 1806, with further clerical entries recording the receipt from Edwd. Robinson of 11 shillings, ‘being the Amount of one Year’s Quit-Rent due to the Crown the 28th of Sept. 1805 on one Grant and one Lease.’; signed D.D. Mann (David Dickenson Mann, government clerk); complete and fine.
There can be little doubt that this official receipt from the Crown, made out to Edward Robinson for his (slightly overdue) annual quit rent payments for the year 1805, was printed by George Howe on the same wooden screw-press that had arrived with the First Fleet, and had been used by George Hughes to print the oldest known Australian imprints. It is an extremely early example of an ephemeral Australian printing, which could conceivably have been printed anywhere between 1802, when Howe was made Government Printer, and January 1806, when the receipt was dated and signed by Mann. Its diminutive size reflects the imperative to conserve the limited stocks of paper and ink in the fledgling colony.
GEORGE HOWE & EARLY PRINTING IN SYDNEY
George Howe (1771-1821) was the son of a government printer on Basseterre, Saint Christopher Island (Saint Kitts). As a young man he went to London and worked as a journeyman printer for The Times newspaper. In 1799 he was convicted of larceny and sentenced to death, but this was commuted to transportation for life to New South Wales. Howe arrived in Sydney in November 1800.
The first issue of Australia’s first newspaper, The Sydney Gazette, and New South Wales Advertiser, was published on Saturday, March 5, 1803, by Howe, who had been appointed Government Printer due to his experience working on the London Times. In a despatch to Lord Hobart dated May 9, 1803, Governor King refers to George Howe as an ‘ingenious man’ (Ferguson 383). Howe not only printed but was also the editor of the Gazette, although the content of the newspaper – published under the initiative of Governor King – was under strict government censorship. The paper was printed on a small wooden screw-press which had been brought to the colony by Arthur Phillip in the First Fleet, along with some metal type, paper and ink. (It would not be long before ink had to be improvised using local resources: a charcoal base mixed with fat, whale and fish oils, and tree resins). David Collins (Account of the English Colony in New South Wales) noted in November 1795 that a young printer, George Hughes, had used the press to print numerous government notices and orders. Copies of some of these ephemeral printed items are held in the Record Office, London (Ferguson, Foster & Green.The Howes and their Press, p 15). This almost certainly makes Hughes responsible for the very earliest Australian imprints (Ferguson, op. cit.), of which the oldest to have survived is a playbill dated 30 July 1796 (now in the National Library of Australia). George Howe used the same press to print the colony’s first book, The New South Wales General Standing Orders, in 1802 – probably confirming him as the colony’s second printer – and also its second, the first edition of the New South Wales pocket almanack and colonial remembrancer, in 1806. In May 1804 a complete set of new type had been brought from London, although it would not be until 1814 that a replacement for the wooden screw-press – a new iron Stanhope printing press, ordered by Governor Macquarie – would arrive.
McInnes William Beckwithview full entry
Reference: William Beckwith McInnes : an artist’s life, by Margot Tasca. With Index. [To be indexed fully - artists with only one reference in the book’s index have not yet been added to the Scheding Index].
‘The artist William Beckwith McInnes was a paragon of early 20th century Australian art, and the seven-time winner of the renowned Archibald Prize. An Artist’s Life is the first time his full story is being told.
Winner of the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ first four Archibald Prizes (1922 to 1925) – and several more thereafter – was Melbourne’s William Beckwith McInnes. With the Archibald wins, and then in his early 30s, McInnes was already an acclaimed landscape artist and had exhibited works painted in the British Isles, Spain and Morocco. After his Archibald successes he became, arguably, the country’s most sought-after portrait painter with official commissions to paint war heroes, prime ministers, lord mayors and other notables. In 1927 he was commissioned to paint the opening of Canberra’s new Parliament House and 1933 saw him in London painting The Duke of York who was soon to take the throne.
In 1904, at age 14, McInnes was enrolled at Melbourne’s National Gallery of Victoria Art School with the support of its occasionally controversial Director, L. Bernard Hall. McInnes’s later success was founded on the academic training received at the School which, very much of its time, taught traditional skills of drawing and pictorial composition. After art school he became an active member of the arts community, participating in painting trips with well known fellow artists and keeping abreast of new galleries and arts associations at a time when some knowledge of European Modernism was beginning to infiltrate the local culture. In 1916 he was appointed master of the Gallery’s Drawing School, replacing his former teacher Frederick McCubbin. Later he became Director of the Art School and acting-Director of the Gallery itself, thus faithfully maintaining his connection with the institution until his early death in 1939.
While not averse to the contemporary developments emanating from overseas, McInnes was intent on maintaining the School’s stellar reputation and equipping his students with the skills needed to succeed in a rapidly changing art world. It was a time of unavoidable unrest in the arts community, debates about Modernism escalated and controversies appeared in the press. McInnes was caught in a time of exponential change which could not be avoided and he handled it with care and equanimity as is attested by the wide range of artists and friends of that time whose views and opinions appear in the book.
Margot Tasca’s sympathetic, assiduously researched text, with numerous previously unpublished images, also traces the artist’s personal and family life. Married to fellow artist Violet McInnes in 1915, they had six children and lived an idyllic life alongside other artists in Melbourne’s Bohemian suburb of Alphington. With ‘movie-star’ looks and a kind and generous personality his story, which is not without tragedy, is now told in this important publication which hopefully sheds some new light on an occasionally misunderstood period of Australian art history.’

Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd, 2022. Quarto, laminated boards, pp. 232, illustrated.
Treasures : highlights of the cultural collections of the University of Melbourneview full entry
Reference: Treasures : highlights of the cultural collections of the University of Melbourne, Chris McAuliffe and Peter Yule, (editors). Includes within the extensive volume sections on the collections of fine art, antiquities, ethnographic art, rare books, manuscripts, early prints, decorative arts, scientific instruments and sculpture.

Publishing details: Melbourne : The Miegunyah Press, 2003. Quarto, boards in dustjacket (light handing wear), pp. 315, extensively illustrated.

Scully Seanview full entry
Reference: Sean Scully visited Australia and spent some time travelling in the Centre

Brash Barbaraview full entry
Reference: Barbara Brash—Holding Form, Geelong Art Gallery Exhibition. Saturday 25 June to Sunday 9 October 2022 
Barbara Brash was a key artist in Melbourne’s printmaking revival of the 1950s and ’60s. Her richly coloured and dynamic works convey a unique visual language built on experimentation and a proficiency across a multitude of printmaking techniques. Throughout her career Brash consistently tested the boundaries of the printed medium, often combining several printmaking processes in her works, and embracing the power and potential of abstract forms through the synthesis of colour, gesture and texture in her impressions of landscapes and the natural world. Bringing together woodcuts, linocuts, lithographs and screenprints from throughout the artist’s career, Barbara Brash—Holding Form provides an insight into the evolution of Brash’s innovative and expressive practice.

Publishing details: Geelong Art Gallery, 2022, [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Parke Trentview full entry
Reference: Trent Parke: The Black Rose. Catherine Hunter
Publishing details: DVD
Ref: 1000
Sages Jennyview full entry
Reference: Jenny Sages: Paths to Portraiture, by Catherine Hunter
Publishing details: DVD
Ref: 1000
Jarver Peterview full entry
Reference: The Top End of Down Under
Publishing details: Thunderhead Photographics, Darwin, 1988. Reprint. Square quarto hardcover; grey boards with black upper board and spine titling, grey endpapers; 118pp, colour plates.

Ref: 1000
Swift Ianview full entry
Reference: Avant Guard Dogs: Sculptural Cartoons
Publishing details: Katoomba Fine Art, 2006. Quarto paperback; 60pp., colour illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Caporael Suzanne view full entry
Reference: see Heritage Auctions, Dallas, US, August, 2022, Lot 28002, Suzanne Caporael (American, b. 1974) Shoalhaven, New South Wales, from Salt Marsh Suite, 2003 Lithograph in colors with hand painting, pencil, chine collé on kozo paper 19-1/4 x 14 inches (48.9 x 35.6 cm) (sheet) Ed. 25/30 Signed, numbered and dated in pencil along lower edge Property from the G.E. Corporate Art Collection HID03101062020
Floated and framed under acrylic. Not examined out of frame. Presents well with no visible issues to note.
Framed Dimensions 26.5 X 21.5 Inches

Hinton Howardview full entry
Reference: Howard Hinton Memorial Exhibition. Catalogue for a memorial exhibition of works presented by the late Mr. Howard Hinton, O.B.E. to the National Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, including some of the works bequeathed by him to the Teachers College, Armidale. Introduction by Lionel Lindsay.

