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The Scheding Index of Australian Art & Artists

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on Australian artists more details»


Showing 158,397 records of 158,397 total. We are displaying one thousand.

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Moffatt Traceyview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Moore Davidview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Morley Lewisview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Mueck Ronview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Mukeba Pierreview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Munduwalawala Ginger Rileyview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Riley Ginger see Munduwalawala Ginger Rileyview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Adams Josephine Muntzview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Namatjira Albertview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Namatjira Vincentview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Nicholas Hilda Rixview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Nixon Johnview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Nixon Stephen Edward 1842-1910 photographerview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Nixon William Millington 1814-1893 photographerview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Tait Bess Norrisview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Obarzan ek Simonview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Obarzanek Simonview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Ou Selina and see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Papapetrou Polixenaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Parke Trentview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Parr Mikeview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Perry Adelaideview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Piccinini Patriciaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Proctor Theaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Puautjimi Mark Virgilview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Purdie Shirleyview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Rankin Davidview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Ramsay Hughview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Rees Lloydview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Riley Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Robb Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Rodius Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Rosetzky Davidview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Robert Brothers Ballaratview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Rrap Julieview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Scarce Yhonnieview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Rubuntja Rona Panangkaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
See Pamelaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Sharp Martinview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Shmith Atholview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Smart Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Smith Grace Cossingtonview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Stewart & Co Melbourneview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Stokes Constanceview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Summers Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Sutherland Janeview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Nevin T in Hobart 1865-7view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Tanner Lesview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Textaqueenview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Thake Ericview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Thompson Christianview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Tjangala Uta Utaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Tucker Albertview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Walker Theresa 1807-1876view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Waller Christianview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Waller Napierview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Watson Jennyview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Whiskey Kayleneview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Whiting Ada 1859-1953view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Willits Ballarat attributed toview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Wilson Ericview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Wojak Anaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Woolner Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Wright John in Australia 1865-9view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Vassilieff Danilaview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Xian Ahview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Yang William and see Comparative list p 273 and essay p88view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Yeoman & Co Melbourne 1882-1900 attributed toview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Zahalka Anneview full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Bronte Hannah see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Charlie Miriam see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
de Medici eX see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Heysen Hans see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Larter Richard see also Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Moffatt Tracey see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Pugh Clifton see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Sages Jenny see Comparative list p 273view full entry
Reference: see Who Are You - Australian portraiture, edited by Sophie Gerhard, Joanna Gilmour, Penelope Grist, David Hurlston, Hannah Presley and Beckett Rozentals, with contributors. Extensively illustrated. [The book includes a list of about 200 works. The artist’s names have been entered in the scheding Index and there may be biographical information on these artists within the book. However, the book has no index].
‘Merging the traditional and unconventional, WHO ARE YOU: Australian Portraiture is a co-curated combination of collections from the National Gallery of Victoria and National Portrait Gallery. Featuring 130 works across painting, film, photography, screen printing, sculpture, and then some – it explores our inner worlds, outer selves, intimacy, isolation, celebrity and more.
You’ll see artists such as Patricia Piccinini, Atong Atem, Howard Arkley, Vincent Namatjira, John Nixon and Tracey Moffatt. Think superstar sitters like Albert Namatjira, Cate Blanchett, Queen Elizabeth II, David Gulpilil and Jeff the Wiggle. And why not both? We give you John Brack, Nora Heysen, William Yang and Shirley Purdie, just to name a few.
From head and shoulders to shape and text, this exhibition will have you thinking about the ever-evolving and ever-expanding idea of portraiture.’
Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC : NGV, National Portrait Gallery, Thames & Hudson Australia, 2022,
xxi, 281 pages : colour illustrations, portraits
Lahm Hartmuthview full entry
Reference: Snifter of the AIF - Story and Pictures by Lahm. Chiefly cartoon illustrations.
Publishing details: Sydney: K.G. Murray / Author, 1941. First printing. Pamphlet. Small 8vo, 58pp unnumbered,
Ref: 1000
Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands Theview full entry
Reference: The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands [with] a supplement to The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands.
[’In total, these two volumes have 49 hand colored plates including the very desirable images of the Penguins. Fine lithographed plates after J.G. Keulemans, H. Gronvold, R. Green, and F.W. Frohawk with original color, heightened with gum arabic. 

The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - royal 4to xii, (4) 139pp, 47 plates. Bound in a worn half green morocco and marble boards cover with the original printed paper wrapper bound in. Besides some ink lines through the title on the cover, the issue is fine, bright and clean. Top edge is dyed in red and the foredge is untrimmed. Libraries Australia ID 13883353

Supplement to the Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - unbound and in its original fascicles, 23 in total with one fascicle missing (pages 14 to 20). Royal 4to xiv, (2) 177pp, 26 plates. Fine condition.Bagnall, M1336, Libraries Australia ID 5507358

The scarce supplements to Mathews' masterwork on the birds of Australia, the last hand coloured ornithological works to be produced.’ from Antipodean Books February, 2023]
Publishing details: London: H.F. & G. Witherby, 1928 & 1936. First editions. Hardcover. "The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands" is a subscriber's copy with a total run of 225.’
Ref: 1000
Keulemans J G view full entry
Reference: see The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands [with] a supplement to The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands.
[’In total, these two volumes have 49 hand colored plates including the very desirable images of the Penguins. Fine lithographed plates after J.G. Keulemans, H. Gronvold, R. Green, and F.W. Frohawk with original color, heightened with gum arabic. 

The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - royal 4to xii, (4) 139pp, 47 plates. Bound in a worn half green morocco and marble boards cover with the original printed paper wrapper bound in. Besides some ink lines through the title on the cover, the issue is fine, bright and clean. Top edge is dyed in red and the foredge is untrimmed. Libraries Australia ID 13883353

Supplement to the Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - unbound and in its original fascicles, 23 in total with one fascicle missing (pages 14 to 20). Royal 4to xiv, (2) 177pp, 26 plates. Fine condition.Bagnall, M1336, Libraries Australia ID 5507358

The scarce supplements to Mathews' masterwork on the birds of Australia, the last hand coloured ornithological works to be produced.’ from Antipodean Books February, 2023]
Publishing details: London: H.F. & G. Witherby, 1928 & 1936. First editions. Hardcover. "The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands" is a subscriber's copy with a total run of 225.’
Gronvold H view full entry
Reference: see The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands [with] a supplement to The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands.
[’In total, these two volumes have 49 hand colored plates including the very desirable images of the Penguins. Fine lithographed plates after J.G. Keulemans, H. Gronvold, R. Green, and F.W. Frohawk with original color, heightened with gum arabic. 

The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - royal 4to xii, (4) 139pp, 47 plates. Bound in a worn half green morocco and marble boards cover with the original printed paper wrapper bound in. Besides some ink lines through the title on the cover, the issue is fine, bright and clean. Top edge is dyed in red and the foredge is untrimmed. Libraries Australia ID 13883353

Supplement to the Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - unbound and in its original fascicles, 23 in total with one fascicle missing (pages 14 to 20). Royal 4to xiv, (2) 177pp, 26 plates. Fine condition.Bagnall, M1336, Libraries Australia ID 5507358

The scarce supplements to Mathews' masterwork on the birds of Australia, the last hand coloured ornithological works to be produced.’ from Antipodean Books February, 2023]
Publishing details: London: H.F. & G. Witherby, 1928 & 1936. First editions. Hardcover. "The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands" is a subscriber's copy with a total run of 225.’
Green R view full entry
Reference: see The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands [with] a supplement to The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands.
[’In total, these two volumes have 49 hand colored plates including the very desirable images of the Penguins. Fine lithographed plates after J.G. Keulemans, H. Gronvold, R. Green, and F.W. Frohawk with original color, heightened with gum arabic. 

The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - royal 4to xii, (4) 139pp, 47 plates. Bound in a worn half green morocco and marble boards cover with the original printed paper wrapper bound in. Besides some ink lines through the title on the cover, the issue is fine, bright and clean. Top edge is dyed in red and the foredge is untrimmed. Libraries Australia ID 13883353

Supplement to the Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - unbound and in its original fascicles, 23 in total with one fascicle missing (pages 14 to 20). Royal 4to xiv, (2) 177pp, 26 plates. Fine condition.Bagnall, M1336, Libraries Australia ID 5507358

The scarce supplements to Mathews' masterwork on the birds of Australia, the last hand coloured ornithological works to be produced.’ from Antipodean Books February, 2023]
Publishing details: London: H.F. & G. Witherby, 1928 & 1936. First editions. Hardcover. "The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands" is a subscriber's copy with a total run of 225.’
Frohawk F Wview full entry
Reference: see The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands [with] a supplement to The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands.
[’In total, these two volumes have 49 hand colored plates including the very desirable images of the Penguins. Fine lithographed plates after J.G. Keulemans, H. Gronvold, R. Green, and F.W. Frohawk with original color, heightened with gum arabic. 

The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - royal 4to xii, (4) 139pp, 47 plates. Bound in a worn half green morocco and marble boards cover with the original printed paper wrapper bound in. Besides some ink lines through the title on the cover, the issue is fine, bright and clean. Top edge is dyed in red and the foredge is untrimmed. Libraries Australia ID 13883353

Supplement to the Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands - unbound and in its original fascicles, 23 in total with one fascicle missing (pages 14 to 20). Royal 4to xiv, (2) 177pp, 26 plates. Fine condition.Bagnall, M1336, Libraries Australia ID 5507358