Publishing details: Sydney: Thomas Henry Tennant, Government Printer, 1948. First Edition.
24cm x 18.5cm. 18 pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1009
Howard Hinton Collectionview full entry
Reference: see Hinton Howard
Survey 6view full entry
Reference: Survey 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery.
Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices. Featuring Frank Chavat, Ray Coles, Stan de Teliga, Stephen Earle, John Firth-Smith, Col Jordan, Mike Kitching, Elwyn Lynn, Rod Milgate, Ken Reinhard, Henry Salkauska, Peter Travis, Stephen Walker, Guy Warren, and Dick Watkins.


Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Chavat Frank view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Coles Ray view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

de Teliga Stan view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Earle Stephenview full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Firth-Smith John view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Col Jordanview full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Mike Kitchingview full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Elwyn Lynnview full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Milgate Rod view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Reinhard Ken view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Salkauska Henry view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Travis Peter view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Walker Stephen view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Warren Guy view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Watkins Dick

view full entry
Reference: see 6 Art Exhibition, Farmer's Blaxland Gallery. Exhibition catalogue. Short biographies of the artists with list of works and prices.
Publishing details: Sydney: Farmer's Blaxland Gallery, 1966. [8] pages. Saddle-stapled wrappers.

Newton Helmut view full entry
Reference: Us and Them. Helmut Newton; Alice Spring.
Publishing details: Zurich, Berlin and New York: Scalo, 1999. 199 pages, black and white illustrations. Black papered boards, gray lettering, pictorial jacket.
Ref: 1000
The Scoreview full entry
Reference: The Score. By Jacqueline Doughty
A cross-disciplinary exhibition of visual art, dance, music and vocal performance. Artists and performers include: Pia Borg, John Cage, Roy de Maistre, Fayen d'Evie, Marco Fusinato, Charles Gaines, Kurltjunyintja Jackie Giles, Michaela Gleave, Agatha Gothe-Snape, Nathan Gray, Helen Grogan, Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack, Yuki Kihara, Emily Kam Kngwarray, Shelley Lasica, Sonia Leber & David Chesworth, Dylan Martorell, Angelica Mesiti, John Nixon, Sandra Parker & Rhian Hinkley, Rammey Ramsey, Mia Salsjo, Charlie Sofo, Sriwhana Spong, Christine Sun Kim & Thomas Mader, Danae Valenza, and Jude Walton.

Publishing details: Melbourne: The Ian Potter Museum of Art, 2017. 90 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Neish Edithview full entry
Reference: see CAPRICORNIA QUEENSLAND: A HERITAGE SKETCHBOOK, Edith Neish; Lorna McDonald

Publishing details: Rockhampton: Central Queensland University Press, 2001. [viii], 152 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

McDonald Lornaview full entry
Reference: see CAPRICORNIA QUEENSLAND: A HERITAGE SKETCHBOOK, Edith Neish; Lorna McDonald

Publishing details: Rockhampton: Central Queensland University Press, 2001. [viii], 152 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

CAPRICORNIA QUEENSLAND: A HERITAGE SKETCHBOOKview full entry
Reference: CAPRICORNIA QUEENSLAND: A HERITAGE SKETCHBOOK, Edith Neish; Lorna McDonald

Publishing details: Rockhampton: Central Queensland University Press, 2001. [viii], 152 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Ciccarone Juliaview full entry
Reference: Julia Ciccarone - Between Worlds
Publishing details: Melbourne: Niagara Galleries, 2018. 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Dominguez Nelsonview full entry
Reference: Nelson Dominguez, by Manuel Lopez Oliva

Publishing details: Sydney: Craftsman House, 1998.168 pages, colour illustrations. Gray cloth, silver lettering, illustrated french fold jacket.

Ref: 1000
Figueiredo Marta (b. 1979)view full entry
Reference: Marta Figueiredo, exhibition at FINKELSTEIN GALLERY.
Marta Figueiredo (b. 1979) is a Portuguese architect & multidisciplinary artist based in NAARM/Melbourne. In 2016, she founded her design practice which unites innovative technology and craft to produce playfulness, joy, and sensory experimentation.

With her works she wants to challenge beliefs about standardisation, sustainability, and prompt discussions about new ways design can speak to a broader sensory experience.
With this approach, she’s pushing into a new kind of artistic expression in design that aims to instigate a richer, more layered interaction between individual and object - one that has the potential to be different for each person, depending on the particularities of their mind and body.

Marta is motivated by a desire to challenge the notion of design and find alternatives to irresponsible mass production and the concept of the "average individual" as a consumer.
Marta has received various awards (High Commendation Clarence Prize for Excellence in Furniture Design 2021, Fringe Furniture Experimental Design Award 2018) and nominations for several others (Finalist Australian Furniture Design Award (AFDA) 2020).

Her works have been included in a number of shows both in Australia and abroad, including Shanghai, Paris, the Brussels Collectible Fair, and Milan Design Week and collections (Metaphores - Hermès Holding Textiles).

“What if the practical objects in our lives could engage us playfully, kindly, lovingly? Reminding us of our brighter, lighter, more childlike selves through their very function?”


The Elementary Abacus offers a new kind of inclusive sensory experience, while featuring familiar references and performing everyday functionality. Keeping visual and physical experimentation at the forefront of the design process, the Elementary Abacus embodies the desire to see more designs that induce a state of ‘openness to experience’- design that caters to everyone, regardless of their sensory abilities. A piece that challenges standardisation and speaks of product design’s potential to feature more sensory richness, traditional craftspersonship and modern technologies, without environmental compromise.

The Elementary Abacus has components that have to be moved along a tubular arch to enable one of the two integrated tables to be used. One of them is a coffee table, and the other is a counter-height cocktail table. The beads are covered in seductive colours and textures: velvety burgundy flocking, glossy sorbet looking lacquer, heavenly glow 24 carat gold leaf, red and pearl white 3Ddimensional hand stitched wool fabric and braille bumps, to captivate and invite people to touch, to enjoyment.
-Marta Figueiredo
Publishing details: FINKELSTEIN GALLERY, 2022.
Ref: 1000
Mosman Art Prize 1947-1996 Theview full entry
Reference: The Mosman Art Prize 1947-1996, Pamela Bell; Allan Gamble.
The collector's copy, limited to 5 hand assembled and numbered copies, of which this is number 4, illustrating, in colour, each year's winner of the Mosman Art Prize starting with Margaret Olley in 1947 through to Elizabeth Cummings in 1996 published on the eve of the 50th year of the prize. Foreword by Virginia Howard, Mayor of Mosman, introductory essays by Pamela Bell and Allan Gamble.
Publishing details: [Sydney]: [Pamela Bell and Allan Gamble], [1997].
Collector's Edition. Signed by Author
30.5cm x 21cm. [90], [2] pages, colour illustrations. Bonded leather.

Ref: 1009
Gibson Bessie view full entry
Reference: Bessie Gibson, 1868-1961.
Publishing details: Brisbane: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2001. [8] pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled self- wrappers.
Exhibition catalogue. Price list laid in.

Ref: 1009
War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relationsview full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
German Australian Artistic Relationsview full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
von Guérard Eugene view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Ostoja-Kotkowski Stanislaus view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Lange Eleanore view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Hirschfeld-Mack Ludwig view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Frankel Tilli view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Scharf Theoview full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Friederberger Klaus view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Fabian Erwin view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Kaiser Peter view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Heckroth Hein view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Moore Alan view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Feuerring Maximilian view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Sellbach Udo view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Feddersen Jutta view full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Hoppé E Oview full entry
Reference: See War and Peace: 200 Years of Australian-German Artistic Relations, BY Butler, Rex; Donaldson, A D S. 