The scarce supplements to Mathews' masterwork on the birds of Australia, the last hand coloured ornithological works to be produced.’ from Antipodean Books February, 2023]
Publishing details: London: H.F. & G. Witherby, 1928 & 1936. First editions. Hardcover. "The Birds of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands" is a subscriber's copy with a total run of 225.’
Thornton Harold Leslieview full entry
Reference: The Colourful Life Of Harold Leslie Thornton Alias Harold The Kangaroo (1915-2004). By Pienke W.h. Kal; McDonald, John; Kubic-Vegter, Erica. ‘Australian artist Harold Leslie Thornton (1915-2004) started his career as a sign writer, painter of facades and shop windows in Sydney, but lived and worked most of his life in Amsterdam. Traces of his work in Holland can still be seen in the Nieuwmarkt district in Amsterdam. The most famous, and still existing, example is the facade of Coffeeshop The Bulldog. Thornton gradually developed his talent as a portraitist and became known for his murals. Besides being a painter, he also acted as performer, cartoonist, poet and he wrote a fragmented autobiography.’
Publishing details: Published by Lecturis Netherlands, 2015, 160 pages color illustrations throughout.
Ref: 1000
Harold the Kangarooview full entry
Reference: see The Colourful Life Of Harold Leslie Thornton Alias Harold The Kangaroo (1915-2004). By Pienke W.h. Kal; McDonald, John; Kubic-Vegter, Erica. ‘Australian artist Harold Leslie Thornton (1915-2004) started his career as a sign writer, painter of facades and shop windows in Sydney, but lived and worked most of his life in Amsterdam. Traces of his work in Holland can still be seen in the Nieuwmarkt district in Amsterdam. The most famous, and still existing, example is the facade of Coffeeshop The Bulldog. Thornton gradually developed his talent as a portraitist and became known for his murals. Besides being a painter, he also acted as performer, cartoonist, poet and he wrote a fragmented autobiography.’
Publishing details: Published by Lecturis Netherlands, 2015, 160 pages color illustrations throughout.
Kangaroo Harold the view full entry
Reference: see The Colourful Life Of Harold Leslie Thornton Alias Harold The Kangaroo (1915-2004). By Pienke W.h. Kal; McDonald, John; Kubic-Vegter, Erica. ‘Australian artist Harold Leslie Thornton (1915-2004) started his career as a sign writer, painter of facades and shop windows in Sydney, but lived and worked most of his life in Amsterdam. Traces of his work in Holland can still be seen in the Nieuwmarkt district in Amsterdam. The most famous, and still existing, example is the facade of Coffeeshop The Bulldog. Thornton gradually developed his talent as a portraitist and became known for his murals. Besides being a painter, he also acted as performer, cartoonist, poet and he wrote a fragmented autobiography.’
Publishing details: Published by Lecturis Netherlands, 2015, 160 pages color illustrations throughout.
Lasica Shelley 1961- view full entry
Reference: Shelley Lasica, The design plot. Editors: Justine Ellis and Dan Rule.
‘Over a career spanning more than three decades, Shelley Lasica's practice has placed the creative and processional machinations of dance and choreography centre stage. Skirting histories of visual, spatial and performance art as closely as she has embraced dance and choreography, the Melbourne artist's propositions test the limits of the mediums in which they operate, forever expanding contexts and posing questions of just what dance is and what it can be as art. ¶ Lasica's debut book The Design Plot - which features texts by project producer Zoe Theodore, curator Pip Wallis and writer Megan Payne - acts as both documentation of Lasica's ever-evolving practice and a wider vehicle for exploring the relationship between the body and architectural space, imagination and memory. Tracing ten iterations of the collaborative dance work from which the book takes its name, The Design Plot is at once organised and amorphous in its bearings - image sequences fracturing and folding in on themselves amidst a measured, cumulative flow of gestures, people, movements and architectures. ¶ Like the performances themselves - which were conceived with dancers Ellen Davies, Timothy Harvey, Louella Hogan, Daniel Newell, Lilian Steiner and Jo White - the book is just another iteration of The Design Plot's ongoing process and self-interpretation. 'Each time The Design Plot is performed,' writes Zoe Theodore in her essay for the book, 'it is durational or cumulative, as it hosts a collective conversation that continually questions: What is the work? Where is the work? What happens to the work after occupying this architecture of time and space?'.
Partial contents • Three texts:
• Introduction / Zoe Theodore
• It's capricious, capricious everyday Pip Wallis
• The Landlord / Megan Payne.
Biography/History: For more than thirty years, Shelley Lasica has pushed the confines of dance, choreography and performance. Her practice is defined by an enduring interest in the context and situations of presenting choreography. She regularly collaborates with visual artists, including Tony Clark, Helen Grogan, Anne Marie May, Callum Morton and Kathy Temin, in order to create dialogues between different modes and means of presentation. Lasica's choreographic works have been shown nationally and internationally within both visual art and theatre contexts, including: Melbourne Festival; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; Chunky Move, Melbourne; Artspace, Sydney; Centre Nationale de la Danse, Paris; Siobhan Davies Studios, London; Dance Massive, Melbourne; Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne; Murray White Room, Melbourne; and Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne. She has been invited to research and develop new work through residencies at Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne; Artspace, Sydney; Lucy Guerin Inc, Melbourne; The Substation, Melbourne; and PFERD, Vienna, Austria.
Notes Editors: Justine Ellis and Dan Rule.
Design: Paul Mylecharane, Kim Mumm Hansen at Public Office.
Publishing details: Melbourne, Australia : Published by Perimeter Editions, 2021, 128 pages (last 14 unnumbered) : colour illustrations. First edition of 600.
Ref: 1000
Madayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkalaview full entry
Reference: Madayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala. Edited by Wukun Wanambi, Kade McDonald, Henry Skerritt.
This volume chronicles the rise of a globally significant art movement, as told from the perspective of the Yolngu people of northeastern Australia. It presents more than 90 iconic paintings on eucalyptus bark, many of which have never been seen outside of Australia.
For millennia, Yolngu people around Yirrkala in northern Australia have painted their sacred clan designs on their bodies and ceremonial objects. These designs—called miny’tji—are not merely decorative: they are the sacred patterns of the ancestral land itself. Yolngu people describe them as madayin: a term that encompasses both the sacred and the beautiful. With the arrival of Europeans in the 20th century, Yolngu people turned to the medium of painting on eucalyptus bark with ochres. The result was an outpouring of creativity that continues to this day as artists find new and innovative ways to transform their ancient clan designs into compelling contemporary statements that are chronicled in this singular publication.
Authors include: Andrew Blake, David Burrumarra MBE, Steve Fox, Gunybi Ganambarr, Manydjarri Ganambarr, Yinimala Gumana, Jason Guwanbal Gurruwiwi, Djambawa Marawili AM, Nonggirrnga Marawili, Dhuwarrwarr Marika, Wanyubi Marika, Baluka Maymuru, Paul Wutjin Maymuru, Naminapu Maymuru-White, Frances Morphy, Howard Morphy, Barayuwa Mununggurr, Marrnyula Mununggurr, Rerrkirrwanga Mununggurr, Wäka Mununggurr, Buwathay Munyarryun, Eleanore Neumann, Will Stubbs, Dhukumul Wanambi, Dhukal Wirrpanda, Liyawaday Wirrpanda, Dela Yunupingu, Djerrkngu Yunupingu and Yälpi Yunupingu.
Publishing details: DELMONICO BOOKS/KLUGE-RUHE, 2022, 
Hardcover, 8.75 x 12 in. / 384 pgs / 250 color.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Madayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala. Edited by Wukun Wanambi, Kade McDonald, Henry Skerritt.
This volume chronicles the rise of a globally significant art movement, as told from the perspective of the Yolngu people of northeastern Australia. It presents more than 90 iconic paintings on eucalyptus bark, many of which have never been seen outside of Australia.
For millennia, Yolngu people around Yirrkala in northern Australia have painted their sacred clan designs on their bodies and ceremonial objects. These designs—called miny’tji—are not merely decorative: they are the sacred patterns of the ancestral land itself. Yolngu people describe them as madayin: a term that encompasses both the sacred and the beautiful. With the arrival of Europeans in the 20th century, Yolngu people turned to the medium of painting on eucalyptus bark with ochres. The result was an outpouring of creativity that continues to this day as artists find new and innovative ways to transform their ancient clan designs into compelling contemporary statements that are chronicled in this singular publication.
Authors include: Andrew Blake, David Burrumarra MBE, Steve Fox, Gunybi Ganambarr, Manydjarri Ganambarr, Yinimala Gumana, Jason Guwanbal Gurruwiwi, Djambawa Marawili AM, Nonggirrnga Marawili, Dhuwarrwarr Marika, Wanyubi Marika, Baluka Maymuru, Paul Wutjin Maymuru, Naminapu Maymuru-White, Frances Morphy, Howard Morphy, Barayuwa Mununggurr, Marrnyula Mununggurr, Rerrkirrwanga Mununggurr, Wäka Mununggurr, Buwathay Munyarryun, Eleanore Neumann, Will Stubbs, Dhukumul Wanambi, Dhukal Wirrpanda, Liyawaday Wirrpanda, Dela Yunupingu, Djerrkngu Yunupingu and Yälpi Yunupingu.
Publishing details: DELMONICO BOOKS/KLUGE-RUHE, 2022, 
Hardcover, 8.75 x 12 in. / 384 pgs / 250 color.
bark paintingview full entry
Reference: see Madayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala. Edited by Wukun Wanambi, Kade McDonald, Henry Skerritt.
This volume chronicles the rise of a globally significant art movement, as told from the perspective of the Yolngu people of northeastern Australia. It presents more than 90 iconic paintings on eucalyptus bark, many of which have never been seen outside of Australia.
For millennia, Yolngu people around Yirrkala in northern Australia have painted their sacred clan designs on their bodies and ceremonial objects. These designs—called miny’tji—are not merely decorative: they are the sacred patterns of the ancestral land itself. Yolngu people describe them as madayin: a term that encompasses both the sacred and the beautiful. With the arrival of Europeans in the 20th century, Yolngu people turned to the medium of painting on eucalyptus bark with ochres. The result was an outpouring of creativity that continues to this day as artists find new and innovative ways to transform their ancient clan designs into compelling contemporary statements that are chronicled in this singular publication.
Authors include: Andrew Blake, David Burrumarra MBE, Steve Fox, Gunybi Ganambarr, Manydjarri Ganambarr, Yinimala Gumana, Jason Guwanbal Gurruwiwi, Djambawa Marawili AM, Nonggirrnga Marawili, Dhuwarrwarr Marika, Wanyubi Marika, Baluka Maymuru, Paul Wutjin Maymuru, Naminapu Maymuru-White, Frances Morphy, Howard Morphy, Barayuwa Mununggurr, Marrnyula Mununggurr, Rerrkirrwanga Mununggurr, Wäka Mununggurr, Buwathay Munyarryun, Eleanore Neumann, Will Stubbs, Dhukumul Wanambi, Dhukal Wirrpanda, Liyawaday Wirrpanda, Dela Yunupingu, Djerrkngu Yunupingu and Yälpi Yunupingu.
Publishing details: DELMONICO BOOKS/KLUGE-RUHE, 2022, 
Hardcover, 8.75 x 12 in. / 384 pgs / 250 color.
Yirrkala bark paintingview full entry
Reference: see Madayin: Eight Decades of Aboriginal Australian Bark Painting from Yirrkala. Edited by Wukun Wanambi, Kade McDonald, Henry Skerritt.
This volume chronicles the rise of a globally significant art movement, as told from the perspective of the Yolngu people of northeastern Australia. It presents more than 90 iconic paintings on eucalyptus bark, many of which have never been seen outside of Australia.
For millennia, Yolngu people around Yirrkala in northern Australia have painted their sacred clan designs on their bodies and ceremonial objects. These designs—called miny’tji—are not merely decorative: they are the sacred patterns of the ancestral land itself. Yolngu people describe them as madayin: a term that encompasses both the sacred and the beautiful. With the arrival of Europeans in the 20th century, Yolngu people turned to the medium of painting on eucalyptus bark with ochres. The result was an outpouring of creativity that continues to this day as artists find new and innovative ways to transform their ancient clan designs into compelling contemporary statements that are chronicled in this singular publication.
Authors include: Andrew Blake, David Burrumarra MBE, Steve Fox, Gunybi Ganambarr, Manydjarri Ganambarr, Yinimala Gumana, Jason Guwanbal Gurruwiwi, Djambawa Marawili AM, Nonggirrnga Marawili, Dhuwarrwarr Marika, Wanyubi Marika, Baluka Maymuru, Paul Wutjin Maymuru, Naminapu Maymuru-White, Frances Morphy, Howard Morphy, Barayuwa Mununggurr, Marrnyula Mununggurr, Rerrkirrwanga Mununggurr, Wäka Mununggurr, Buwathay Munyarryun, Eleanore Neumann, Will Stubbs, Dhukumul Wanambi, Dhukal Wirrpanda, Liyawaday Wirrpanda, Dela Yunupingu, Djerrkngu Yunupingu and Yälpi Yunupingu.
Publishing details: DELMONICO BOOKS/KLUGE-RUHE, 2022, 
Hardcover, 8.75 x 12 in. / 384 pgs / 250 color.
McKenna Noelview full entry
Reference: Drawings. Exhibition catalogue. A selection of ink drawings from 1989 to 1991. A signed and numbered edition of 200 copies.
Publishing details: [Sydney]: Noel McKenna, 1991. [28] pages, black and white illustrations. Lettered saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Romily Amelie or Romilly (French)view full entry
Reference: see reference p77 and illustration of her portrait of Ladt franklin on p78 in Imagined Portraits: Reviving Figures from [Jane Franklin, sketch by Amelie Romily, print, 1816 (New York Public Library)]
War art & ritual view full entry
Reference: War art & ritual : shields from the Pacific / edited by Bill Evans ; with contributions by Steven G. Alpert, Robyn Maxwell, Andrew Tavarelli, Harry Beran, Kevin Conru, Barry Craig, Natalie Wilson.
"This beautiful two-volume set is the result of many years of planning by Sydney-based collector and art dealer Bill Evans. In the course of its development, he identified 140 previously unpublished shields in public and private collections in Australia, New Zealand, and Indonesia, and they are reproduced in these volumes as full-page plates with details and supporting field photos. Informative essays by experts in specific fields go in depth, casting additional light onto their particular subjects, which range from dance shields of Java and Bali to war shields from Borneo, New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. Contributors include Andrew Tavarelli, who provides a general introduction; Steven Alpert writing on the Dayak; Harry Beran, Barry Craig and Natalie Wilson writing on various aspects of Papua New Guinea; Robyn Maxwell on the legacy of the Majapahit; and Kevin Conru on the Solomon Islands. These two richly illustrated volumes will be a benefit to any library, whether specialized or general."
SUBJECTS AND TOPICS
Shields--Malay Archipelago
Shields--Southeast Asia
Shields--Melanesia
Shields--Malay Archipelago--Pictorial works
Shields--Southeast Asia--Pictorial works
Shields--Melanesia--Pictorial works
Material culture--Malay Archipelago
Material culture--Southeast Asia
Material culture--Melanesia
Art, Malaysian--Pictorial works
Art, Southeast Asian--Pictorial works
Art, Melanesian--Pictorial works
Malay Archipelago--Social life and customs
Southeast Asia--Social life and customs
Melanesia--Social life and customs
Publishing details: Woollahra, NSW : William Nathaniel Evans in association with J.M. Fogel Media, Inc., San Francisco, [2019], 2 volumes (ix, 483 pages) : illustrations (some coloured), coloured maps, portraits (some coloured) ; 33 cm.
volume 1. Island Southeast Asia -- volume 2. Melanesia.
Ref: 1009
Pacific artview full entry
Reference: seeWar art & ritual : shields from the Pacific / edited by Bill Evans ; with contributions by Steven G. Alpert, Robyn Maxwell, Andrew Tavarelli, Harry Beran, Kevin Conru, Barry Craig, Natalie Wilson.
"This beautiful two-volume set is the result of many years of planning by Sydney-based collector and art dealer Bill Evans. In the course of its development, he identified 140 previously unpublished shields in public and private collections in Australia, New Zealand, and Indonesia, and they are reproduced in these volumes as full-page plates with details and supporting field photos. Informative essays by experts in specific fields go in depth, casting additional light onto their particular subjects, which range from dance shields of Java and Bali to war shields from Borneo, New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. Contributors include Andrew Tavarelli, who provides a general introduction; Steven Alpert writing on the Dayak; Harry Beran, Barry Craig and Natalie Wilson writing on various aspects of Papua New Guinea; Robyn Maxwell on the legacy of the Majapahit; and Kevin Conru on the Solomon Islands. These two richly illustrated volumes will be a benefit to any library, whether specialized or general."
SUBJECTS AND TOPICS
Shields--Malay Archipelago
Shields--Southeast Asia
Shields--Melanesia
Shields--Malay Archipelago--Pictorial works
Shields--Southeast Asia--Pictorial works
Shields--Melanesia--Pictorial works
Material culture--Malay Archipelago
Material culture--Southeast Asia
Material culture--Melanesia
Art, Malaysian--Pictorial works
Art, Southeast Asian--Pictorial works
Art, Melanesian--Pictorial works
Malay Archipelago--Social life and customs
Southeast Asia--Social life and customs
Melanesia--Social life and customs
Publishing details: Woollahra, NSW : William Nathaniel Evans in association with J.M. Fogel Media, Inc., San Francisco, [2019], 2 volumes (ix, 483 pages) : illustrations (some coloured), coloured maps, portraits (some coloured) ; 33 cm.
volume 1. Island Southeast Asia -- volume 2. Melanesia.
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: seeWar art & ritual : shields from the Pacific / edited by Bill Evans ; with contributions by Steven G. Alpert, Robyn Maxwell, Andrew Tavarelli, Harry Beran, Kevin Conru, Barry Craig, Natalie Wilson.
"This beautiful two-volume set is the result of many years of planning by Sydney-based collector and art dealer Bill Evans. In the course of its development, he identified 140 previously unpublished shields in public and private collections in Australia, New Zealand, and Indonesia, and they are reproduced in these volumes as full-page plates with details and supporting field photos. Informative essays by experts in specific fields go in depth, casting additional light onto their particular subjects, which range from dance shields of Java and Bali to war shields from Borneo, New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands. Contributors include Andrew Tavarelli, who provides a general introduction; Steven Alpert writing on the Dayak; Harry Beran, Barry Craig and Natalie Wilson writing on various aspects of Papua New Guinea; Robyn Maxwell on the legacy of the Majapahit; and Kevin Conru on the Solomon Islands. These two richly illustrated volumes will be a benefit to any library, whether specialized or general."
SUBJECTS AND TOPICS
Shields--Malay Archipelago
Shields--Southeast Asia
Shields--Melanesia
Shields--Malay Archipelago--Pictorial works
Shields--Southeast Asia--Pictorial works
Shields--Melanesia--Pictorial works
Material culture--Malay Archipelago
Material culture--Southeast Asia
Material culture--Melanesia
Art, Malaysian--Pictorial works
Art, Southeast Asian--Pictorial works
Art, Melanesian--Pictorial works
Malay Archipelago--Social life and customs
Southeast Asia--Social life and customs
Melanesia--Social life and customs
Publishing details: Woollahra, NSW : William Nathaniel Evans in association with J.M. Fogel Media, Inc., San Francisco, [2019], 2 volumes (ix, 483 pages) : illustrations (some coloured), coloured maps, portraits (some coloured) ; 33 cm.
volume 1. Island Southeast Asia -- volume 2. Melanesia.
Perceval Celiaview full entry
Reference: Celia Perceval - Painting and drawings, exhibition at Bridget McDonnell Gallery
“In the modern world, technological change has brought about disaffiliation. In the case of Australia’s most visible artistic clan, one sees continuity instead of a generation gap, apprenticeships within the family group instead of submission to an impersonal institution… When Australia’s disaffiliated youth were returning to rural life in places like Nimbin in the early seventies, ‘Boyds’ of the postwar baby-boom generation found themselves in the midst of an extended family whose link with the pre-industrial world had never been cut. That is why Tessa and Celia Perceval can work unselfconsciously in the landscape tradition, producing canvases close in inspiration to those of their grandmother Doris Boyd,  whose artistic conceptions were firmly rooted in the celebration-of-nature aims of the en plein airistes: painting on the spot, painting virgin sensations of colour and texture. These children of the post-second world war generation artists had no need to discover the neo-romanticism of the hippies and dropouts because their family environment had never lost a passionate appreciation of the natural world and the place of human beings in it.”
Extract: The Art of the Boyds, Generations of artistic achievement by Patricia Dobrez, Peter Herbst, Bay Books, 1990, page 17
Publishing details: Bridget McDonnell Gallery, 2023.
Ref: 1000
Wheelwright Roland 1870-1955view full entry
Reference: see Viscontea Casa d'Aste srl, MILANO DECOR-Antiques,Fine Art&Design Auction
Mar 08, 2023, Milano, Italy, Italy, lot 198 ROWLAND WHEELWRIGHT (Australia 1870-1955). Oil painting on cardboard depicting "HORSE FENCE JUMPING". Signed lower left. In a gilt frame. 51x35.5cm approx. ROWLAND WHEELWRIGHT (Australia 1870-1955). Dipinto olio su tela cartonata raffigurante "SALTO DEL RECINTO A CAVALLO". Firmato in basso a sinistra. In cornice dorata. 51x35,5 cm ca.
AND lot 199
ROWLAND WHEELWRIGHT (Australia 1870-1955). Oil painting on cardboard depicting "CARRIAGE WITH CHARACTERS IN THE COUNTRY". Signed lower right. In frame. 53.5x38cm approx. ROWLAND WHEELWRIGHT (Australia 1870-1955). Dipinto olio su tela cartonata raffigurante "CARROZZA CON PERSONAGGI IN PAESE". Firmato in basso a destra. In cornice. 53,5x38 cm ca.