Publishing details: Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, Iss. 8,  (2014/2015): P1-24.
Melbourne Savage Clubview full entry
Reference: A Social-cultural reading: the Melbourne Savage Club through its collections. By Graeme H. Williams FRMIT (Arch), M. Bus. (Property) Grad Dip (Real Estate Development and Investment)
Submitted in total fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Masters of Arts (by Thesis only)
Publishing details: Faculty of Arts & Education
School of Communication and Creative Arts Deakin University
May 2013
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Sidney Nolan - The Heide Years, 1938-1947, Bonhams auction, Sydney, 23 AUGUST 2022.
In the opinion of the late Edmund Capon, director of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, 'Nolan is the best known, the most familiar, name in the history of modern Australian art'. Nolan's first decade as an artist has had more written about it than any other period of his career. The story is of ground-breaking art and a tangled love affair, a story as intriguing and captivating as that of the Bloomsbury Group in England or of Peggy Guggenheim in Venice. Nolan's abstracts, such as Boy and the Moon, often called Moonboy (now in the National Gallery of Australia), scandalised contemporary reviewers and artists; his St Kilda images combined contemporary international iconography with the tawdry imagery of his spent youth; the Wimmera series redefined the depiction of the Australian landscape, the first significant shift since Arthur Streeton and Tom Roberts in the 1880s; and, of course, the Ned Kelly series that has made him Australia's most famous artist outside this country. The enduring influence on this pioneering work was the house called Heide and his relationship with its owners, John and Sunday Reed. One of the most famous storeys in Australian art history began as Nolan turned twenty-one, the son of a tram driver, determined to make a name for himself as a radical modern artist. It ended when he was thirty, his Ned Kelly series just completed, with a one-way flight away from the Reeds, from Heide, and ultimately from Australia.
In 1938, when Nolan first met John and Sunday Reed at Heide, he was almost unknown in the art world. After practical training in the Department of Design and Crafts at Prahran Technical College and some classes at the National Gallery School, he developed his skills in the art department at Fayrefield Hats, designing shop displays and advertising. However, his outlook was anything but parochial or commercial, and his objective then was to move to Europe to paint. Nolan's earliest paintings date to the summer of 1936-37, three landscapes painted in the Kiewa Valley (see lot 1) that suggest familiarity with van Gogh and European Post-Impressionism. A few months later, on an infamous trip to Selby near Melbourne, he produced three more, this time influenced, it appears, by Paul Klee and other European contemporaries (see lot 3). After his attempt to stow away aboard a ship failed dismally, he bluffed his way into the office of Sir Keith Murdoch in the hope of being awarded an overseas travel scholarship. He took a folio of experimental abstract drawings (such as lot 5), to which Sir Keith responded well, referring him to the newspaper's art critic Basil Burdett. The latter turned him down for a scholarship but recommended he contact John and Sunday Reed, prominent patrons of contemporary art.
John Reed, a Cambridge-educated lawyer of Tasmanian pastoralist heritage, married cosmopolitan Sunday Baillieu, of the prominent Melbourne family, in 1932. Two years later, they bought the house and land on Melbourne's eastern fringe that became known as Heide and there, they threw their energy into nurturing the arts. When Nolan entered their orbit, a new world of opportunity opened to him: the company and conversation of intellectual and influential friends, access to the Reed's library of art, Literature, and poetry, and, in due course, financial support that allowed him to focus on his art. Other young artists also congregated around the Reeds, including Albert Tucker, John Perceval, Joy Hester, and Arthur Boyd – a group known today as The Angry Penguins. But, as is well known, Nolan's relationship with the Reeds assumed even greater intimacy and complexity when he and Sunday became lovers, apparently with John's knowledge. The affair ended Nolan's marriage to Elizabeth Patterson in 1941, and he moved to Heide, leaving behind his infant daughter, Amelda. Sunday became his muse, collaborator, and studio assistant, while John's influence in art circles and publishing made connections for him and opened doors.
Nolan's art evolved continually after his first meeting with the Reeds, and with their encouragement during 1938-39, he worked assiduously developing abstraction, a rarity in Australia then. He even attracted mild controversy at the recently formed Contemporary Art Society (of which John Reed was vice-president) when he exhibited Head of Rimbaud, an experimental abstract that challenged at least one fellow artist (see lots 5 to 12 for other abstract works dating to 1937-39). From this period emerged a language of repeated symbols associated with his adolescent haunts around St Kilda conflated with images derived from his interpretation of poetry and Literature. These attracted the attention of Serge Lifar, choreographer of the Ballets Russes, then performing in Australia, who, in early 1940, commissioned him to design the sets and costumes for his radical ballet, Icare. Nolan received prominent national press coverage and a standing ovation at the Sydney premiere, and, in a way, this served as his own public debut. (see lots 14-19). Encouraged by the success, he held his first solo exhibition that winter in his Russell Street studio showing works from the previous three years taped or pinned to the shocking pink walls. After Amelda's birth in 1941 and the start of his new relationship, his art took a gentler turn with richly coloured images of angels, girls with flowers, the Garden of Eden, and further development of his Luna Park theme (see lots 23-27). In early 1942 in the weeks before Nolan's military conscription, Sunday turned the debate at Heide to the possibility of reinventing Australian landscape painting. Nolan's attention shifted dramatically, and over two months, he began his first experiments using a flattened perspective and, in some, an almost childlike use of colour to depict the country around Heide and the urban landscape of St Kilda. In an interview decades later, Nolan said he had a soft spot for these works and kept them under his painting table. Following their exhibition in 2017-18, this auction is the first to include a group of them (see lots 23, 24, 25, 29, 30, 31, 32). Experiments with landscapes became Nolan's focus during his military service. The Wimmera series, named after the district in western Victoria, where he was stationed, is regarded as some of his most important work (see lots 37, 39 and 40). The great majority of these works are now in public collections.
Throughout his time in the army, Nolan was in constant contact by letter and telephone with Sunday and John; Sunday visited him when she could, and Heide remained his home when he was on leave. In 1944, fearing that he was about to be sent on active service overseas, Nolan failed to report for duty, assumed a false name, and went into hiding, moving between a friend's loft in Parkville and Heide. During this period as a fugitive, his painting assumed new, anxious energy and rawness seen in works such as Beach, painted in December that year (see lot 41). It also led him in 1945 to start painting the story of another outlaw, Ned Kelly. It is easy to forget that the Kelly series comprises so much more than the iconic group of paintings dating from 1946-47 now hanging at the National Gallery of Australia and that there are other works depicting additional episodes in the narrative (see lots 46 and 47).
The most enigmatic painting in this auction is Figure and Angel (see lot 43), which hung over the mantelpiece at Nolan's home for years. It is dated February 1946, days before Nolan painted the first of the Kelly works now at the National Gallery of Australia. Today we see a vertical painting of a figure that Mary Nolan, his widow, told me was Saint Joseph of Arimathea, walking away from us, leaning on a heavy staff and an angel flying above the rocky landscape. But turn the painting anticlockwise, so it is horizontal, and it becomes evident that Nolan painted over another work soon after its completion, making use of the original work to form new patterns: floral wallpaper can be seen, like that in Sunday's bedroom, and so too can the outline of a bentwood chair, both of which feature in one of the most famous Kelly paintings, Constable Fitzpatrick and Kate Kelly (the 1945 version is in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria; the larger 1946 version is in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia). Does the staff look like the metal barrel of a rifle? And what is the applique square shape under the top paint layer? Further investigation may determine what lies beneath.
The turmoil depicted in the Kelly series mirrored the turmoil in Nolan's life. He was thirty, his relationship with John and Sunday was increasingly fraught, he still had not travelled, nor had he sold a single picture in a commercial exhibition. The last Kelly painting from this era was painted in July 1947, and a few days later, 75 years ago, he left Heide and the Reeds behind forever.
Mark Fraser, 
The Estate of Lady Nolan
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2022
Ref: 1000
Grist Eleanor (Nellie) (1871-1957)
view full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art, 23 August 2022, Sydney, lot 55:
Eleanor (Nellie) Grist (1871-1957)
Weary, 1894
signed and dated lower right: 'N. Grist / 1894'
oil on canvas
91.5 x 71.0cm (36 x 27 15/16in).
Frame: Original, Isaac Whitehead, Melbourne
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Private collection, Melbourne
thence by descent
Private collection, Melbourne

Eleanor 'Nellie' Beatrice Grist (1871-1957) was studying at the National Gallery School in Melbourne from 1894-1895 when the present work was executed. Little is documented of the artist. In the early 1890s she was known to have painted portraits in oils and subsequently was better recognized as a teacher and practitioner of porcelain painting in Melbourne. Active from the 1890s through to the 1940s, Grist was a member of the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors between 1912-1920.

The connection with her friend and colleague, Florence Fuller and her original painting Weary, 1888, now in the collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, is unknown. However, for centuries it has been common practice for students to copy the works of established artists as part of their training. 

Housed in an original Isaac Whitehead frame, Whitehead was the preeminent frame maker in Melbourne supplying frames to many established artists such as Eugene von Guerard, Nicholas Chevalier and Louise Buvelot.
Fuller Florence afterview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art, 23 August 2022, Sydney, lot 55:
Eleanor (Nellie) Grist (1871-1957)
Weary, 1894
signed and dated lower right: 'N. Grist / 1894'
oil on canvas
91.5 x 71.0cm (36 x 27 15/16in).
Frame: Original, Isaac Whitehead, Melbourne
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
Private collection, Melbourne
thence by descent
Private collection, Melbourne

Eleanor 'Nellie' Beatrice Grist (1871-1957) was studying at the National Gallery School in Melbourne from 1894-1895 when the present work was executed. Little is documented of the artist. In the early 1890s she was known to have painted portraits in oils and subsequently was better recognized as a teacher and practitioner of porcelain painting in Melbourne. Active from the 1890s through to the 1940s, Grist was a member of the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors between 1912-1920.

The connection with her friend and colleague, Florence Fuller and her original painting Weary, 1888, now in the collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, is unknown. However, for centuries it has been common practice for students to copy the works of established artists as part of their training. 

Housed in an original Isaac Whitehead frame, Whitehead was the preeminent frame maker in Melbourne supplying frames to many established artists such as Eugene von Guerard, Nicholas Chevalier and Louise Buvelot.
Balson Ralphview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Important Australian Art, 23 August 2022, Sydney, lot 39:
Ralph Balson (1890-1964)
Constructive Painting, c.1940
oil on cardboard
78.0 x 63.0cm (30 11/16 x 24 13/16in).
Footnotes
PROVENANCE
The artist's estate
thence by descent
Private collection
Philip Bacon Galleries, Brisbane
Private collection, Queensland

EXHIBITED
probably, Exhibition of Oil Paintings by Ralph Balson, Anthony Hordern and Sons Limited, Sydney, 29 July - 9 August 1941
Ralph Balson, Gallery A, Sydney, November 1979, cat. 12
Ralph Balson: 10 Constructive Paintings, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, 1 - 30 October 1980, cat. 1
R-Balson-/41 - Anthony Horderns' Fine Art Galleries, Ivan Dougherty Galleries, College of Fine Arts, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, 22 August - 27 September 2008

LITERATURE
R-Balson-/41 - Anthony Horderns' Fine Art Galleries, Ivan Dougherty Galleries, College of Fine Arts, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, 2008, p. 12 (illus.)
'Art Notes', Art Monthly Australia, August 2008, issue 212, p. 54 (illus.)

RELATED WORKS
Painting, 1941, oil on paperboard, 78.7 x 63.5cm, in the collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney
Painting no. 14, 1941, oil on cardboard, 47.3 x 78.8cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Painting, 1941, oil on cardboard on composition board, 47.2 x 78.7cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

A little over eighty years ago in July 1941, as Ralph Balson mounted his exhibition of constructive (or 'non-objective' paintings, he used both terms), the mood in Sydney was sombre. Britain and America had just frozen all Japanese assets in preparation for a war in the Pacific; the bombing of British towns and cities commenced; campaigns in Greece and North Africa suffered heavy losses; and the German Army moved relentlessly eastward into the Ukraine and towards Leningrad. 

At home the war was also beginning to bite. On the south coast of NSW, dairy farmers called for higher prices for milk and severe petrol restrictions slowed the delivery of food, clothing and household goods across the nation. Air raid shelters, curfews, sirens, drills and blackouts would soon come. But for Ralph Balson the war was also personal. A few months before, his 21 year old son Peter had enlisted in the R.A.A.F. and would soon see active duty in Europe. In 1943, he would be shot down over Germany and taken a prisoner of war. Months would pass before Balson and his wife knew whether Peter was still alive. 

By the beginning of the war, Balson had reached a stage of maturity and confidence in his art practice after decades of intense study and work. He took his first tentative moves towards abstraction with the 1939 group exhibition at the David Jones Art Gallery, showing works with prisms of vivid colour and fragmentation of form which, while abstracted, were still recognisably representational. The exhibition provoked a fierce critical backlash but rather than being tamed by the experience, Balson if anything, became more radical and over the next eighteen months worked hard on a startling new series of works.

After two years Balson had sufficient works to mount a solo exhibition. He presented twenty-one works of untitled completely abstract work, their only identifiers the number in the catalogue and the price. In contrast to 1939, the exhibition hardly caused a ripple. All the press notices were brief and attempted to explain, in the simplest terms, where 'this type of art' fitted. It belonged to the modern age the writer for the Truth declared – to the age of the motor car and machine – and was distinguished by simplicity of form and expression. Paul Haefliger, the newly-appointed art critic for the Sydney Morning Herald demonstrated his recent acquaintance with contemporary European art by acknowledging the influence of Leger, Gleizes and others. Balson, he wrote (albeit reluctantly), possessed 'an excellent colour sense and feeling for design' that too few Australian artists could claim. 

Balson had indeed been looking at the work of Leger and Gleizes, but there were many others he studied closely, ranging from Wassily Kandinsky and Rudolf Bauer to Piet Mondrian and Ben Nicholson. Although he would later say that the biggest influence came from Mondrian, the various books and catalogues known to have been either in his personal collection or borrowed from friends, reveal the true breadth and depth of his reading and thinking. 

In Balson's paintings of 1940/1941, circles, squares, rectangles and triangles float and swirl across the flat plane of the surface. Colours are muted rather than primary and, perhaps unsurprisingly, fashionable and contemporary. The faded pinks, pale yellows, pastel blues and mauve-greys that fill these compositions can be seen in the colour sections of the popular women's magazines and pattern books of the day, though this particular work and a couple of others also have another palette running in counterpoint, of military greens, blues and browns.

What Balson embraced in abstract painting, he later explained to fellow artist and writer Herbert Badham, was that 'the source of true design is to be found in cosmic laws and that this truth offers a better basis for progress than any other' (Adams, p.24, Edwards, p.38). This view of art was essentially optimistic, transcendent and utopian. It was beyond representation and above reality. It emphasised abstract art's positivity, its ability to lift humanity above the destructiveness and baseness of the material world. It was to herald a new expression of truth. Like the writings of Wassily Kandinsky, and later, Hilla Rebay – both of whom Balson read – it had its origins in Theosophy, though Balson's interests seemed to lean more to a mathematical and scientific direction rather than the overtly spiritual. 

None of the paintings sold and with the war deepening, the exhibition was packed up and sent back to his studio. Balson knew his art would be little understood by the average collector as those who bought from him tended to be among the more sophisticated in Sydney society. Patrons such as the Andre Lhote-trained artist Mary Evatt and her husband Herbert who was soon to be the next Attorney-General. This encouragement seems to have been sufficient for Balson persisted with abstraction and never returned to a figurative style. He remained convinced that this was the future. On 30th May 1945 Warrant-Officer Peter Balson was among thirty British, Australian and Canadian POWs liberated from Germany. 

For the next fifteen years Ralph Balson would concentrate on constructive compositions of pure colour and intricate geometry. He refined his technique and painted some of the most beautiful and profound works of his career. He exhibited, often more than once, every year from 1944 for the next twenty years, and was recognised in his lifetime as one of Australia's most important artists. 