Donnan Leiv Warren view full entry
Reference: see Das Kunst & Auktionshaus Kastern GmbH & Co KG, Hannover, Germany. For sale on Saturday 04 March, 2023, lot 73, Leiv Warren Donnan
1938 Bairnsdale, Australia - lives in Hanover - Swimming pool - Oil/Lwd. 126 x 92.5 cm. Signed and dated l. u.: L Donnan / (19)66. frame. - www.donnan.de Art studies at SHfbK Berlin with Volkert, Thieler and Mac Zimmermann.
Hanover, Lower Saxony
Vivid Memoriesview full entry
Reference: Vivid Memories: An Aboriginal Art History at the Musée d’Aquitaine (Bordeaux, France) from 16 October 2013 to 30 March 2014.
The brilliantly illustrated catalogue richly documents the exhibition co-curated by Paul Matharan (Curator of Non-European Collections, Musée d’Aquitaine) and recognised independent curator Arnaud Morvan (Anthropologist, Laboratoire d’Anthropologie sociale, Paris). It features an impressive list of essays by European, non-Indigenous Australian and Indigenous Australian scholars, as well as artist interviews.
Contents:
– “Mémoires vives: de l’ancien et du moderne” – Arnaud Morvan
– “Art pariétal: traditions anciennes, expressions contemporaines” – Paul Taçon
– “Reflections on Émile Durkeim, Religion and Aboriginal Art” – Philip Batty
– “Recognizing South East Australian Aboriginal Cultural Heritage” – Garry Jones
– “Aboriginal Art: Sacred Past and Existing Present” – Marcia Langton
– “Across borders: Aboriginal Art in Bordeaux” – Georges Petitjean
– Interview: Brook Andrew
– “Empreintes” – Barbara Glowczewski
– “Trajectoires et Historicité de Deux Motifs Iconographiques” – Géraldine Le Roux
– Interviews: Paddy Nyawarra, Michael Nelson, John Marwurndjul, Ivan Namirrkki
– “Intercultural Patterns in Indigenous Art” – Ian McLean
– “Vents du Nord: Presence Macassan en Australie du Nord” – Jessica de Largy-Healy
– Interview: “Ocre et Encre” – Zhou Xiaoping
– “L’Invention Aborigene de la Technologie et la Museologie Cooperative” – Lyndon Ormond Parker and Suzanne Spunner
– Interview: Lily Hibberd and Curtis Taylor
Publishing details: Published by the Musée d’Aquitaine (Bordeaux, France)
Editions de la Martinière, 2013
Authors: Paul Matharan and Arnaud Morvan
Bilingual French / English
264 pages.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: Vivid Memories: An Aboriginal Art History at the Musée d’Aquitaine (Bordeaux, France) from 16 October 2013 to 30 March 2014.
The brilliantly illustrated catalogue richly documents the exhibition co-curated by Paul Matharan (Curator of Non-European Collections, Musée d’Aquitaine) and recognised independent curator Arnaud Morvan (Anthropologist, Laboratoire d’Anthropologie sociale, Paris). It features an impressive list of essays by European, non-Indigenous Australian and Indigenous Australian scholars, as well as artist interviews.
Contents:
– “Mémoires vives: de l’ancien et du moderne” – Arnaud Morvan
– “Art pariétal: traditions anciennes, expressions contemporaines” – Paul Taçon
– “Reflections on Émile Durkeim, Religion and Aboriginal Art” – Philip Batty
– “Recognizing South East Australian Aboriginal Cultural Heritage” – Garry Jones
– “Aboriginal Art: Sacred Past and Existing Present” – Marcia Langton
– “Across borders: Aboriginal Art in Bordeaux” – Georges Petitjean
– Interview: Brook Andrew
– “Empreintes” – Barbara Glowczewski
– “Trajectoires et Historicité de Deux Motifs Iconographiques” – Géraldine Le Roux
– Interviews: Paddy Nyawarra, Michael Nelson, John Marwurndjul, Ivan Namirrkki
– “Intercultural Patterns in Indigenous Art” – Ian McLean
– “Vents du Nord: Presence Macassan en Australie du Nord” – Jessica de Largy-Healy
– Interview: “Ocre et Encre” – Zhou Xiaoping
– “L’Invention Aborigene de la Technologie et la Museologie Cooperative” – Lyndon Ormond Parker and Suzanne Spunner
– Interview: Lily Hibberd and Curtis Taylor
Publishing details: Published by the Musée d’Aquitaine (Bordeaux, France)
Editions de la Martinière, 2013
Authors: Paul Matharan and Arnaud Morvan
Bilingual French / English
264 pages.
Notre Histoire Sacreeview full entry
Reference: Notre Histoire Sacree (OUR SACRED HISTORY” Australian Aboriginal paintings from the Central Desert. Morteza ESMAILI.
Publishing details: Yapa Gallery, Yapa Gallery publishers 2009.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Notre Histoire Sacree (OUR SACRED HISTORY” Australian Aboriginal paintings from the Central Desert. Morteza ESMAILI.
Publishing details: Yapa Gallery, Yapa Gallery publishers 2009.
Coutts Gordonview full entry
Reference: see Vogt Auction, Texas, The Estate of Phil Moranm Mar 05, 2023, San Antonio, TX, USA, lot 121: Gordon Coutts (Scotland/Am., Palm Springs California, 1868-1937), cowboy cottage oil painting on canvas in gold frame frame, sight: 30 x 38 in., frame: 36 x 44 in. Condition: Small tear in upper right corner
Provenance: The Estate of Philip and Carolyn Moran, San Antonio, Texas
Born in Scotland, Coutts began his studies of art at the Glasgow School of Art, then in London at the Royal Academy and Paris at the Academie Julian. He also studied in Melbourne, Australia from 1891-1893. In 1902, Coutts and his wife, the artist Alice Grey, moved to San Francisco, California. Coutts received a gold medal from the Paris Salon in 1913. He was a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy, the Paris Salon, and many American International Exhibitions. He moved to Palm Springs in 1924 with tuberculosis, and built a Moroccan style villa, Dar Marroc, to live out his days.


Hoffensberg & Trapṣ Etablview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Jensen Harald lithographerview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
A P K (signed P K A) possibly K A Paul or Paul K A or Paullview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
P K A (signed P K A) possibly K A Paul or Paul K Aview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Darban T C ?view full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Paul K A may be A P K (signed P K A) possibly K A Paul or PAUL K Aview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Paulika ? Paul K A may be A P K (signed P K A) possibly K A Paul or PAUL K Aview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Giraraet TH ?view full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Pauli L ? A P K (signed P K A) possibly K A Paul or Paul K A or Paull or Pauliview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Kahnview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland. The name is given as artist or lithographer for at least one of the illustrations in this book. 
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland.
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
Lumholz Carlview full entry
Reference: see Carl. Lumholz, Among cannibals. An account of four years' travels in Australia and of camp life with the Aborigines of Queensland.
Publishing details: John Murray, 1889. XX,396 pp. Wood-engr. text-ills, chromolithogr. plates & 2 folded lithogr.
O’Doherty Chris a.k.a. Reg Mombassa 1view full entry
Reference: Simplisticism III Shadowland, catalogue of a a pop-up exhibition, illustrated in colour, approx with approx 60 works.
Publishing details: Rogue Pop-Up Gallery, 2021, 130 Regent Street, Reffern, NSW, 36pp
Billington Robertview full entry
Reference: This is Australia, by Robert Billington
Publishing details: Hodder Headline Australia, 2003 
144 p. : ill., ports
Ref: 1000
Billington Robertview full entry
Reference: The Bridge / photographs by Robert Billington ; text by Sarah Billington ; foreword by Giles Auty. Includes index.
Publishing details: Peribo, 1999 
119 p. : ill.
Ref: 1000
Billington Robertview full entry
Reference: Bondi : the sound of tumbling water / photographs and illustrations by Robert Billington

Publishing details: Bowral, N.S.W. : WriteLight, for Sparklehorse Publishing, 2006
Ref: 1000
Lindsay Normanview full entry
Reference: Playboy, vol. 14, no. 12, December 1967, contains an article Art Nouveau Erotica (pp.129-137) which showcases the work of Norman Lindsay, including reproductions of 8 of his works: The Mirror, Julia’s Monkey, She Arrives, The Ring, Apex of Life, The Sortie, The Dance, and a full-page illustration from Lysistrata; in fine condition. An elusive item for the Norman Lindsay completist.

Publishing details: Chicago, IL : H.M. Hefner, 1967. Small quarto, pictorial wrappers (lightly rubbed), 320 pp;
Ref: 1000
Dunn Johnview full entry
Reference: School Photography, by John Dunn, forward by Max Dupain. For secondary school students.
Publishing details: Piper Press, 1988, 158pp
Ref: 1000
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: see School Photography, by John Dunn, forward by Max Dupain. For secondary school students.
Publishing details: Piper Press, 1988, 158pp
Arnoldi - Arnold Jarvis 1881-1859view full entry
Reference: see The Arnold Jarvis Story by Robert G. Molyneux.
CONTENTS:
·        Critique by Russell Henry
·        Foreword
·        Arnold Jarvis
·        Bush Fires
·        Known Items of Paintings sold at Australian Auctions
‘Arnold Henry Jarvis 1881-1859
Jarvis, had by the 1920s, made a permanent niche for himself in the world of art appreciation.
Whether it be in Tasmania or the Victorian Grampians his watercolours were in keeping with the sincerity and the best traditions of a professional artist.
Born in 1881, Arnold Jarvis is best known for his traditional watercolours in the style of Hans Heysen. He is believed to have been resident in the Melbourne area where he died in 1960.’
Publishing details: Ron Millard, Deans Marsh. 1986, octavo, cardcover, 18 pages. Full colour and black and white photographs and illustrations.
Reasonable & Necessaryview full entry
Reference: Reasonable & Necessary: Prints and Artists Books by Artel Artists, Lynne Seear.Catalogue of an exhibition at Redcliffe Art Gallery, 7 December 2018 – 25 January 2019, and in Galleries around Queensland until March 2021. [To be indexed]

Publishing details: Brisbane: Museums and Galleries Queensland, 2018.
First Edition.
44 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.



Ref: 1000
Artel artistsview full entry
Reference: see Reasonable & Necessary: Prints and Artists Books by Artel Artists, Lynne Seear.Catalogue of an exhibition at Redcliffe Art Gallery, 7 December 2018 – 25 January 2019, and in Galleries around Queensland until March 2021.

Publishing details: Brisbane: Museums and Galleries Queensland, 2018.
First Edition.
44 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.



Crochet Coral Reefview full entry
Reference: Crochet Coral Reef, by Christine Wertheim, Margaret Wertheim,
A Project by Australian-born sisters and their Los Angeles based Institute for Figuring. “Our Crochet Coral Reef project is perhaps the largest participatory art and science endeavor in the world, with nearly 8000 active contributors in a dozen countries.” (from page 202) The resulting installations of brightly coloured crocheted corals and other sea creatures drawing attention to climate change and the death of living reefs, in particular Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef, have been exhibited around the world, including at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
Publishing details: Los Angeles: The Institute for Figuring, 2015. First Edition.
206 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial french fold wrappers, white lettering.

Ref: 1000
Wertheim Christine and Margaret view full entry
Reference: see Crochet Coral Reef, by Christine Wertheim, Margaret Wertheim,
A Project by Australian-born sisters and their Los Angeles based Institute for Figuring. “Our Crochet Coral Reef project is perhaps the largest participatory art and science endeavor in the world, with nearly 8000 active contributors in a dozen countries.” (from page 202) The resulting installations of brightly coloured crocheted corals and other sea creatures drawing attention to climate change and the death of living reefs, in particular Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef, have been exhibited around the world, including at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
Publishing details: Los Angeles: The Institute for Figuring, 2015. First Edition.
206 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial french fold wrappers, white lettering.

Great Barrier Reefview full entry
Reference: see Crochet Coral Reef, by Christine Wertheim, Margaret Wertheim,
A Project by Australian-born sisters and their Los Angeles based Institute for Figuring. “Our Crochet Coral Reef project is perhaps the largest participatory art and science endeavor in the world, with nearly 8000 active contributors in a dozen countries.” (from page 202) The resulting installations of brightly coloured crocheted corals and other sea creatures drawing attention to climate change and the death of living reefs, in particular Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef, have been exhibited around the world, including at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
Publishing details: Los Angeles: The Institute for Figuring, 2015. First Edition.
206 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial french fold wrappers, white lettering.

crochetview full entry
Reference: see Crochet Coral Reef, by Christine Wertheim, Margaret Wertheim,
A Project by Australian-born sisters and their Los Angeles based Institute for Figuring. “Our Crochet Coral Reef project is perhaps the largest participatory art and science endeavor in the world, with nearly 8000 active contributors in a dozen countries.” (from page 202) The resulting installations of brightly coloured crocheted corals and other sea creatures drawing attention to climate change and the death of living reefs, in particular Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef, have been exhibited around the world, including at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
Publishing details: Los Angeles: The Institute for Figuring, 2015. First Edition.
206 pages, colour illustrations. Pictorial french fold wrappers, white lettering.

Sciberras Lukeview full entry
Reference: Side of the Sky - Luke Sciberras. "Curated by Emily Rolfe and Sarah Gurich"--Page 48.
"Campbell Town Arts Centre: 4 June - 7 August 2022, Bathurst Regional Art Gallery: 11 June - 7 August 2022"--Page 48.
Includes bibliographical references (page 393).
Publishing details: Campbelltown Arts Centre and Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, 2022, 408 pages : colour illustrations ; 32 cm + 1 appendix (15 pages : colour illustrations ;
Ref: 1000
Pattern pulse view full entry
Reference: Pattern pulse : exploring the art of Australian surface designers, by Rachael King.
A compendium showcasing 100 of Australia's most talented surface designers: people who create the artwork that adorns the surfaces of everyday objects we use, and the fashions we wear. Read about their careers, their processes, and heed their words of 'insider' wisdom. Dive into a glorious catalogue of colours and shapes created using analogue and digital techniques. Learn about why this corner of the art world is so dynamic, where continuously evolving digital processes allow manufacturers to print artwork on a vast array of surfaces.Experience the unique flora and fauna of Australia through the eyes of these imaginative and talented creatives. Welcome to the exciting art and unique lives of Australian surface designers.