Dr Candice Bruce
Savvas Nikeview full entry
Reference: see article in Look magazine, Aug-Sept, 2022
Douglas Blakview full entry
Reference: see article in Look magazine, Aug-Sept, 2022
Douglas Blakview full entry
Reference: see article in Look magazine, Aug-Sept, 2022
Publishing details: Look Magazine, Art Gallery of NSW Members Society, 2022
Famous Australian Artistsview full entry
Reference: Famous Australian Artists, by Lois Hunter


Publishing details: Sydney: New Holland, 2003.
Reprint.
104 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Ref: 1009
Lahey Vidaview full entry
Reference: Vida Lahey - Colour and Modernism
Publishing details: Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery, 2010.
First Edition.
27.5cm x 21cm. [8] pages, colour illustrations. Quad-fold.
Ref: 1009
Stelarcview full entry
Reference: OBSOLETE BODY / SUSPENSIONS / STELARC, by James B. Paffrath

Monograph documenting the suspension performance art of Stelarc, mostly in Japan and Australia, from his early performances in the 1970s through to the early 1980s. Mostly in English, a few Japanese texts.

Publishing details: Davis: JP Publications, 1984.
First Edition.
30.5cm x 22.5cm. 160 pages, illustrations, some colour. Pictorial wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Shaken to his Core: The Untold Story of Nolan’s Auschwitz, Sydney Jewish Muesum catalogue, 2022,
From July 21 - 23 October 2022, the Sydney Jewish Museum will exhibit Shaken to his Core: The Untold Story of Nolan’s Auschwitz. This rare exhibition will showcase 50 works by Sir Sidney Nolan from a series never before seen in Australia.
Best known for his bold modernist work, Nolan elevated the mythology of the Australian bush to global prominence and earned himself a place among the most significant artists of the 20th century.
Yet, his response to the Holocaust has until now remained unseen and unknown.
This exhibition uncovers an important chapter in his life and work: a series of images painted with great intensity during 1961, as the Adolf Eichmann trial came to a close and as Nolan prepared to visit Auschwitz.


Publishing details: Sydney Jewish Muesum catalogue, 2022, 15pp
Dobell Drawing Prize 22view full entry
Reference: Dobell Drawing Prize #22 [to be indexed]
Publishing details: National Art School, 2022,
Ref: 1000
Caught stealing view full entry
Reference: Caught stealing : National Art School Gallery 14 June - 10 August 2019 / [editors: Isabel Hesketh, Olivia Sophia, Jaime Tsai]. Published on the occasion of the exhibition held 14 June - 10 August 2019 at the National Art School, Sydney. [to be indexed]

Publishing details: National Art School Gallery, 2019. 61pp
Ref: 1000
Brown Reuben Ernestview full entry
Reference: Paralell Landscapes, exhibition at Bundanon Art Gallery Aug - Sept, 2022
Publishing details: Bundanon Art Gallery, 2022 [catalogue details to be entered.
Ref: 1000
Brown Reuben Ernestview full entry
Reference: Detective work uncovers unknown artist’s joyful images. By Steve Meacham, in Sydney Morning Herald, p15,
August 3, 2022
Ref: 145
Mitchell Thomas Livingstoneview full entry
Reference: Thomas Livingston Mitchell and his world, by Wlliam C. Foster
Publishing details: Institute of Surveyors, 1985, 594pp
Ref: 1000
Colonial Afterlivesview full entry
Reference: Colonial Afterlives, by Sarah Thomas, (ed.)
DANIEL BOYD
MAREE CLARKE
FIONA FOLEY
JULIE GOUGH
JAMES NEWITT
GEOFF PARR
YVONNE REES-PAGH
JOAN ROSS
CHRISTIAN THOMPSON
 
Publishing details: Salamanca Arts Centre, Hobart, 2015
Ref: 1000
Namatjira Albert North of MacDonells 1953view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Boyd Athur Evening Shoalhaven 1981view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
O’Brien Justin 2 works 1959 and 1971-2view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essays on the artworks
Badham Herbert The Bus Stop 1953view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Fox Phillips Blanche et Noire 1912view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Fox Ethel Carrick Sur la plage 1911view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
von Guerard Eugene The American Creek near Woollongongview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Piguenit W C The Lane Cove River 1887view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
McCubbin Frederick A Quiet Study 1886view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Nicholas Hilda Rix Colonel Barnes 1907view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Dickerson Robert Frteeway 1988view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Cook W Delafield Gundagai Revisited 2006view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Campbell Cressida Garden Island 1990view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork in a separate booklet, and other works by her with essays in the catalogue.
Onus Lin Guyi Bulgabulu 1992view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Dupain Max Sunbaker 1937 printed laterview full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Kerwick Jordy Rimbaud 2019view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer auction catalogue, 24 August, 2022, with essay on the artwork
Ferris Jeffview full entry
Reference: Jeff Ferris   Recent Paintings
‘I tend to paint urban landscapes. I live in the western suburbs of Melbourne – Altona. I grew up in Williamstown. Most of my images and ideas come from what I see around me. Petro chemical factories, industrial themes, things I see as I drive around. At the same time I am trying to capture a particular ‘light’ and a particular atmosphere - moment. The light and the shadows of early mornings – especially winter, has always interested me. The late evening light is wonderful. The shadows are long and the light is sharp. I like dark bold skies.’
Publishing details: Bridget McDonnell Gallery, 2022, [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Richards Clifford Francisview full entry
Reference: see eBay listing 7.8.22
Drawing  "DROVERS' AFTERNOON TEA"
Unframed
Original Ink Sketch 1989 by Clifford F. Richards.
27.5cm X 21.5cm
Page:  36.5cm X 27cm
ABOUT THE ARTIST

CLIFFORD FRANCES RICHARDS (21/06/1921 - 31/07/1998)  was born in Queensland to Irish-Australian parents.

A boilermaker/welder by trade, Cliff worked in Brisbane, Perth and Papua New Guinea before retiring to Bribie Island on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast in the early 1980s.  A staunch family man, Cliff and his wife of many years, Coral raised 3 daughters who all in turn followed them to retire on Bribie.  When he passed away, Cliff was adored by 6 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren.

An intelligent man, Cliff found it impossible to sit still.  He was passionate about fishing, gardening and was an accomplished lawn bowler.  Cliff painted in watercolours as well as oils.  Many works were sketched in charcoal or pen and pencil.  He was entirely self taught.

When he needed a break from painting or drawing, Cliff designed and built his own unique pieces of wooden furniture.

Cliff was witty, quick to laugh and joke and enjoyed a hearty debate.  He is dearly missed.

Whilst his art was revered by the family during its production, the full extent of Cliff’s talent and the number of works he completed were not realised until they were virtually stumbled upon in storage some 20 years after his passing
Booth Peterview full entry
Reference: Peter Booth - Works on Paper 1963 - 1985. Catalogue of the exhibition held at the University Gallery, the University of Melbourne, 13 Nov.-13 Dec., 1985.
Foreword by Frances Lindsay ; catalogue essay by Gary Catalano.
Bibliography: p. 40.
Publishing details: Parkville, Vic. : University Gallery, University of Melbourne, 1985 
40 pages : illustrations (some col.)
Adorned established 2014view full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Ali Khadimview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Aydemir Cigdemview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
de Souza Kegview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Iqbal Mehwishview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Papanikolakis Elenaview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Santiago Marikitview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Tawale Saloteview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Taweel Shireenview full entry
Reference: see New sacred
Includes ‘artist CV?s’p48-50
The exhibition New Sacred has been developed as a partnership between Parramatta Artists Studios and Mosman Art Gallery in response to critical discourses in contemporary Australian art practices concerning storytelling through ritual, cultural traditions, narratives and folklore. 
New Sacred includes newly commissioned and recent artworks by nine contemporary Australian artists who are current residents or Alumni of the Parramatta Artists Studios. Together the artists work across a range of art media including installation, performance, video, painting and cross disciplinary practices, some with direct reference to and engagement with culturally rich artisan traditions.  
Artists include: Adorned, Khadim Ali, Cigdem Aydemir, Keg de Souza, Mehwish Iqbal, Elena Papanikolakis, Marikit Santiago, Salote Tawale and Shireen Taweel.  
Parramatta Artists Studios is an initiative of the City of Parramatta and is assisted by the NSW Government through Create NSW.


Publishing details: Mosman Art Gallery, 2018. pb, 56pp
Murray Johnview full entry
Reference: Adventures of Tomorrow, Man
(catalogue in book form from exhibition 13 March - 27 March 2021.
From Art Atrium website:
\’John Murray
The Adventures of Tomorrow, man !
In:
Going to the patisserie, and beyond.
This exhibition carries in it 20 years of thought upon the subject of not doing things, of solving things by inaction. Its purpose is to polarise the world in a helpful way. It is not a new idea, there are many fine examples of it particularly in eastern spirituality. Inaction is the other control lever, the break to an accelerator, it is the space that accentuates an object, the slowing down to so as not to miss out. This exhibition is in a way a thesis, late as you could expect as it has as it’s subject the nature of not doing things.
On it’s uppermost level these comics promote an alternate hero to the existing pantheon of impressive proactive super hero’s, a hopeless hero, one that could barely even exist, really the opposite, infinity is where the edge is and infinity is full of holes but it is still infinity.
It is about that duality, the holes in infinity.
This is how an inactive superhero would save the world, if we could believe in them, as much as we believe in superman.
It is a collection of comics presented large and out of note book form for the first time at the Art Atrium gallery on March 13th by John Murray and introduced by Richard Laplastrier.
John Murray graduated with his Bachelor of Fine Art degree from College of Fine Art, University of NSW in 2000 after completing his Associated Diploma of Fine Art from TAFE. He also completed a Printmaking and Education course at Southern Cross University at Lismore. He was the Winner of the Trustees’ Watercolour Prize as part of the Wynne Prize for landscape painting at Art Gallery of NSW in 2017, Finalist of NSW Plein Air Painting Prize and Finalist of Paddington Art Prize in 2016 and Finalist of Warringah Council Art Prize in 2015.  John Murray had also created a handmade ceramic tile installation for the outdoor bath at Newtown and was the illustrator for various magazines and journals.
‘My work is concerned with observation, from the beauty of our natural surroundings to the emotional landscape of my own internal being.  I try to paint without concern for time or difficulty involved in a proper description and finish a work when I have nothing left to add.
Art is a ghost, I say this because like a ghost it cannot really change anything except how we feel. It is just barely part of our physical world, the bulk of what it contains belongs to our ethereal selves, and its power is its ability to convey this information to a viewer. Even a bad feeling, if it is transferred forcefully to a viewer through a particular artwork, would be enough to have the artwork considered as a great artwork.
Art is a parallel world. A painting of a tree is not a tree. It cannot photosynthesise and it cannot change the physical world as a tree can. The art is not the paint or the canvas but what has been described or embedded in them. If someone is offended by an artwork and responds to this offence with another artwork, then very, very little in the physical world has changed. This makes art a safe place, particularly for conflict, providing that the conflict is not permitted to escape the confines of art and enter into a more physical world.
I can use art as a reason for seeing clearly, for examining and for describing. I can use it as a motive to search beyond the horizon of my ignorance for something that if it is described well, even the description will be of value.’
Publishing details: Art Atrium, Botany, NSW, 2021, 20pp (signed on last page.)
Ref: 145
Lewers Margoview full entry
Reference: Margo Lewers - No Limits, by T. Crothers, G. Harper, D. Lewers. With index. [Artists who have more than one reference in the index to this book have been entered in the Scheding Index. To be indexed fully?].
20th century modernist artist Margo Lewers (1908-1978) refused to be constrained by the traditional roles of women as wives and mothers. While embracing the technological and social advances of a new era, she also challenged the convention of art as representation, believing that creativity required the expression of feelings and emotions. 

Primarily known as an Abstract painter, Margo worked in a variety of other media that few artists would dare to tackle. In all aspects of her life 'she embraced modernism not as a style but an ideology for a new way of living.' This is represented in the holistic, integrated environment of her home at Emu Plains that has now become the Penrith Regional Art Gallery and Lewers Bequest. 

First-hand, personal experiences and independent, original research by the authors of five essays bring new insights to the power and range of Margo's creativity.
Publishing details: Grasstree Press, 2022, hc, 224pp
Cook Billview full entry
Reference: Bill Cook: A Deeper Beauty by Andrew Hill.

Obsessed by the human form, Bill Cook bucked the 1970s trend of abstract art, focusing instead on figurative painting and drawing during his art studies at the prestigious South Australian School of Art in North Adelaide. In addition to his paintings and drawings, he was soon producing political cartoons, caricatures and illustrations for a range of publications.

Over a career spanning five decades, he has produced a substantial oeuvre in a range of media and styles, most recently ceramic sculptures that combine 'the complexity of his painterly works with a multi-angled human ceramic canvas', and works that reference the 'exile, longing and marginalisation' of migration.

Bill's work is held in numerous public collections including the National Gallery of Victoria, several universities and in private collections nationally and internationally.
Publishing details: Wakefield Press, 2022. Hardback, 272 pages.
Ref: 1000
Beckett Clariceview full entry
Reference: The Worlds and Work of Clarice Beckett. By Edith M. Ziegler. Includes index and bibliography.
Clarice Beckett was one of Australia’s most important early Modernist painters, excelling in portraiture, still-life and landscape. The discovery of a trove of her artworks has led to her remarkable talent and evocative art being recognised afresh and greatly admired.
Clarice Beckett was self-effacing; she left no diaries or letters and was only occasionally mentioned in the diaries of her friends. For an insight into her enigmatic genius, Edith Ziegler focuses on Clarice’s family background, childhood; art education; philosophical, spiritual and psychological enquiries and influences; friendships and contacts. The reader is drawn into the world in which Clarice’s vision was formed and her talent developed.
Publishing details: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2022,
Australian Painters In Etaplesview full entry
Reference: Australian Painters In Etaples, by Jean-Claude Lesage. [This is a reprint, in English, of Peintres Australiens a Etaples, by Jean Claude Lesage, with additiuonal illustrations. Originally published in French, however, an English translation by Pauline Le Borgne was printed in loose sheet form later, with the purpose of being inserted.]
In 1900, 30 Australian artists were working in Etaples, a French fishing village west of Paris. Charles Conder, Rupert Bunny, Isobel Rae and John Peter Russell were among these who lived and worked in France.
Publishing details: ETT IMPRINT, Bondi Junction, NSW, 2022, pb, 85pp
Brewer Rhettview full entry
Reference: see Day Gallery preess release 8.8.22:
Introducing Blue Mountains artist Rhett Brewer to Day Gallery
 

Rhett Brewer is a painter who works mostly with the Australian landscape as a plein air and studio painter. Trained in an environment that encouraged self-expression he incorporates elements of colour field painting, Pop, Surrealism and mid twentieth Century Modernism into his Romantic interpretations of the Australian outdoor environment. Nature for this artist is always in flux and rhythm and pattern are given high priority.

He has held over twenty solo shows along the East coast of Australia, been selected in Art Prizes notably twice selected into the Sulman Prize at the AGNSW, taught painting in universities in Australia and the UK and been in many group exhibitions. He lives and works in The Blue Mountains.
Anderson Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian Dictionary of Biography entry on William Macleod (1850–1929), by B. G. Andrews:
‘’William Macleod (1850-1929), artist and businessman, was born on 27 October 1850 in London, son of William Macleod, cordwainer, and his wife Juliana, née Exness (or Esner). The family followed the gold rush to Victoria and after her husband's death in 1855 Julia settled in Sydney, where she married the portrait painter James Anderson. His drinking excesses caused Macleod to seek work from the age of 12; trained by Edmund Thomas at the Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts and known first as William Macleod Anderson or James Anderson junior, he had his first artistic contribution published in 1866 in the Illustrated Sydney News. Over the next decade he travelled widely and won a reputation as a painter of portraits and cattle, a designer of stained-glass windows, and as illustrator with a strong line for such journals as the Sydney Mail, the Australian Town and Country Journal and Sydney and Queensland Punch. On 29 January 1873 he married Emily Collins at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney....’