Publishing details: Samford, OLD, Pattern Pulse Press, 2020, 288 pages : colour illustrations(paperback)
Ref: 1000
designingview full entry
Reference: see Pattern pulse : exploring the art of Australian surface designers, by Rachael King.
A compendium showcasing 100 of Australia's most talented surface designers: people who create the artwork that adorns the surfaces of everyday objects we use, and the fashions we wear. Read about their careers, their processes, and heed their words of 'insider' wisdom. Dive into a glorious catalogue of colours and shapes created using analogue and digital techniques. Learn about why this corner of the art world is so dynamic, where continuously evolving digital processes allow manufacturers to print artwork on a vast array of surfaces.Experience the unique flora and fauna of Australia through the eyes of these imaginative and talented creatives. Welcome to the exciting art and unique lives of Australian surface designers.

Publishing details: Samford, OLD, Pattern Pulse Press, 2020, 288 pages : colour illustrations(paperback)
surface designingview full entry
Reference: see Pattern pulse : exploring the art of Australian surface designers, by Rachael King. [To be indexed]
A compendium showcasing 100 of Australia's most talented surface designers: people who create the artwork that adorns the surfaces of everyday objects we use, and the fashions we wear. Read about their careers, their processes, and heed their words of 'insider' wisdom. Dive into a glorious catalogue of colours and shapes created using analogue and digital techniques. Learn about why this corner of the art world is so dynamic, where continuously evolving digital processes allow manufacturers to print artwork on a vast array of surfaces.Experience the unique flora and fauna of Australia through the eyes of these imaginative and talented creatives. Welcome to the exciting art and unique lives of Australian surface designers.

Publishing details: Samford, OLD, Pattern Pulse Press, 2020, 288 pages : colour illustrations(paperback)
TRUTH BOMBview full entry
Reference: Truth bomb : inspiration from the mouths and minds of women artists / Abigail Crompton. [To be indexed]]
If anyone can teach us how to pursue the life and work of an artist, it is the artists in Truth Bomb. This compilation of pioneering and established women artists from around the world will motivate and empower you, challenge you to find solace in the shared human experiences of birth, death, love, anger, joy, sadness. Their sassiness will fire your spirit. Truth Bomb offers the very best commentary and insight into the incredible formation of diverse women artists while uncovering the power of taking a chance, pushing the envelope and ultimately not being shy when it comes to making a mark. It is a magical visual mash-up of images, memoirs, moments, interviews and inspirational beginnings as told by twenty-two leading women artists, including Beci Orpin, Mickalene Thomas, Kaylene Whiskey and Judy Chicago. Truth Bomb is an ode to art and artists and an attempt to decipher the mystery of creativity.
Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Victoria : Thames & Hudson Australia, 2020, 207 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Wanambi Wukunview full entry
Reference: Wukun Wanambi Destiny
In early 2022, the Michael Reid team began working towards a solo exhibition with renowned Yolŋu artist Mr Wanambi, alongside the Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre in Yirrkala. In early May, we were saddened by the news of his sudden passing. The artist’s family and the team at Yirrkala were fully aware of what this exhibition meant to Mr. Wanambi and requested that the exhibition continue as planned. It was with great sorrow that this exhibition took place posthumously.
Mr. Wanambi’s family authorised the use of his name in written form but request that it not be spoken aloud in the presence of people from Arnhem Land or in the Miwatj region. His spirit has a long journey to go on, to return to his origin point. Calling his name aloud could distract and delay his spirit’s return in a new form. His family have authorised the use of his preferred title ‘Destiny’. ‘Destiny’ exhibited across our galleries in Sydney and Berlin, and marked the grand opening of our new space, Michael Reid Art Bar. Mr Wanambi’s legacy is vast and unfolding, and we look forward to sharing his boundary pushing talents & unbreakable vision with you.
Publishing details: Michael Red Gallery, 2022 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Justin Miller Art,view full entry
Reference: Justin Miller Art, Small Australian Treasures, March, 2023 catalogue.
Publishing details: Justin Miller Art, 2023, pb, 48pp
Ref: 133
Blackwood William 1824-97view full entry
Reference: see Justin Miller Art, Small Australian Treasures, March, 2023 catalogue.
Sydney Harbour Taken From Darling Point, c. 1858

a rare mid-nineteenth century albumen paper photograph

captioned in ink on original backing

7.5 x 25.6cm

and

ydney Harbour Taken From Government House, c. 1858

a rare mid-nineteenth century albumen paper photograph

captioned in ink on original backing

6.8 x 21cm

Publishing details: Justin Miller Art, 2023, pb, 48pp
Streeton Arthur Draper’s Commercial Hotel,view full entry
Reference: see Justin Miller Art, Small Australian Treasures, March, 2023 catalogue.
Draper’s Commercial Hotel, Mittagong, c. 1892, watercolour on paper
the verso with a pencilled inscription signed by the artist, accompanied by several small sketches that relate to its dedicatee (see below) 24 x 29.5cm. With essay.
Publishing details: Justin Miller Art, 2023, pb, 48pp
Alcock & Co Melbourneview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Hulbert Benjamin 1850-1936view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Billyeald George 1851-1932 carverview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Alcock Henry Uptonview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Stephen John furniyure makerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Doulton Australia 1886 vaseview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Billyeald Charles White carverview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by John Wade on Australian billiard table by Benjamin Hulbert, p9-17.
Doulton market in Australia view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Smallfield Katherine Doulton decoratorview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Rutgherford Geraldine Doulton decoratorview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Rutgherford Linda china decoratorview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Rutherford Ada artistview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Rutherford Hettie artistview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Rutherford Florence artistview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Jon and Yvonne Douglas on ‘Unlocking the story of Doulton’s Australia 1886 vase
Casellas John aka Juanview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Dorothy Erickson on ‘Spanish Craftsmen in... Western Australia, part 2 John Casellas’, p32-
Casellas Salvatore brother of John view full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Dorothy Erickson on ‘Spanish Craftsmen in... Western Australia, part 2 John Casellas’, p32-
Harley Peter wood carverview full entry
Reference: see Australiana Magazine, February, 2023, vol 45, no. 1. article by Glenn R. Cooke, ‘Harley Peter - Queensland Folk wood carver’, p48-56
Booth Peterview full entry
Reference: see ‘The Stuff of Nightmares’, review of Peter Booth’s exhibition at Tarra Warra Museum, Sydney Morning Herald, 4.3.23, Spectrum section ,p 10.
Publishing details: Sydney Morning Herald, 4.3.23, Spectrum section ,p 10. Copy in Human Nature, by Jason Smith with John Embling and Robert Lindsay, 2003
Booth Peterview full entry
Reference: Peter Booth / curated by Anthony Fitzpatrick, catalogue of exhibition at Tarra Warra Museum of Art.
"TarraWarra Museum of Art is proud to present this major survey exhibition of the renowned Australian artist Peter Booth. Peter Booth has carved out a unique place in Australian art. His robust and sometimes turbulent paintings present images that linger in the memory for years. The use of impasto paint in his work creates images that beckon sustained looking. The drama of light and dark creates singular at times eerie and uncanny pictures replete with various imaging's." -- Foreword, page 5.
Full contents • 1. Foreword by Victoria Lynn
• 2. Figurative Abstraction / Abstract Figuration: Peter Booth's Early Years by Kirsty Grant
• 3. Inside / Out: the Liminal Worlds of Peter Booth by Anthony Fitzpatrick
• 4. Works
• 5. List of Works
• 6. Biography
• 7. Acknowledgements.

A survey exhibition of the work of the renowned Australian artist Peter Booth 
With a remarkable career spanning several decades, Melbourne-based Booth is a unique voice in Australian art. This new survey of paintings and works on paper is the first major public gallery exhibition of Peter Booth’s work since the NGV retrospective in 2003 and features a number of the artist’s most significant works from the 1970s to 1990s, alongside important recent works from the past two decades.
The exhibition is presented thematically, honing in on and highlighting particular motifs, subjects and moods which have become hallmarks of Booth’s expansive oeuvre: stillness and turbulence, alterity and alienation, mutation and hybridity, the absurd and the grotesque, the road and the ruin, and the despoliation and the resilience of nature.
A small group of abstract paintings from the mid-1970s at the start of the exhibition provide a prelude to an important series of gestural paintings which mark the beginning of the artist’s journey into the highly expressive landscape and figure subjects which have characterised his practice since that time.
The exhibition progresses through Booth’s vivid imaginings of an apocalyptic world characterised by grotesque, unsettling, and at times absurd scenes of human and hybrid figures in varying states of apprehension, aggression and conflict. These works will be accompanied by a small selection of prints by William Blake, James Ensor, Francisco Goya, and Samuel Palmer, visionary artists who have been important touchstones for Booth and with whom he shares a number of affinities.
This survey also brings together important works from the past three decades to convey humanity’s often fraught and ambiguous relationship to the natural world, revealing Booth’s extraordinary capacity to transmute his intensely personal perceptions of the mysteries and forces of nature and the folly and hubris of human endeavours, into exceptional and deeply compelling paintings and drawings.
PETER BOOTH, curated by Anthony Fitzpatrick, is generously supported by The Balnaves Foundation.

Publishing details: Tarra Warra Museum of Art, 2022, 130 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1009
Cotton Alan b1936view full entry
Reference: see Dominic Winter Auctions, 8.3.23, lot 263: Cotton (Alan, 1936-). Venice Moorings on the Grand Canal, oil on canvas, signed lower left, canvas size 25.5 x 30.5 cm (10 x 12 ins),signed to verso of upper stretcher by artist, title, artist's name and address to verso of lower stretcher in ink, framed (40.7 x 46 cm)


QTY: (1)

NOTE:
Cotton attended Redditch and Bournville School of Art. Once he graduated from there he joined the Painting School at the Birmingham College of Art. In 2005 Alan was tour artist for the then Prince of Wales when he toured Sri Lanka, Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.
Knott Lview full entry
Reference: see Thimbleby & Shorland auction, UK, 5.3.23, lot 124: Framed oil on board, written to reverse 'Pilbara, N.W. Australia', signed by artist bottom left L. Knott, 59 x 44cms. Estimate: £20-40
Creedy Jean 1920-2014view full entry
Reference: see Dominic Winter Auctions, UK, 8.3.23, lot 209: Creedy (Jean, 1920-2014). Distant Mountains from Katoomba Falls, watercolour on wove paper, signed lower right, mount aperture 29 x 39.2 cm (11 1/2 x 15 3/8 ins), together with two other Australian watercolour views: Blue Mountains Landscape 1 [and] 2, both signed and mounted, plus a watercolour landscape Foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, signed and mounted, all framed and glazed (59 x 74.5 cm and smaller), labelled on versos (the first item labelled 'Distant Mountains from Katoomba Falls d'Alcudia [?]), some with ink manuscript inscription on verso, and another similar possibly American landscape, signed watercolour on paper QTY: (5)
NOTE:
Jean Creedy studied at Exeter University, the Chelsea College of Art, and London University. A Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, she has exhibited at the Heffner Gallery, Cambridge, Galleri Docent Duc, Stockholm, the Royal Academy Summer Exhibitions, and the Royal West of England Academy amongst others.
Wilson Cyril Scottish 1911 - 2003view full entry
Reference: see Thomson Roddick Auctioneers & Valuers, 7.3.23, lot 296,Cyril Wilson (Scottish, 1911 - 2003) 
Australian Corn Barbecue 
Signed and dated '83, oil on canvas, 49cm x 44cm. 
Hendrie Peter photographerview full entry
Reference: Pacific journeys, photography by Peter Hendrie
Publishing details: Albert Park., Victoria : Pacific Journeys, c2003 
[224] p. : ill.(col.)
Ref: 1000
Rogge Ottoview full entry
Reference: Australia, a visual celebration / Otto Rogge
Publishing details: Sydney : New Holland, 1997 
192 p. : col. ill., maps
Ref: 1000
Tweedie Pennyview full entry
Reference: Spirit of Arnhem Land / Penny Tweedie,
Situated in the far reaches of the Northern Territory, Arnhem Land is one of the few regions of Australia where traditional Aboriginal culture remains intact. Author/Photographer Penny Tweedie's twenty-year relationship with the people of Arnhem Land has given her unparalleled access into their lives and culture, and resulted in this rare glimpse into traditional Aboriginal culture. Quotes from the Aboriginal people themselves bring the photographs to life and provide an insight into the spirit of Arnhem Land. Organized into four sections, the book details the efforts of the Aboriginal people to maintain their cultural heritage. The introduction provides the reader with background information on Aboriginal history and traditional art, while the remaining three sections focus on the themes of Land, Water, and Spirit and their meaning to the Aboriginal people. Magnificent Aboriginal artworks, including rock art and bark painting, are featured throughout the book.
Publishing details: Wahroonga, NSW : New Holland Publishers, 2021 
©2021 
168 pages : chiefly illustrations (colour), colour map
Ref: 1000
Nganjmirra Nawakadj view full entry
Reference: Kunwinjku spirit : creation stories from western Arnhem Land / Nawakadj Nganjmirra, artist and storykeeper ; edited and photographed by Neil McLeod
Publishing details: Melbourne University Press, 1997, xii, 272 p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 1000
Kunwinjku spiritview full entry
Reference: see Kunwinjku spirit : creation stories from western Arnhem Land / Nawakadj Nganjmirra, artist and storykeeper ; edited and photographed by Neil McLeod
Publishing details: Melbourne University Press, 1997, xii, 272 p. : ill. (some col.)
McLeod Neil photographerview full entry
Reference: see Kunwinjku spirit : creation stories from western Arnhem Land / Nawakadj Nganjmirra, artist and storykeeper ; edited and photographed by Neil McLeod
Publishing details: Melbourne University Press, 1997, xii, 272 p. : ill. (some col.)
Adorned view full entry
Reference: Adorned : traditional jewellery and body decoration from Australia and the Pacific, by Anna Edmundson, Chris Boylan ; photography by David Liddle. With ethnographic notes on each piece, bibliography; Produced to accompany a joint exhibition of the Macleay Museum and the Oceanic Art Society, on display at the Macleay Museum, 23 March 1999 – 30 January 2001.
 

Publishing details: Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 1999. Large quarto (300 x 210 mm), pictorial card in dust jacket; endpaper maps, pp. 112, illustrated throughout in colour and b/w,
Riji and Jakulview full entry
Reference: Riji and Jakuli : Kimberley pearl shell in Aboriginal Australia. AKERMAN, Kim and John STANTON.
‘Detailed study of the uses of pearl shell in Aboriginal culture; sources of shell, material types, manufacturing and engraving tools and techniques; function – personal adornment, magic and sorcery, ritual; use in exchange – distribution modes and exchange routes; description and meaning of motifs – geometric (meander, zigzag, interlocking key) and figurative (traditional and nontraditional); historical developments in the 20th century; utensils – shell; portable art; arts – change; arts – crafts; arts – techniques; ornaments; ritual objects – other; trade and gift exchange.’ (Trove)

Publishing details: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, 1994. Series: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, Monograph Series, number 4. Large octavo, 250 x 175 mm, pictorial wrappers, pp. xii, 73; colour illustrations, map;
Ref: 1009
Kimberley pearl shell in Aboriginal Australiaview full entry
Reference: see Riji and Jakuli : Kimberley pearl shell in Aboriginal Australia. AKERMAN, Kim and John STANTON.
‘Detailed study of the uses of pearl shell in Aboriginal culture; sources of shell, material types, manufacturing and engraving tools and techniques; function – personal adornment, magic and sorcery, ritual; use in exchange – distribution modes and exchange routes; description and meaning of motifs – geometric (meander, zigzag, interlocking key) and figurative (traditional and nontraditional); historical developments in the 20th century; utensils – shell; portable art; arts – change; arts – crafts; arts – techniques; ornaments; ritual objects – other; trade and gift exchange.’ (Trove)

Publishing details: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, 1994. Series: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, Monograph Series, number 4. Large octavo, 250 x 175 mm, pictorial wrappers, pp. xii, 73; colour illustrations, map;
pearl shell in Aboriginal Australia - Kimberley view full entry
Reference: see Riji and Jakuli : Kimberley pearl shell in Aboriginal Australia. AKERMAN, Kim and John STANTON.
‘Detailed study of the uses of pearl shell in Aboriginal culture; sources of shell, material types, manufacturing and engraving tools and techniques; function – personal adornment, magic and sorcery, ritual; use in exchange – distribution modes and exchange routes; description and meaning of motifs – geometric (meander, zigzag, interlocking key) and figurative (traditional and nontraditional); historical developments in the 20th century; utensils – shell; portable art; arts – change; arts – crafts; arts – techniques; ornaments; ritual objects – other; trade and gift exchange.’ (Trove)

Publishing details: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, 1994. Series: Northern Territory Museum of Arts and Sciences, Monograph Series, number 4. Large octavo, 250 x 175 mm, pictorial wrappers, pp. xii, 73; colour illustrations, map;
Fibre art from Elcho Islandview full entry
Reference: Fibre art from Elcho Island. Catalogue of an Exhibition St. George campus, The University of New South Wales.
Publishing details: Sydney : School of Applied and Performing Arts, The University of New South Wales, 1994. Narrow quarto (295 x 170 mm), illustrated stiff wrappers, pp. [4], iii, 56; 19 b/w photographs, 18 coloured plates, 2 maps, catalogue of works;
Ref: 1000
Barnett P Nevilleview full entry
Reference: From Chatswood to Edo: The life and books of P. Neville Barnett, by Diane Kraal.

Publishing details: Melbourne: Bread Street Press, 2007. Quarto, wrappers, 102pp. illustrated. Limited to 30 copies,
Ref: 1000
Duncan Ken photographerview full entry
Reference: Ken Duncan - Reflections. Inspiring Australian Images Volume 1. ‘Many splendid panoramic colour photographs. A selection of photographer Ken Duncan’s stunning panoramic images of Australia.
Publishing details: Syd. Ken Duncan Panographs. 2004. (rep) Wide
Oblong Folio. (485x230cm.) Or.cl. Dustjacket. 168pp.
Ref: 1000
Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams, Melbourne, Sidney Nolan: The Early Works, 9 Mar 2023, Online Only.
Sidney Nolan
The Early Works
ENDING FROM 9 MARCH 2023, 14:00 AEDT

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 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 16). 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 18), 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 6, 14 and 18 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. 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. 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. 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 1, 9 and 24). 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. 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 2 and 12). 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
NOTE: Please refer to the cataloguing of each Lot for the specific location.
McClure Hazelview full entry
Reference: see Joel’s online auction, 9.3.23: Lots 2001 to 2004 of our Objects & Collectables auction form a small collection of Merric Boyd pottery, gifted by Merric Boyd to Hazel McClure, grandmother of the present owner. Hazel McClure studied under Merric Boyd and was later employed as his assistant at Murrumbeena up until 1926. She was also an active potter in the 1920s, exhibiting in the Arts and Craft Society Victoria from 1923.
Burrup Eddieview full entry
Reference: see Australian Financial Review, 9.3.23, p12, ‘’’Curiosity Piece’ to test appetite for scandal’, article by Elizabeth Fortescue. ‘West Australian blue blood Elizabeth Durack outraged the art world when she started painting as Indigenous artist “Eddie Burrup”. Who remembers Eddie Burrup, the man who never was? The appearance of an abstract painting in a Perth auction catalogue has conjured the spectre of one of Australia’s most celebrated cultural controversies.
Among 144 relatively affordable works by artists including Sidney Nolan and Tim Storrier, Burrup’s Glimpse of Ngarangani is a pleasant abstract, evoking sunlight on shallow green water. About the size of an exercise book, the painting is estimated to fetch between $600 and $900 at GFL Fine Art’s auction on Sunday, March 12.
So far, so good. But the clue is in the maker’s name, which is listed as “Eddie Burrup/Elizabeth Durack”. The two artists were not collaborators, mind you. They were one and the same person.
Elizabeth Durack CMG, OBE was born in 1915 into a prominent Kimberley grazing dynasty that employed many local Indigenous people on its cattle stations, Argyle Downs and Ivanhoe. Her sister Dame Mary Durack wrote the Australian classic novel, Kings in Grass Castles.
Elizabeth became a successful artist, often painting portraits of Indigenous people – some of which appear in this sale – and exhibiting her work under her own name.
In 1995, an unknown artist named Eddie Burrup began exhibiting in Broome. Burrup was invited to exhibit in a group show of Indigenous art at the 1996 Adelaide Festival. He was also hung in the 1996 Telstra National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Award in Darwin.
In 1997, Elizabeth Durack outed herself as the artist behind the Burrup name. The revelation that Burrup did not in fact exist, and that a privileged white woman had been making pictures that purported to be Indigenous, outraged much of the Australian art world.
Durack’s actions went to the heart of cultural appropriation, well-known Indigenous curator Djon Mundine told Saleroom this week. The Eddie Burrup incident became a turning point for the idea of the “primary voice” in Indigenous art. Provenances that linked works securely back to Indigenous creators attained a new importance. For Mr Mundine, who met Elizabeth Durack, Glimpse of Ngarangani is now just “a curiosity piece”.
“I’m mellowed with age, but I was really pissed off at the time,” Mr Mundine said.
Elizabeth Durack died in 2000 aged 85. Only one other “Eddie Burrup/Elizabeth Durack” has ever come to auction, and that was in 2014. The work was passed in.
It’s a fair bet there will be no “Eddie Burrups” offered when Sotheby’s holds its just announced sale of Aboriginal Art in New York on May 23. Deutscher and Hackett’s sale of Important Indigenous Art on March 22, previewed here last week, is also short on Burrups. Viewings for that sale take place in Sydney from Thursday March 9 until March 12, and in Melbourne from March 16 to March 21.

Lewis martinview full entry
Reference: see Spellman Gallery, NY, USA, online catalogue 2023,
Martin Lewis (1881-1962)
Boss of the Block, circa 1939
Etching and aquatint
11 1/4 x 7 1/2 inches (plate size)
15 7/8 x 11 inches (sheet size)
Signed lower right
Edition on 212
Martin Lewis (1881-1962)
Born in Castlemaine, Australia, Martin Lewis became in the 1920s and 1930s one of the major print makers in the United States, completing between 1915 and 1945 about 143 prints.  On canvas, he also explored human activity and relationships, but his graphics* are regarded as superior to his paintings.  He lived in New York City most of his life, with the exception of several years during the Depression when he moved to Connecticut.  But in 1933, missing the city, he returned to New York.
He trained in Sydney, and emigrated to the United States in 1900.  After a trip in 1910 to San Francisco, he decided to settle in New York where he was excited about the rhythms of city life.  In 1915, largely self taught, he made his first etching* and also pursued drypoint*.  From 1920 to 1922, he lived in Japan, and that experience influenced his work.  In 1934, he and lithographer* George Miller organized a printmaking school in New York, and Lewis taught at the Art Students League* from 1944 to 1951.
 
Images of New York City fill his prints that show industry, commerce, and immigrant life.  Like artist Edward Hoppper, Lewis especially liked night scenes, which offered him the chance to show light and shadow.  He continued scenes from his print studies of moody urban streets and structures with and without dominating figures.  In October, 1998, his Cityscapes on Paper was shown at the Brooklyn Museum.

Sources:
Matthew Baigell, Dictionary of American Art
Spanierman Galleries, Art for the New Collector II
Olsen Johnview full entry
Reference: 'New York Nowhere'. Etchings by John Olsen, text by Geoffrey Dutton. Containing 12 etchings,
Publishing details: Delux edition #28/175, pub. Lytlewode Press, Melbourne 1998. In slipcase. 10 signed by John Olsen, 2 unsigned. Ten black & white photographs, signed by John Littlewood.
Ref: 1000
Purves Smith Peter book ownershipview full entry
Reference: see Forum Auctions, UK, 30.3.23, lot 521: Golding (William) Lord of the Flies, first edition, third impression, signed by the author on endpaper, foxing to endpaper, pencil and ink ownership inscription to endpapers, original cloth, shelf-lean, wear to head of spine, sunning to spine tips, dust-jacket, price-clipped, toning to spine, spine ends and corners chipped, marking and soiling to panels, 8vo, 1955. 
With the ownership inscription of Maisie Purves-Smith, wife of the Australian painter Peter Purves-Smith.
Murphy Idrisview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, Spectrum , 11.3.23, pages 8-9, article by John McDonald, 4 illustrations, in relation to exhibtion at S. H. Irvin Gallery.
Australian Abstract view full entry
Reference: Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Hrovat Felice view full entry
Reference: see Abell March 16 Online Weekly Auction
Mar 17, 2023, Los Angeles, CA, USA, Felice Hrovat (20th / 21st Century): Australia - Outback, oil on panel; signed lower right, titled verso 10 3/4 x 13 3/4 in. (27.3 x 34.9 cm.), Frame: 16 3/4 x 19 3/4 in. (42.5 x 50.2 cm.)
Gill Michaelview full entry
Reference: see From: Australiana Society, 21st Virtual Show and Tell Report, 13.3.23, article with photos (not included here)

Michael Gill, 2023, Sydney Harbour Bridge Cocktail Cabinet. Photos: John Lee


The West side. The maker, Michael Gill behind the deck in his red shirt gives an idea of the scale.

LENGTH: just under 5 metres;
HEIGHT: just under 2.5 metres, not including flags;
WIDTH: 1.7 metres.
NUMBER OF RIVETS: Oops, I forgot to make rivets – I’ll have to start again… (Real Bridge: 6 million rivets).
For those of us (this editor - David Bedford – normally included) who only like ‘old stuff’ our apologies. But we simply couldn’t resist this wonderful item, a piece of modern-day Australiana that we think will become an antique of the future. The artistry, the timbers, the techniques all come together to make this WOW. We don’t have International exhibitions of decorative arts anymore, but, if we did, this would be an exhibition piece to knock their socks off!

The East side

The style is industrial Art Deco. Below the deck are 13 views of the Harbour foreshores in coloured glass. 7 on the west side and 6 on the east. Below them, mosaic panels feature Sydney Harbour’s underwater life. Between them, the 2 panels total around 90 animals and plants. Those flags atop the pylons are White Beech (Gmelina leichhardtii) carved from the charred remains of verandah posts I salvaged after a house fire in Drummoyne in the 1970s.

The three main timbers, in solid and veneer form, are Art Deco favourites: Qld. Maple (Flindersia brayleyana), Qld Walnut (Endiandra palmerstonii) and North Qld. Silky Oak (Cardwellia sublimis). Much of the solid timber came from an old, pre-war, coffin-maker’s collection and most of the veneers were sliced in the 1920s and 30s.
L.E.D. lights throughout, both 12 volts and 24 volts.

The most popular spirits, liqueurs and mixers are in the pylons and fitted with dispensers. It is an “island” cabinet – staff mix and serve cocktails from both sides and ends.


At age 17, Michael was booked for speeding on the Bridge, driving his first car, a Morris Minor! Perhaps that explains his obsession (and given that the early MM motors were only 850cc it must have taken some doing – Ed).

If you like the look of this there is a video on YouTube that shows more. Because that video contains a sale advertisement, we cannot include the link in an Australiana publication.


Dupain Rexview full entry
Reference: Australia : 150 photographs / Rex Dupain
Publishing details: Camberwell, Vic. : Penguin Books, 2010 
191 p. : col. chiefly ill.
Ref: 1000
Murcutt Glenview full entry
Reference: Glenn Murcutt Buildings + Projects 1962-2003, by F. Fromonot

Publishing details: Thames & Hudson, 2005, colour & b/w illustrations, soft cover,
Ref: 1000
Bauer Ferdinandview full entry
Reference: llustrations of the Flora of New Holland, exibition at the British Museum of Natural History in 1990. [The exhibition: 'The Illustrations of Ferdinand Bauer', or otherwise known under it's extended title: 'Ferdinand Bauer's Illustrations of the Flora of New Holland collected on Captain Matthew Flinders' circumnavigation of Australia in HMS Investigator 1801-1803'. It was held in Gallery 11, 23 January to 5 April 1990, and celebrated a new issue publication taken from the original plates.’]
Publishing details: British Museum of Natural History, 1990 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Wolff Wolfgangview full entry
Reference: The following works appeared at Davidsons auction 19.3.23. Lots 360 - 367, Exhibitions of Wolff’s work were held in Australia (see biography below). Howver, it does not appear that he visited Australia,
From Davidson’s catalogue:
This group of woodcut prints were forwarded to a librarian at the Mitchell Library, Sydney, in 1947 seeking funds for plans by Wolfgang Wolff and family to migrate to USA as they were no longer welcome in French Tahiti owing to their German nationality after WWII. See original attached list of works and letter from Wolff to Librarian, Mitchell Library, Sydney.

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest)

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest) 

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest) 

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest)

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) 
Young Fisherman, Tahiti, c.1939-40. 
Signed in pencil 'Wolff ... Tahiti'. 