Anderson William McLeodview full entry
Reference: This is William McLeod of the Bulletin - see Australian Dictionary of Biography entry on William Macleod (1850–1929), by B. G. Andrews:
‘’William Macleod (1850-1929), artist and businessman, was born on 27 October 1850 in London, son of William Macleod, cordwainer, and his wife Juliana, née Exness (or Esner). The family followed the gold rush to Victoria and after her husband's death in 1855 Julia settled in Sydney, where she married the portrait painter James Anderson. His drinking excesses caused Macleod to seek work from the age of 12; trained by Edmund Thomas at the Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts and known first as William Macleod Anderson or James Anderson junior, he had his first artistic contribution published in 1866 in the Illustrated Sydney News. Over the next decade he travelled widely and won a reputation as a painter of portraits and cattle, a designer of stained-glass windows, and as illustrator with a strong line for such journals as the Sydney Mail, the Australian Town and Country Journal and Sydney and Queensland Punch. On 29 January 1873 he married Emily Collins at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney....’

Begg Samuelview full entry
Reference: see Australian Dictionary of Biography entry on William Macleod (1850–1929), by B. G. Andrews:
‘William Macleod (1850-1929), artist and businessman, was born on 27 October 1850 in London, son of William Macleod, cordwainer, and his wife Juliana, née Exness (or Esner). The family followed the gold rush to Victoria and after her husband's death in 1855 Julia settled in Sydney, where she married the portrait painter James Anderson. His drinking excesses caused Macleod to seek work from the age of 12; trained by Edmund Thomas at the Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts and known first as William Macleod Anderson or James Anderson junior, he had his first artistic contribution published in 1866 in the Illustrated Sydney News. Over the next decade he travelled widely and won a reputation as a painter of portraits and cattle, a designer of stained-glass windows, and as illustrator with a strong line for such journals as the Sydney Mail, the Australian Town and Country Journal and Sydney and Queensland Punch. On 29 January 1873 he married Emily Collins at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney.
In January 1880 Macleod illustrated the first lead-story of the new Sydney Bulletin. In March he and another artist, Samuel Begg, jointly secured a third share in the journal but relinquished it when the financial affairs of J. F. Archibald and John Haynes improved. A prominent freelance contributor of robust cartoons to the Bulletin and the designer of its new pink cover in 1883, Macleod purchased part of Haynes's holding in April 1884. After extensive involvement in the Picturesque atlas of Australasia (1886) project—he executed many of the portraits used and was chairman of its publishing company—Macleod joined the Bulletin full time in 1886 in response to a plea from Archibald following the departure of W. H. Traill. They became joint owners in 1887; Macleod was the Bulletin's manager or managing director for the next forty years...’