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest) 

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest)

WOLFF, Wolfgang (Germany/Tahiti/USA 1909-1994) (5) 
Daily Activities in Tahiti, 1939-47. 
Hand Coloured Black & White Woodcut Prints (5) 
18x24cm (largest)

Wolfgang Wolff · 1909 – 1994
Wolfgang Wolff was a prolific self-taught artist who worked in a variety of media: oils and acrylics, watercolors, pen and ink, woodcuts, jewelry, and textiles. His work reveals the influence of the Die Brucke school’s Max Pechstein, Ernst Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, amongst other expressionists.
Wolfgang was born September 30, 1909 in St. Louis, Alsace Lorraine, when the territory was part of Germany. With his wife, Hildegard, they fled Nazi oppression in 1934 — escaping to Tahiti. Wolfgang’s successful artwork supported them during their self-exile in Tahiti and beyond. With the commencement of World War II, Wolfgang was interned in two successive French prison camps on Tahiti because of his German birth. After the war, Wolfgang and Hildegard left Tahiti with their son, Goetz, for the United States. There, Wolfgang became a successful commercial artist in textile design. He was one of the originators of the Polynesian designs found in typical “Hawaiian” shirts.
Life in Germany
Before leaving Germany, he was an administrative law judge. In this position Wolfgang found he was pressured by his Nazi supervisors to find Jews guilty and Aryans innocent in cases that came before him.
The ominous future facing Germany with Hitler in power led Wolfgang and his sweetheart Hildegard, whose nickname was Max, to decide that they had to emigrate from Germany to a less threatening place in the world.
Wolfgang and Max were stymied when exit visas were refused by the authorities who sought to keep Aryans in the homeland. In response, the two got married, relying on the cover story of a taking a four–week honeymoon to Tahiti as a way to obtain an exit visa, but knowing they weren’t returning. A key element to their successful escape was that they traveled with another couple, one of whom was French. She provided additional cover and access to basic resources such as French currency which was difficult for Germans to obtain. They left via Marseilles.
Life in Tahiti
Wolfgang and Max hoped to start a vanilla plantation in one of the outer Society Islands, but the French opposed their plan. Fortunately, Wolfgang’s artistic talent was recognized while in Tahiti. He had an early art show in Papeete at the Bougainville that led him to have confidence to pursue an art career, even though he never had any art training.
Wolfgang’s paintings, woodcuts, and mother of pearl jewelry were a success with tourists visiting the island. His work soon became displayed not only at a gallery in Tahiti, but throughout the western world. Exhibits of his work were held in Australia, South America and in the United States. Much of Wolfgang’s artwork focused on people, depicting everyday life. He frequently subtly addressed social justice issues simply by portraying the lives of his subjects. His artwork was an integral part of the book I Went Native, by Al Kassel. The book was reviewed by the New York Times (1939) which included one of Wolfgang’s illustrations.
Life During the War
The beginning of World War 2 dramatically changed Wolfgang and Max’s pleasant life in Tahiti. Because he was a German citizen, Wolfgang was imprisoned along with a dozen “enemies” in Fort Taravao in the swampy isthmus part of Tahiti.
Despite being imprisoned, Wolfgang demonstrated respect for the Tahitian native guards who had been unwillingly drafted. At one point the guards offered Wolfgang all their guns while the French commanding officers were away in Papeete. The natives hoped for an uprising to throw out the colonialist French from Tahiti. Wolfgang declined, trying to explain to them the realities of geopolitics of the war.
By 1942, Wolfgang and the other “enemies” were moved to the coral atoll of Motu Uta in the bay of Papeete. The atoll had no facilities or fresh water. The prisoners built their own housing and grew their own food to supplement the meager rations that were delivered irregularly. He captured the daily life in an extensive illustrated diary. They were haunted by the threat of being bombed because the French deliberately attached an obsolescent amphibious aircraft to the atoll so that if the Japanese reached Tahiti, they would bomb the atoll instead of Papeete.
Despite these harsh conditions while imprisoned, Wolfgang continued his artwork relying on art materials that were sent to him from Germany. Sales from his artwork supported Max and their baby, Goetz. Wolfgang’s artwork was smuggled out in Goetz’s diapers.
Even after the Allies’ victory in Europe, life did not return to normal. Wolfgang was kept under house arrest at their family home in Punauuia (since the war was not officially resolved by a peace treaty).
After Tahiti
Wolfgang, Max and Goetz came to the U.S. in 1948 and took up residence in Los Angeles. Their U.S. citizen sponsors whom Wolfgang met in Tahiti before the war included an OSS officer (Office of Special Services, the precursor to the CIA). This connection helped no doubt.
Wolfgang’s career as an artist continued. He had several exhibits; among the first was one at the Long Beach Pacific Coast Club, in California, in 1948. He had a few more exhibits before turning to commercial art – creating textile designs for a fashion house that contributed to the popular Polynesian style. Over 60 years later, shirts with his designs sell for thousands of dollars. In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s Goetz promoted Wolfgang’s artwork and he had several exhibits including a one man show at Cal State University – L.A. He was an award winner at a West Hollywood art gallery exhibit and received an award for an outstanding piece at a L.A. City art exhibit.
Wolfgang died in Los Angeles in 1994.
Permission to publish this biography provided by the kind permission of the artist’s son and author, Goetz Wolff.






Publishing details: https://wolfgangwolff.org/biography/
Ref: 145
Smith Evanview full entry
Reference: see Davidsons auction, Sydney, 19.3.23.
with the note that Evan Smith was artist Treania Smith's father.
lot 238: SMITH, Evan (1870-1964) (2) 
Suburban Views, possibly the Family Home at Springwood, N.S.W., December 1940. 
Evan Smith was artist Treania Smith's father. 
One signed and dated lower right; the other inscribed verso 'Mrs Treania Bennett,' with framing instructions. 
W/Clr (2) 
25x18.5cm (each) 

PROVENANCE: 
Paterson family, close friends of Evan Smith (and his daughter Treania Smith); thence by descent - private collection, Qld.
Dimensions
25x18.5cm (each)
Artist or Maker
(1870-1964) (2)
Medium
Evan Smith was artist Treania Smith's father. 
One signed and dated lower right; the other inscribed verso 'Mrs Treania Bennett,' with framing instructions.
Provenance
Paterson family, close friends of Evan Smith (and his daughter Treania Smith); thence by descent - private collection, Qld.

Close Edward Charles (1790-1886)view full entry
Reference: see Michael Massey Robinson c1817. State Library of New South Wales, Watercolour c1817 by Edward Charles Close (1790-1866) from his New South Wales sketchbook (State Library of New South Wales, FL3271533, showing Michael Massey Robinson (1744-1826) Australia’s first published poet. Catalogue description: Two portrait studies: John Jacques. Keeper of the Sydney Gaol; and Michael Massey Robinson, Chief Clerk to the Colonial Secretary.
Inscribed: `Jaques’ (upper left, vertical); `Mich Robinson’ (upper right); `The Poet Laureat [sic]’ (upper right)
Close Edward Charles (1790-1886)view full entry
Reference: SLNSW catalogue entry for 35 drawings (1 bound volume with two loose sheets) - 26 watercolours, 2 monochrome wash drawings, 6 pencil drawings, 1 ink drawing, 2 handwritten sheets - 22.8 x 28.6 cm, at
SAFE/PXA 1187:
From a private collection, United Kingdom; by descent through the family of the artist
Administrative / Biographical History

This sketchbook, along with its companion volume in the National Library of Australia collection, have long been attributed, on the basis of family tradition, to Sophia Campbell (1777-1833), nee Palmer. She was the sister of John Palmer ( 1760-1833) and later wife of colonial merchant and pioneer pastoralist, Robert Campbell (1769-1846).

It has been definitively re-ascribed to Edward Close (1790-1866), soldier, engineer, magistrate, member of the Legislative Council, and settler in Morpeth, known as `Father of the Hunter’.

Close familial links exist between Sophia Campbell and Edward Close which have contributed to the obscuring of attribution. Edward Close married Sophia Campbell’s niece, Sophia Susannah Palmer; and their daughter, Marrianne Colinson Close married one of Sophia Campbell’s sons, George. Two of Close’s sons were given the middle names Palmer and Campbell.

The attribution to Close is made on the basis of several factors. First, the sketchbook was made in London by art materials supplier, Rudolph Ackermann. It includes paper watermarked 1816. Sophia Campbell left NSW with her husband in 1810. They returned to the colony five years later in 1815 before the sketchbook was made.

Eight of the watercolours at the front of the sketchbook describe a voyage to Australia made y the barque Matilda. The regiment of Edward Close, the 48th North Hamptonshire Regiment of the Foot, travelled tot eh colony on the Matilda in 1817. Two of the views are inscribed as having been taken from on board the Matilda.

Thirdly, the views of India and Gibraltar also resonate with Close’s life story. Son of an East India Company trader, he was himself born in Rangamati, Bengal, and he served in the Peninsular War in 1808-1814 and was stationed at Gibraltar from September 1808 to May1909.

Fourthly, in New South Wales, following colonial service as engineer at Newcastle, Close resigned his commission and was granted land on the Hunter River. A corner of his river front property ‘lllaulang’ became the township of Morpeth, and Close funded the construction of St James’s Church of England, which was dedicated on 31 December 1940. The town and its church feature in a pencil sketch in the present work and a watercolour in the National Library sketchbook. Sophia Campbell died in 1833, well before the church was built,

Finally, the apparent stylistic inconsistencies, even anomalies between the various component drawings in the twin sketchbooks can be explained by reference to Close’s amateur status. As a military officer he would have had some training in topographical rendering, and the coastal and landscape watercolours are the most detailed, polished arid spatially convincing of the drawings in the book. Lacking academic training, he is naturally rather less comfortable with anatomy, which explains the naiveté of his figure compositions.

A similar wide variety of subject, theme and finish is also to be found in a third collection, a scrapbook in the Mitchell Library which bears the dedication (in a hand very close, if not identical, to that found in sketchbook inscriptions): ‘The Paintings and sketches of / Edward Charles Close Esqre H.M. 48th Reg.t / His gift to his only daughter Marrianne Collinson Close / Morpeth February 17th 1844.’

This re-attribution represents a substantial shift in the canon of early colonial art. This sketchbook, and the National Library sketchbook, can now be matched to the signed Newcastle panorama and Mitchell Library scrapbook both by Edward Close.

Reference:
David Hansen, Sotheby's catalogue, Lot 213, Melbourne, 9 May 2009. pp 24-29
Contents

Sketchbook of 30 folios (three cut out) containing 26 watercolours, two monochrome wash drawings and six pencil sketches or rough notations, together with a separate ink drawing by another hand and two handwritten sheets of Whatman wove paper (watermarked with the date 1816), bound in morocco.

Except where specifically described, all works are watercolours, and are on single sheets.

Inside front cover
Rough sketch map of the side of Sydney Harbour.
Pencil
Inscribed: Bondi Bay (lower right) and with the letter C on the west side of Double Bay.
Bears supplier’s label: R. ACKERMANNS/ REPOSITORY / Strand, London (top left).

Panoramic view of Rio de Janeiro from the sea, Sugarloaf and Corcovado mountains Point Sao Joao, a boat with officers in the foreground.
Double page

Panoramic view of Madeira from the sea, with a fishing vessel in the foreground and a sailing ship in the distance.
Inscribed `Madeira taken on board the Mattilda [sic] (upper right).
Double page

Two coastal profiles of the Curtis Group (Curtis Island, Cone Islet and Sugarloaf Rock), Bass Strait. Inscribed Basse’s Straits (upper centre);
Appearance of Sir Roger Curtis’ Isle & peaks as passed at 10 am by Mitilda [sic] (upper centre); Sir Roger Curtis’ Group bearing N.N.E (lower centre)

Two coastal profiles: Porto Santo Island, Atlantic Ocean, and the Kent Group (Deal, Erith and Dover Islands), Bass Strait.
Inscribed `Porto Santo bearing S – W. to S.E. (upper left); Kent’s Group & Judgement rock Basse’s Straits. E.N.E (centre left)

Two coastal profiles of lIe St Paul, Atlantic Ocean.
Inscribed: `St Pauls (upper left); NE by E. (upper left); B by N. (upper right); St Pauls (centre left); Bearing N.W. (centre)

Paddle steamer, river’s edge and buildings.
Pencil
Preliminary sketch for detail of finished watercolour Morpeth, from above the new Steam Co.’s wharf’ (in related sketchbook, National Library of Australia)

Catalan Bay, Gibraltar, with houses and fishermen in the foreground. Inscribed `Cataline [sic] Bay / Gibraltar’ (upper right)

The Katra Mosque, Murshidabad. Bengal (after an engraving in William Hodges’s Select views in India, 1788, vol. 2 plate 17).
Inscribed: `View of the Cuttera. built by / Jaffier Cawn at Muxadabad. / East Indies’ (upper right)

Panorama of Hyde Park Barracks and Sydney Hospital, from the Domain. Pencil.
Sketch for finished watercolour in related sketchbook, National Library of Australia.
Double page

`Sydney in all its glory’
Inscribed with title (upper right).
Double page

Storm above Red Point and the Five Islands, Illawarra, with Aborigines in the foreground.
Inscribed: `Five Islands’ (upper right)

Lake landscape with settler’s hut and Aborigines.
Inscribed: `Tom Thumb’s Lagoon’ (upper right)

Lake and mountain landscape with Aborigines in a canoe in the foreground. Inscribed: `Tom Thumbs Lagoon’ (upper right)

Coastal landscape with settler’s hut, Illawarra
Inscribed: `Five Islands’ (upper right)

Settler’s huts and fenced enclosure, with a family of Aborigines, Illawarra.
Ink and brown wash
Inscribed: `lllawarra’ (upper right).

View of Newcastle.
Ink and brown wash

Studies of a hat and two figures - preliminary sketches for ‘The costume of the Australasians’
Pencil

The costume of the Australasians.
Inscribed with title (lower left)
This drawing is a primary source for the history of clothing in Australia. Distinctive in its social inclusiveness and its tone of amiable satire, it includes rare images of convicts, and records the prisoners’ apparent easy co-existence with free settlers and with their military gaolers.
Shows a total of ten figures including the Governor’s aide-de-camp Lt John Watts; an officer; soldier; a bandsman of the 73rd Regiment (McLeod’s Highlanders); wealthy colonial figures; convicts on government service.

Sketch: huts, cart, tree, figure.
Pencil

Sydney Church and Regimental Mill from the Main Guard.
Inscribed with title (lower left)

Morpeth, from above the new Steam Co.’s wharf.
Pencil
Sketch for finished watercolour in National Library sketchbook.

Panoramic view of Barrack Square, Sydney.
Pencil, ink and coloured wash
Inscribed: `old Barrack Square’ (upper right).
Unfinished - closely related to (though not a direct study for) finished watercolour in National Library sketchbook.

Two portrait studies: John Jacques. Keeper of the Sydney Gaol; and Michael Massey Robinson, Chief Clerk to the Colonial Secretary.
Inscribed: `Jaques’ (upper left, vertical); `Mich Robinson’ (upper right); `The Poet Laureat [sic]’ (upper right)

Courtroom scene, Sydney: the ‘Philo Free’ civil libel trial, 1 December 1817. Inscribed: `G. Allen’ (upper right, vertical); `G. Crosley’ (upper right, vertical)

The ‘Philo Free’ trial took place in Sydney in 1817 and was the first libel case heard in the colony. In this matter, Rev. Samuel Marsden accused Colonial Secretary John Campbell (no relation to Sophia) of libeling him through a letter published in the Sydney Gazette which suggested that, under the aegis of the Missionary Society, the ‘Christian Mahomet’ had operated as a gun-runner and moonshiner in the Pacific islands; includes caricatures of several notable figures including Marsden at the right, the defendant Campbell on the left and possibly Judge-Advocate John Wylde behind him, as well as the lawyers Frederick Garling, William Moore, George Allen and George Crossley

Forest landscape with kangaroo and waratah

Forest landscape with man chopping wood

Stream running through ravine

Landscape with crops, fence, stream and distant mountains

Landscape with cleared paddocks and homestead under mountains

Artist unknown (probably Francis Allman, 1780-1860), `My house as Police
Magistrate, Goulburn, 1834’
Inscribed with title (upper right); inscribed: `View from the / Church
Yard’ (lower centre)
Separate sheet

Notes by child of Edward Close (probably Marrianne Collinson Campbell) containing a list of witnesses and a transcription of the beginning of William Bligh’s opening speech, from the court-martial of Major George Johnston, 7th May 1811
Separate sheets
Source
Purchased Sotheby's Melbourne, lot 213, 5 May 2009
Miorrell Geoffview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald, Good weekend article, 18.3.23, ‘A life in three acts and a prelude’, by Amanda Hooton p18-20. And see artists website https://www.geoffmorrell.com
Hornel Edward Atkinson left Australia aged 2view full entry
Reference: from Wikipedia: Biography[edit]
Hornel was born in Bacchus Marsh, Victoria, Australia, 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.[1] He studied for three years at the art school at Edinburgh, and for two years in Antwerp under Charles Verlat. 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 splendor of color, Hornel boldly and freely employing texture effects produced by loading and scraping, roughening, smoothing, and staining. In 1893–94 (funded by William Burrell via their friend and art dealer Alexander Reid[2]) the two artists spent a year and a half in Japan, where Hornel learned much about decorative design and spacing. In this period they met the resident British artist, Percy Sturdee.[3]
In April 1895 Alexander Reid organised an exhibition of Henry and Hornel's Japanese work which sold very well, especially to Sir John Maxwell Stirling-Maxwell.[4]
In 1895 he contributed the illustration Madame Chrysanthème to the Autumn volume of The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal published by Patrick Geddes and Colleagues in Edinburgh.[5]
Towards the close of the 1890s Hornel's colors, 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.[6][7]
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.[8] There he made several modifications to the house and designed garden taking inspiration from his travels in Japan. he also made an addition of a gallery for his paintings.[9] On his death the house and library were donated for the benefit of the citizens and Broughton House 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, Leeds, Manchester, Hull, Bath, and Liverpool.
Angus Maxview full entry
Reference: see Colville Auctions Max Angus Collection March 20, 2023, Hobart, Australia , 60 lots, mainly watercolours.

Flood Patricia Vaughanview full entry
Reference: see Canberra Art & Antiques, 22.3.23, Artwork by Pat Vaughan Flood & Bernard Hardy, Artwork by Pat Vaughan Flood
Pat Vaughan Flood (1919-2017) was born and raised in Melbourne where she met her first husband, Dr Lowen Hardy, with whom she had six children before his sudden death in 1953. She moved with her family to Canberra following her second marriage to Colonel William Flood in the early 1960s where she began painting and exhibiting, undertaking classes with artist Tom Gleghorn (born 1925) at the Canberra School of Art. 
Art historian and curator, Felicity St John Moore, describes her work as being influenced by childhood memories, international journeys and a love of music – each having a profound impact on her life. The artist, coming to art relatively late in life, found her practice to be an outlet - it was both energising and invigorating. ‘Painting gave her a space - a world beyond the everyday world, in which she could divine her own feelings and intuitions. And within this space, the actual process of painting - of reaching for colour, playing around with water and making marks on the surface – triggered memories of the colours, patterns and rituals of her environment during childhood and adolescence. (Felicity St John Moore, The Artist and Her Work, 1991).
During her 33 years as a practicing artist, themes Vaughan Flood continually returned to were light, water, mountains and music. Her work is characteristically spontaneous, punctuated with vivid colour and personal symbolism. Many of her works have an inherent intensity to them however are simultaneously possess a meditative, almost mystical quality. Despite undertaking part time studies, the artist relied on her innate artistic resources to inform her practice. ‘Hers is an art that does not polemically reject the often superficial debates of much current art-speak, but simply displaces them with the expression of deeply felt experience…it finds its occasions in the world, reveals an interiority enriched by the interactions of mind and matter as they complement each other.’ (Artist Bernard Hardy, The Art of Pat Vaughan Flood, 1996)
Pat Vaughan Flood’s work has been exhibited widely in both solo and group shows – locally with gallerist Nancy Sever at the Manuka Gallery and with the late Joy Warren at Solander Gallery. Her work was shown at Holdworth Street Galleries in Sydney and also Hawthorn City Art Gallery in Melbourne. Pat Vaughan Flood’s paintings was chosen by Dame Barbara Hepworth to hang in the prestigious Penwith Art Society exhibition in St Ives Cornwall and a solo show of her work was held at the Sheraton Gallery in Kathmandu in 1985. Her work is represented in a number of Australian university collections including the Australian National University and Flinders University. Many of her best paintings are in the private collections of diplomats and similar international itinerants, who respond to her work’s cultural nomadism and freedom of spirit.
Hardy Bernard view full entry
Reference: see Canberra Art & Antiques, 22.3.23, Artwork by Pat Vaughan Flood & Bernard Hardy, Artwork by Bernard Hardy
Bernard Hardy is a Canberra-based painter, printmaker, sculptor and teacher who continually investigates different ways of working, intent on discovering how his ideas might most imaginatively be revealed.
Hardy studied at Melbourne University and later in Sydney and Canberra where he went on to lecture at several art institutions including the Australian National University.
In the Canberra bushfires of 2003, Hardy lost a large proportion of his ouevre - thirty years of artistic struggle was destroyed. The artist has since used the experience as a source of regeneration and catharsis. Here, Sasha Grishin describes the work produced by Hardy following the destruction of the fires, 'They are paintings of great power, where there is a sense of requiem and a profound pathos, but also a curious celebration of the sacred horror and beauty of the maelstrom....the paintings are like powerful burnt urban totems'. 
In Hardy's paintings and prints, he illustrates the intensities emergent from within the material world and from the artist's mind. In the artist's own words, 'Art is, in effect, a vector for publishing a mental event so that another may get in touch with the artist's creative concept'.
Lewis Martinview full entry
Reference: Glow of the city: the nocturnal world of Martin Lewis – Claudia Chan Shaw, AGNSW 2.3.23 lecture by Claudia Chan Shaw, 17pp transcript.

Ref: 145
Collected : 150 years of Aboriginal art and artefacts at the Macleay Museumview full entry
Reference: Collected : 150 years of Aboriginal art and artefacts at the Macleay Museum, by Susan M. Davies - produced to accompany the exhibition Collected, curated by Susan M. Davies and Rosemary Stack, on display at the Macleay Museum, 29 March 2001 – 30 January 2003.
Introduction; The Northern Territory Collections; The Bark Painting Collection; The Western Australian Collections; The Queensland Collections; The New South Wales Collections; The Collectors.
 

Publishing details: Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2002. Large quarto (300 x 210 mm), pictorial card covers, pp. 108, illustrated throughout in colour, with ethnographic notes on each piece, maps, bibliography
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal art and artefacts at the Macleay Museumview full entry
Reference: Collected : 150 years of Aboriginal art and artefacts at the Macleay Museum, by Susan M. Davies - produced to accompany the exhibition Collected, curated by Susan M. Davies and Rosemary Stack, on display at the Macleay Museum, 29 March 2001 – 30 January 2003.
Introduction; The Northern Territory Collections; The Bark Painting Collection; The Western Australian Collections; The Queensland Collections; The New South Wales Collections; The Collectors.
 

Publishing details: Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2002. Large quarto (300 x 210 mm), pictorial card covers, pp. 108, illustrated throughout in colour, with ethnographic notes on each piece, maps, bibliography
Spinifex : people of the sun and shadowview full entry
Reference: Spinifex : people of the sun and shadow, curators : Ross Chadwick, John Cruthers, Carly Lane. Well-illustrated catalogue was produced to accompany an exhibition of art by the Spinifex People of the Great Victoria Desert region of Western Australia, held at John Curtin Gallery, Curtin University, 24 August-12 October 2012.

Publishing details: Bentley, W.A. : John Curtin Gallery, 2012. Quarto (275 x 230 mm), pictorial card covers with French flaps, photographic endpapers, 70 pp., colour illustrations;
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal Australians view full entry
Reference: Aboriginal Australians : spirit of Arnhem Land. By PPenny Tweedie

Publishing details: Melbourne : New Holland Publishers, 2001. Large quarto (300 x 270 mm), pictorial card covers, 168 pp, colour photographic plates throughout, map;
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal art view full entry
Reference: Aboriginal Australians : spirit of Arnhem Land. By PPenny Tweedie

Publishing details: Melbourne : New Holland Publishers, 2001. Large quarto (300 x 270 mm), pictorial card covers, 168 pp, colour photographic plates throughout, map;
Crooke Rayview full entry
Reference: The Palmer River Paintings

Publishing details: Brisbane : The Johnston Gallery, 1970. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. [4].
Ref: 1000
Kite : Mike Brown and the Sydney twelveview full entry
Reference: Kite : Mike Brown and the Sydney twelve, Essays by: Vincent Alessi, Richard Haese. Art of Mike Brown, John Coburn, Leonard Hessing, Frank Hodgkinson, Robert Hughes, Robert Klippel, Colin Lanceley, John Olsen, Carl Plate, Emmanuel Raft, Stanislaus Rapotec, Charles Reddington and William Rose.
Publishing details: Melbourne : La Trobe University Art Museum, 2007. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 45, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
goddess and the moon man theview full entry
Reference: The goddess and the moon man : the sacred art of the Tiwi Aborigines
Publishing details: Roseville, N.S.W. : Craftsman House, 1995. Quarto (275 x 240 mm), publisher’s brown cloth in pictorial dust jacket, pp. 152, colour and b/w illustrations, map, glossary, index;
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see The goddess and the moon man : the sacred art of the Tiwi Aborigines
Publishing details: Roseville, N.S.W. : Craftsman House, 1995. Quarto (275 x 240 mm), publisher’s brown cloth in pictorial dust jacket, pp. 152, colour and b/w illustrations, map, glossary, index;
Long Leonardview full entry
Reference: Leonard Long

Publishing details: Melbourne : the artist, 1986. Folio, full leather, matching slipcase, essay and 48 colour plates illustrating the traditional landscapes of this popular Australian artist.
Ref: 1000
Gould Johnview full entry
Reference: see article in Sydney Morning Herald, 20.3.23 ‘The fiorgotten people behind the birdman [John Gould]’, by Julie Power, p 17, about upcoming exhibition ‘The Birds of Australia Storybox’ in Newcastle
Gould Elizasbethview full entry
Reference: see article in Sydney Morning Herald, 20.3.23 ‘The fiorgotten people behind the birdman [John Gould]’, by Julie Power, p 17, about upcoming exhibition ‘The Birds of Australia Storybox’ in Newcastle
Birds of Australia Storyboxview full entry
Reference: The Birds of Australia Storybox, exhibition in Newcastle.
A new exhibition showcasing the incredible world of Australia's birdlife will launch in Newcastle. Presented on STORYBOX, an interactive storytelling cube, The Birds of Australia, brings to life the iconic bird illustrations of John and Elizabeth Gould together with First Nations storytelling and knowledges.

<img src="https://media.australian.museum/media/dd/images/AV_BIRDS-AMweb-800px-02.5350b5d.width-1600.256c964.png" alt="The Birds of Australia STORYBOX"/>
Toggle Caption
The Birds of Australia STORYBOX Image: ESEM Projects
© ESEM Projects
Trace the journey of English ornithologist John Gould and his wife Elizabeth, as they travelled across New South Wales in the 1800s on one of the most significant birding expeditions in history, helping inform contemporary knowledge and conservation of Australian birds. The Goulds described and illustrated over 300 birds that were completely new to science, including the Pied Butcherbird (Cracticus nigrogularis) and the now extinct Paradise Parrot (Psephotellus pulcherrimus). It was an astonishing record of observation and sustained hard work.
The Goulds did not do this alone. First Nations guides and knowledge played a vital role in the study. For 60,000 years Australia’s birds have lived alongside First Nations peoples. Birds feature in sacred songlines, play important roles in hunting and ceremony, and are revered as spiritual totems and guides. The exhibition explores why understanding the significance of Australian birds from a First Nations perspectives and their role in connecting to Country is vital to our fragile future.
Learn about current habitat pressures facing many of the birds featured in Gould’s collection and what you can do to help endangered birds in your local area. You can use your mobile to interact with the visual story by scanning the QR code and unlock First Nations stories, bird calls and in-depth profiles, interactive activities and more.
The Birds of Australia is a touring exhibition presented by the Australian Museum. The digital exhibition will be travelling to public precincts across New South Wales, inviting communities to connect with stories, animations, illustrations and interactives that reflect on the wonder and fragility of Australia's unique bird life.
About The Birds of Australia (1840-1848)
The Birds of Australia (1840-1848) was the first comprehensive survey of the birds of Australia, featuring a seven-volume collection of hand-coloured illustrations led by English ornithologist and publisher John Gould. Featuring descriptions of over 681 species, 328 of which were new to science, the Birds of Australia collection interwove art and science in equal measure to produce over 600 hand-coloured plates of Australian birds, today regarded as among the finest examples of bird illustrations ever published. Led by John Gould, the illustrations feature works by a number of artists including Gould’s wife Elizabeth Gould, Edward Lear, H.C. Richter, William Hart, and Joseph Wolf, created through a combination of drawing, watercolour and lithography.
Publishing details: Australian Museum, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Gould Johnview full entry
Reference: see The Birds of Australia Storybox, exhibition in Newcastle.
A new exhibition showcasing the incredible world of Australia's birdlife will launch in Newcastle. Presented on STORYBOX, an interactive storytelling cube, The Birds of Australia, brings to life the iconic bird illustrations of John and Elizabeth Gould together with First Nations storytelling and knowledges.

<img src="https://media.australian.museum/media/dd/images/AV_BIRDS-AMweb-800px-02.5350b5d.width-1600.256c964.png" alt="The Birds of Australia STORYBOX"/>
Toggle Caption
The Birds of Australia STORYBOX Image: ESEM Projects
© ESEM Projects
Trace the journey of English ornithologist John Gould and his wife Elizabeth, as they travelled across New South Wales in the 1800s on one of the most significant birding expeditions in history, helping inform contemporary knowledge and conservation of Australian birds. The Goulds described and illustrated over 300 birds that were completely new to science, including the Pied Butcherbird (Cracticus nigrogularis) and the now extinct Paradise Parrot (Psephotellus pulcherrimus). It was an astonishing record of observation and sustained hard work.
The Goulds did not do this alone. First Nations guides and knowledge played a vital role in the study. For 60,000 years Australia’s birds have lived alongside First Nations peoples. Birds feature in sacred songlines, play important roles in hunting and ceremony, and are revered as spiritual totems and guides. The exhibition explores why understanding the significance of Australian birds from a First Nations perspectives and their role in connecting to Country is vital to our fragile future.
Learn about current habitat pressures facing many of the birds featured in Gould’s collection and what you can do to help endangered birds in your local area. You can use your mobile to interact with the visual story by scanning the QR code and unlock First Nations stories, bird calls and in-depth profiles, interactive activities and more.
The Birds of Australia is a touring exhibition presented by the Australian Museum. The digital exhibition will be travelling to public precincts across New South Wales, inviting communities to connect with stories, animations, illustrations and interactives that reflect on the wonder and fragility of Australia's unique bird life.
About The Birds of Australia (1840-1848)
The Birds of Australia (1840-1848) was the first comprehensive survey of the birds of Australia, featuring a seven-volume collection of hand-coloured illustrations led by English ornithologist and publisher John Gould. Featuring descriptions of over 681 species, 328 of which were new to science, the Birds of Australia collection interwove art and science in equal measure to produce over 600 hand-coloured plates of Australian birds, today regarded as among the finest examples of bird illustrations ever published. Led by John Gould, the illustrations feature works by a number of artists including Gould’s wife Elizabeth Gould, Edward Lear, H.C. Richter, William Hart, and Joseph Wolf, created through a combination of drawing, watercolour and lithography.
Publishing details: Australian Museum, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Gould Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see The Birds of Australia Storybox, exhibition in Newcastle.
A new exhibition showcasing the incredible world of Australia's birdlife will launch in Newcastle. Presented on STORYBOX, an interactive storytelling cube, The Birds of Australia, brings to life the iconic bird illustrations of John and Elizabeth Gould together with First Nations storytelling and knowledges.