Hall Fionaview full entry
Reference: see Studies in contemporary Australian sculptural practice: Hilarie Mais and Fiona Hall, by AE Sanders.
A thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Arts of the Australian National University.
Publishing details: Department of Art History The Australian National University, November 2004
Mais Hillaryview full entry
Reference: see Studies in contemporary Australian sculptural practice: Hilarie Mais and Fiona Hall, by AE Sanders.
A thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Arts of the Australian National University.
Publishing details: Department of Art History The Australian National University, November 2004
Aradon Pty Ltdview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 80th Meeting, 7 July 2022:
Two cast models of echidnas, probably contemporary.
Length (top) 32mm, (bottom) 30mm.
3
The top example in pewter was apparently produced by Aradon Pty Ltd at their Mt. Hay Gemstone Tourist Park in Queensland, a company better known as a miner and seller of decorative stones and geological specimens, which are exported as both rough and polished pieces. A range of Australian themed cast pewter souvenirs and gifts are made on site, including animal models such as the echidna.
The lower echidna with the golden finish seems to have been marketed by Kingfisher Brands, which claims to have its home in Victoria. That company also produced a wide range of similar souvenir flora and fauna to Aradon in Queensland, and say that they sell their products around the world. They claim to “...work with ethical manufacturers across Australia, Asia, Europe, to ... provide quality products”. Both models appear to have the same marking, apparently a stylized “SB”
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/SA%20Report%2080%20July%202022.pdf
Kingfisher Brandsview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 80th Meeting, 7 July 2022:
Two cast models of echidnas, probably contemporary.
Length (top) 32mm, (bottom) 30mm.
3
The top example in pewter was apparently produced by Aradon Pty Ltd at their Mt. Hay Gemstone Tourist Park in Queensland, a company better known as a miner and seller of decorative stones and geological specimens, which are exported as both rough and polished pieces. A range of Australian themed cast pewter souvenirs and gifts are made on site, including animal models such as the echidna.
The lower echidna with the golden finish seems to have been marketed by Kingfisher Brands, which claims to have its home in Victoria. That company also produced a wide range of similar souvenir flora and fauna to Aradon in Queensland, and say that they sell their products around the world. They claim to “...work with ethical manufacturers across Australia, Asia, Europe, to ... provide quality products”. Both models appear to have the same marking, apparently a stylized “SB”
Publishing details: https://www.australiana.org.au/resources/SA%20Report%2080%20July%202022.pdf
Pointer S T view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 80th Meeting, 7 July 2022:
South Australian School of Mines and Industries.
Souvenir of the Complimentary Dinner tendered to Sir Langdon Bonython, 1929.
Well known South Australian resident, Sir John Langdon Bonython (1848-1939) was an English born philanthropist, editor and newspaper proprietor. As the second son of a carpenter/builder, Bonython became particularly interested in technical education and was on the board of both the South Australian School of Mines, Roseworthy Agricultural College and the University of Adelaide. Amongst his many other achievements, he left considerable funds to the University of Adelaide for a chair of law and the erection of Bonython Hall, the School of Mines and he paid for the completion of South Australia’s Parliament House. He also assisted the government to pay civil servant salaries during a financial crisis and distributed meal tickets to the needy.
On the 19th October, 1929, Sir Langdon Bonython was presented with an illuminated address to mark the completion of his fortieth consecutive year of office as President of the Council of the School of Mines. The illuminated address was designed and bound by the South Australian School of Arts staff member Mr S.T. Pointer and Principal, Lawrence Hotham Howie. The School of Arts was previously known under other names such as the Adelaide School of Design and was also on North Terrace, next to the School of Mines.
This illustrated souvenir booklet was presented to each of the 120 guests. The illuminated address had watercolour illustrations placed opposite each page of signatures. Although the souvenir booklet was not in colour, it included reproductions of the frontispiece and back page illustrations, both of which unmistakably convey the distinct design style of the Adelaide School of Design featuring Australian flora in a decorative border.
Howie Lawrence Hotham view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 80th Meeting, 7 July 2022:
South Australian School of Mines and Industries.
Souvenir of the Complimentary Dinner tendered to Sir Langdon Bonython, 1929.
Well known South Australian resident, Sir John Langdon Bonython (1848-1939) was an English born philanthropist, editor and newspaper proprietor. As the second son of a carpenter/builder, Bonython became particularly interested in technical education and was on the board of both the South Australian School of Mines, Roseworthy Agricultural College and the University of Adelaide. Amongst his many other achievements, he left considerable funds to the University of Adelaide for a chair of law and the erection of Bonython Hall, the School of Mines and he paid for the completion of South Australia’s Parliament House. He also assisted the government to pay civil servant salaries during a financial crisis and distributed meal tickets to the needy.
On the 19th October, 1929, Sir Langdon Bonython was presented with an illuminated address to mark the completion of his fortieth consecutive year of office as President of the Council of the School of Mines. The illuminated address was designed and bound by the South Australian School of Arts staff member Mr S.T. Pointer and Principal, Lawrence Hotham Howie. The School of Arts was previously known under other names such as the Adelaide School of Design and was also on North Terrace, next to the School of Mines.
This illustrated souvenir booklet was presented to each of the 120 guests. The illuminated address had watercolour illustrations placed opposite each page of signatures. Although the souvenir booklet was not in colour, it included reproductions of the frontispiece and back page illustrations, both of which unmistakably convey the distinct design style of the Adelaide School of Design featuring Australian flora in a decorative border.
Hewitt Charles photographer view full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 80th Meeting, 7 July 2022:
“Mary Ann and Joseph Jewell - survivors of the General Grant shipwreck”, February 1868, carte de visite photograph, Charles Hewitt, Melbourne. 10 x 6 cm.
In May 1866, the General Grant sailed from Melbourne on a voyage to London, via Cape Horn, with a cargo of zinc, gold and wool, plus eighty-three passengers and crew. Following a north-west wind they travelled 450 kilometres south of New Zealand, and into the latitudes of the "furious fifties". Strangely becalmed one night, land was sighted dead ahead. With no wind to work, the ocean swell carried the ship to the cliffs of the sub-Antarctic Auckland Islands. She lost the rudder and bowsprit before drifting into a large sea-cave. For the remainder of the night, the masts in contact with the cave roof, brought down rigging and rock. By daylight, and in rising wind and seas, an evacuation began using the ship's boats. Mary Ann Jewell fell into the water and made it to one but couldn't be lifted from the water. Joseph jumped off the ship to get her in. The mainmast broke away and the ship went further into the cave where the foremast, wedged against the roof, was pushed back through the keel and the ship began to sink. A third boat was floated off the flooding deck with forty people but capsized. Three members swam through breaking waves to the boats waiting beyond. The captain was on the mizzenmast waving a farewell as the ship sank and all remaining were drowned.
The now fifteen survivors rowed and bailed until a beach was found the next day. With only two matches, the second started a fire that was continuously kept alight for their eighteen months as castaways. Abandoned sealer's huts were repaired. Rabbits, pigs, goats, birds, seals and fish were caught. Clothing was fashioned from wild flax and seal-skins. Lookouts were posted, bonfires built ready to light and messages were carved on timber and
9
thrown into the sea (one was found five years later in New Zealand). Four men left in one boat in an attempt to reach New Zealand but were never seen again. An older member died on the island. In November 1867, a whaling ship called in at the island and the remaining ten were rescued. They arrived back in Melbourne in January 1868.
A month later photographer Charles Hewitt (possibly a relative of Mary Ann Jewell, nee Hewitt) photographed a number of the castaways in his Swanston Street studio. The papers of the day noted they would soon be for sale as souvenirs. Curiously, all those photographed had kept their seal-skin clothing.
In the following years the Jewells moved around rural Victoria with Joseph employed as a railway-station master. In 1883 Joseph recognised a group of men on the railway platform as wanted bank-robbers, raised the alarm, and organised armed locals to surround them until police arrived. He died near Bridgewater on Loddon in 1898, and Mary at Port Fairy in 1907.
Numerous attempts have been made to recover the gold from the "General Grant" (worth about $7 million) but, so far, nothing has been found.
Jurs Ellaview full entry
Reference: see SA Australiana Study Group 80th Meeting, 7 July 2022:
A small sketchbook by Ella Jurs; an outline based on newspaper reports of the time.
Philip Jones
A few months ago I purchased at auction a small ‘autograph book’, sight unseen. This turned out to be a sketchbook, containing 25 pencil sketches. Each sketch is dated and signed ‘Ella Jurs’. Sixteen of the sketches are dated between 9-12 August 1906 and the remaining nine sketches are dated between February and March 1907. The sketches are mostly portraits
12
of young women in in theatrical and studied poses, such as ‘Lady Disdain’, ‘Sincerity’ or ‘A Country Belle’. One of the more dramatic sketches, depicting a young woman with a sweeping mane of hair is captioned ‘Jane Oaker’: she was a prominent American actress at the turn of the 20th century. Another sketch depicts a lover’s tiff, simply titled ‘Tears’, suggestive of a scene from a play. In that vein one of the more elaborate sketches shows a young woman kneeling at an overgrown grave, captioned ‘The grave in the jungle’. Four sketches depict men: ‘A Sculptor’, ‘Un Artiste’, a languorous figure smoking on a couch and a bearded man in profile. Two sketches depict watercraft under sail.
The small sketchbook has a title page, inscribed in pencil: ‘Sketches done during August 1906 and March 1907. Ella Jurs. Port Adelaide’. Ella Jurs was one of four daughters of Dr J.C.G. Jurs, who served a term as Mayor of Port Adelaide during the first years of the century. He was a successful surgeon, born in Denmark in 1839, who had graduated in medicine at Gottingen, Germany and arrived in Australia (Moreton Bay) in 1862. He had travelled widely in Queensland, working as a surgeon, before arriving at Port Adelaide in 1885. There he had built a successful practice, serving as surgeon to 33 masonic lodges, according to newspaper reports. He was successful in the 1902 mayoral election. By that time he and his wife had four daughters in their teens, Florence, Carlein, Ella and Vera. Each had considerable musical ability and by 1902 all had been accepted to study at the Conservatorium of Music in Adelaide. Ella and Vera were both accomplished violinists, but by this time Ella was also becoming known for her artistic talent. Following the death of Queen Victoria in 1901, Mayor Jurs and his councillors resolved to acquire a portrait of the late Queen for the Port Adelaide Council chamber and were about to commission a work, when Ella produced her own portrait of Queen Victoria and this was admired and gratefully accepted. A few months later she produced another, full length, portrait of the late Queen and presented this to the Port Adelaide Art Gallery.
From 1902 to 1903 Ella continued to sketch and paint, studying at James Ashton’s art school in Adelaide, receiving tuition also from G.A.J. Webb and Hans Heysen. With a career as an artist in mind, she travelled to England in 1903 to study at the Royal School of Drawing in London. She graduated with three honours and one pass in April 1904, and returned to Australia, where she began working up material for a solo exhibition. This was opened in September 1906 at a gallery in Commercial Chambers, King William Street. The exhibition contained 35 of her portraits, seascapes and classically-themed pictures, in oils, watercolours, charcoal and crayon sketches. Interestingly, this exhibition took place just after the first sixteen images in her little sketchbook had been completed. In that light, it is possible that one of these sketches, a full length study of a woman in a long dress, may have been a preparatory sketch for her entry in James Ashton’s student competition later in 1907. Another portrait sketch may depict her father. The remaining nine images, sketched in February and March 1907, seem more highly finished and complex. Despite that clear improvement, it seems that Ella Jurs was already turning from art to the theatre and to musical performance.
So far I have not been able to pin down Ella’s age. It would seem that she was about sixteen when she presented her first portrait of Queen Victoria to the Port Adelaide Council, so that by the time she filled her little sketchbook in 1907 she may have been about 21 years. It would seem that her 1906 exhibition was something of a watershed in her career, for after that time there are no newspaper records of her participation in art exhibitions, save for the ‘ambitious entry’ of a full-length portrait of her mother in James Ashton’s student competition in 1907. It did not win a prize. She began participating more in musical soirées
13

and theatrical performances, as a member of the University’s Shakespeare Company. In 1915 she began contributing short stories, often melodramatic in nature, to Adelaide newspapers. At this time also, she began managing the programmes for the Lyric Club, often contributing spoken monologues and addresses in their evening performances.
At this stage I have not established whether artworks by Ella Jurs are held by any of Adelaide’s art collecting institutions. The Port Adelaide Art Gallery seems to have ceased operations before 1910. Ella’s portraits of Queen Victoria and of the Governor-General Lord Tennyson have not been traced. She can be regarded therefore, as one of Adelaide’s lesser artistic lights, who flared briefly before turning her attention to other pursuits. She married late, in 1939, when she was probably close to 50 years old. Her husband was Clarence Schultz, of Lobethal, but it appears that the marriage may not have lasted. The final reference to Ella Jurs, in Adelaide newspapers at least, was to a theft of cash from her home in Hutt Street in 1942, suggesting that she may have been living there alone. At that time she had become the Honorary Secretary for the South Australian Branch of the Australian Writers Association.
This small ‘Autograph’ book with 25 sketches by Ella Jurs can be regarded as a unique insight into the cosmopolitan world of Adelaide theatre and art by one member of a gifted Port Adelaide family.


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