<img src="https://media.australian.museum/media/dd/images/AV_BIRDS-AMweb-800px-02.5350b5d.width-1600.256c964.png" alt="The Birds of Australia STORYBOX"/>
Toggle Caption
The Birds of Australia STORYBOX Image: ESEM Projects
© ESEM Projects
Trace the journey of English ornithologist John Gould and his wife Elizabeth, as they travelled across New South Wales in the 1800s on one of the most significant birding expeditions in history, helping inform contemporary knowledge and conservation of Australian birds. The Goulds described and illustrated over 300 birds that were completely new to science, including the Pied Butcherbird (Cracticus nigrogularis) and the now extinct Paradise Parrot (Psephotellus pulcherrimus). It was an astonishing record of observation and sustained hard work.
The Goulds did not do this alone. First Nations guides and knowledge played a vital role in the study. For 60,000 years Australia’s birds have lived alongside First Nations peoples. Birds feature in sacred songlines, play important roles in hunting and ceremony, and are revered as spiritual totems and guides. The exhibition explores why understanding the significance of Australian birds from a First Nations perspectives and their role in connecting to Country is vital to our fragile future.
Learn about current habitat pressures facing many of the birds featured in Gould’s collection and what you can do to help endangered birds in your local area. You can use your mobile to interact with the visual story by scanning the QR code and unlock First Nations stories, bird calls and in-depth profiles, interactive activities and more.
The Birds of Australia is a touring exhibition presented by the Australian Museum. The digital exhibition will be travelling to public precincts across New South Wales, inviting communities to connect with stories, animations, illustrations and interactives that reflect on the wonder and fragility of Australia's unique bird life.
About The Birds of Australia (1840-1848)
The Birds of Australia (1840-1848) was the first comprehensive survey of the birds of Australia, featuring a seven-volume collection of hand-coloured illustrations led by English ornithologist and publisher John Gould. Featuring descriptions of over 681 species, 328 of which were new to science, the Birds of Australia collection interwove art and science in equal measure to produce over 600 hand-coloured plates of Australian birds, today regarded as among the finest examples of bird illustrations ever published. Led by John Gould, the illustrations feature works by a number of artists including Gould’s wife Elizabeth Gould, Edward Lear, H.C. Richter, William Hart, and Joseph Wolf, created through a combination of drawing, watercolour and lithography.
Publishing details: Australian Museum, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Smith Bernhard shared studio with Thomas Woolnerview full entry
Reference: see Wikipedia:
Smith, Bernhard (1820–1885)
by Marjorie J. Tipping
This article was published:
• in the Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 6 , 1976
• online in 2006
Bernhard Smith (1820-1885), sculptor and painter, was born at Greenwich, London, England, third son of Lord [Christian name] Henry Smith and his wife Jane Mary, née Voase. He joined the Antique School of the Royal Academy of Arts in 1840 and later that year enrolled at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. His first notable sculpture (1838) was a memorial to his sister. After his return to London he wrote 'The World in Miniature' in 1842 but there is no evidence that it was published. By 1851 he had exhibited nineteen works at the Royal Academy, including an oil painting, 'Puck', the inspiration of T. Woolner's statuette. Smith and Woolner shared a studio in Stanhope Street and their circle included Browning, Carlyle, Lamb, Tennyson and Mary and William Howitt. Smith's daughter Minnie later claimed that he was one of the seven original members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood; he certainly belonged to it by 1850 when he helped D. G. Rossetti to plan the Germ. Both Woolner and Rossetti acknowledged Smith's influence on them.
Disillusioned with the movement, Smith planned to go to Canada, but instead he and Woolner decided to accompany E. L. Bateman to Melbourne. Their departure in the Windsor in July 1852 inspired Ford Madox Brown's painting, 'The last of England'. Arriving on 23 October, Smith and Woolner set out for the Ovens diggings and then went to Fryer's Creek and Sandhurst. Smith's brother Alexander John (1813?-1872) had become a commissioner of crown lands for the goldfields; on 17 May 1854 Bernhard became assistant commissioner for the Westernport District, with salary of £400 and allowances, and by 1857 was at Ballarat. On 8 February 1858 he became warden of the goldfields and Chinese protector. In 1860 he was transferred to Pleasant Creek (Stawell) as police magistrate, but resigned on 31 March 1861 and joined Alexander, who had taken up Langley Vale station near Kyneton and who won the Legislative Assembly seat of Castlemaine in May. Bernhard became commissioner of crown lands in August and warden for the goldfields of Victoria in September. Interested in astronomy, in the early 1860s he took meteorological observations for R. L. J. Ellery's geodetic survey; he was assisted by his wife Olivia Frances Josephine, née Boyes, whom he had married at St Paul's Church, Melbourne, on 12 February 1863. He was police magistrate and deputy-sheriff at Stawell from 9 October 1865. Along with many other civil servants he was dismissed on Black Wednesday in January 1878 while stationed at Smythesdale, but he was later reinstated and transferred to Alexandra.
Smith had corresponded with his English friends and continued to paint, though he was not interested in Australian subjects; he remained isolated from colonial artistic trends: 'A thorn pierced my foot in 1854', he wrote of his work for the government, 'So among Gum Trees I lived listlessly dreaming; jangling with sweet music, all out of tune'. In 1881 he dislocated his right arm, but continued his work, painting ethereal and heavenly objects in the manner of Blake and Fuseli; a recent art historian has noted that his art and prose are closer to surrealism than any of the other Pre-Raphaelites. Among his commissions were five illustrations of Macbeth and four of Much Ado About Nothing for a music hall. He wrote verse and sketched fairies and birds for his children. He sent for Rossetti's engravings, but in his isolation he feared for his perception; on seeing a picture of Woolner's statue of Captain Cook he commented, 'No, no, no … Gum Trees and Kangaroos may have ruined my taste'.
W. M. Rossetti described Smith as 'six feet (183 cm) broad … with a hearty English look and manner, and a clear resonant voice'. Alfred Howitt thought him rather fussy but 'a useful man of business'. His habits were abstemious: he customarily drank a handful of oatmeal in a jug of cold water and warned his student son in England against the evils of beer that 'bemuddles the clear brains'. Aged 64, he died of pneumonia at Alexandra on 7 October 1885 after trying to rescue two children from a flooded stream. Buried in the Alexandra cemetery, he was survived by his wife, three of their four sons and four of their five daughters; his estate was valued for probate at £1999, including a property at Elgar Park, Box Hill. Two of his portrait medallions, of Sir John Richardson and Sir James Clark Ross, are in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Milbert Jacques Gerard with Baudin expeditionview full entry
Reference: see auction catalogue Saturday 29 April 2023, 13:00 (Bruxelles, Belgium) Arenberg Auctions, lot 1039: MILBERT, Jacques Gérard (by or after) [View of New York taken from Weehawken]. 1st half 19th c Oil painting on canvas, 32 x 40 cm, not signed (upper corners sl. rubbed, a few sm. unobtrusive holes, some light cracks). Framed. Nice animated view of Weehawken; this site offered to the New Yorkers a pastoral retreat and was a popular picnic area. Based on a sketch by or a lithograph after the French naturalist and artist J.G. Milbert (1766-1840); he studied art with the landscape painter Pierre-Henri Valenciennes, taught drawing at the School of Mines and in 1800 went on the Baudin expedition to Australia. After coming to America in 1815, he lived in New York City and travelled extensively, especially in upstate New York. On October 1823, he returned to Paris and published 3 lithogr. albums of picturesque sites he visited during his stay and travels. Although with some differences (a cow in the field in the left part of the lithogr., boats somewhat different...), our view is plate n. 1 of "Itinéraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson", his major work, published in 13 installments, Paris, Gaugain, 1828-1829. The original sketches for this album were apparently not preserved (except for one conserved in the New York State Library of Albany) nor any original painting by Milbert. Was our painting inspired by the lithogr. or is it the opposite?
Retter Michael Dview full entry
Reference: see Mercredi 05 Apriol, 2023, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Accademia Fine Art lot 510: MICHEAL D. RETTER (Sydney 20-21ème)
Panneau travaillé en marqueterie de plusieurs essences de bois représentant un "Eucalyptus Gummifera", feuilles et fruits, signé et daté 2002, titré au dos.
Dimensions : 33,5 x 26,5 cm
Australian wood panel inlaid with various woods depicting Eucalyptus gummifera leaves and fruit, by Michael D. Retter, signed and dated 2002,
Kuhnert Wilhelm Schnabeltierview full entry
Reference: see auction Friday 31 March, 2023, Berlin, Germany, Jeschke Jádi: lot 655, Kuhnert, Wilhelm Schnabeltier, australischer Stacheligel, Maulwurf, Igel, Spitzmaus, Elefantenspitzmaus, Spitzhörnchen und Tenrek. 28.1.1893. Graphit auf chamoisfarbenem Papier. Sichtmaße 23 x 32,5 cm…
Zoologica Specifica

Kuhnert, Wilhelm

Platypus, Australian spiny hedgehog, mole, hedgehog, shrew, elephant shrew, tree shrew and tenrec. 28.1.1893. Graphite on buff paper. Visual dimensions 23 x 32,5 cm. Signed, dated and inscribed. Mounted under passe-partout.

In the corners with inconspicuous crease marks and small holes from earlier mounting. Minimal light margins. Well preserved.

Platypus, Australian spiny hedgehog, mole, hedgehog, shrew, elephant shrew, tree shrew and tenrec. Graphite on buff paper. Signed, dated and inscribed. Mounted under a passepartout. - With inconspicuous crease marks and small holes at corners due to former mounting. Minimal light margins. In good condition.
Zaadstra Pieter view full entry
Reference: Tamar Valley, an artist’s journey, by Pieter Zaadstra
Publishing details: Gravelly Beach : Pieter Zaadstra Art Studio, 2010 
1 v. (unpaged) : col. ill. ;
Leach-Jones Alunview full entry
Reference: see The Sculpture of Nola Jones, Author: Linda Candy and Jonathan Goodman. [’With unassuming elegance this book subtly guides the reader on Nola Jones’ impressive artistic journey over four decades, from weaving with fibre and copper wire to her abstract geometric and totemic sculptures.
The plenitude of artworks allows for the readers to investigate and assess for themselves Jones’ experimental development in different mediums, all characteristically linked to the tactile and the sensual.  Complementing the colour plate display is a discussion of Jones’ conceptual process and her influence on the changing nature of sculpture in contemporary art.  Personal insights by long-time friend of Jones’, Art Director Joe Eisenberg in the foreword are balanced by acclaimed American critic Jonathon Goodman’s critical essay.
Look forward to an intimate profile of Nola Jones and her lifetime of knowledge in an interview with Linda Candy.  It is a sensitive retrospective of Jones’ impressive career, a unique practice that is iconic for its rich earthy tones and emotive organic forms.’]

Publishing details: Publisher: Marnling Press, 2014. 152 pages : chiefly colour illustrations
architectureview full entry
Reference: see A singular vision : Harry Seidler, by Helen O’Neill. Monograph on the influential Australian architect.
Publishing details: Sydney : Harper Collins, 2013. First edition. Quarto, boards, pp. 378, illustrated. Boxed.
Dupain Maxview full entry
Reference: see A singular vision : Harry Seidler, by Helen O’Neill. Monograph on the influential Australian architect.
Publishing details: Sydney : Harper Collins, 2013. First edition. Quarto, boards, pp. 378, illustrated. Boxed.
Marshall Lyneview full entry
Reference: Geaner or Gladiator: the struggle to create, written, illustrated and compiled by Lyne Marshall
Publishing details: Tallegalla, Qld. : Art Clique Projects, 2007, 80 p. : col ill., ports
Kurtz Judyview full entry
Reference: Portrait of Mudgee and district / by Judy Kurtz ; with historical notes by Diane de St Hilaire Simmonds.

Publishing details: [Mudgee, N.S.W.] : Judy Kurtz and Diane de St Hilaire Simmonds, 2013, 72 pages : colour illustrations ; (paperback)
Bibliography: page [73]
View from Australia Theview full entry
Reference: The View from Australia : the work of Australia's leading graphic designers / [edited by] Ken Cato. [To be indexed]
Publishing details: Tokyo, Japan : Graphic-sha Pub. Co., 1986 
287 p. : col. ill.
Cato Kenview full entry
Reference: see The View from Australia : the work of Australia's leading graphic designers / [edited by] Ken Cato.
Publishing details: Tokyo, Japan : Graphic-sha Pub. Co., 1986 
287 p. : col. ill.
design and designers in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see The View from Australia : the work of Australia's leading graphic designers / [edited by] Ken Cato.
Publishing details: Tokyo, Japan : Graphic-sha Pub. Co., 1986 
287 p. : col. ill.
graphic design and graphic designers in Australiaview full entry
Reference: see The View from Australia : the work of Australia's leading graphic designers / [edited by] Ken Cato.
Publishing details: Tokyo, Japan : Graphic-sha Pub. Co., 1986 
287 p. : col. ill.
Barrow G Hview full entry
Reference: see Day Fine Art website, 2023: G.H Barrow was a working painter and printmaker around Sydney in the 1880s. His full name and birthdates are unknown.
Balmain John 1923 - 2000view full entry
Reference: see eBay listing 27.3.23:
Original Impression OIL Painting, on board, by Australian Listed Artist, JOHN BALMAIN, (1923 - 2000).
It is signed lower left, and was painted around 1990. It is titled "PORTRAIT OF ARTIST JAN HILLYARD",
It was painted in 1990. It looks far more Vibrant than the Photos show. It is framed in an Oak Frame, and ready to hang. 

BALMAIN, John (1923 – 2000)  born in Cooma NSW. After serving with the armed forces (1942 to 1945),  studied art in Sydney, with Graeme Inson, but selected Melbourne and  Meldrum School, where he studied with Ron Crawford. Did Art Study tour of UK, Europe in 1960’s. He was involved with the “Gippsland Five” art group. He won numerous awards, and is represented in Melb University Collection, and many State, Public and Private Collections in Australia, and overseas.

It is in Excellent Condition, and measures 9 1/2 inch by 11 1/2 inch, (24.1cm x 29.3cm). (image size). The Frame is 13 1/2 inch by 15 1/4 inch, (34.3cm x 38.7cm).
Vallance Johnview full entry
Reference: see Australian Financia Review, article by Philippa Coates, January 26, 2021. ‘Director’s unusual art is ‘harder than learning classical Greek’’ [Dr John Vallance is director of the State Library of NSW. He is 62 and lives in St Albans, NSW.]
‘... You make steel kinetic three-dimensional sculptures based on life drawings. Are they your drawings?
Yes, I started studying life drawing during my 10 years in Cambridge where I was lecturing in ancient Greek philosophy. Sometimes I draw from life models, sometimes photographs.
For the sculptures, I abstract lines from the drawings then bend these lines out of steel and weld them together. It’s a bit like classical architecture, which is organised around the scale of the human body.
Each sculpture is between one and two metres, typically about the same size as people. They’re like 3D drawings in the air. I call it drawing in steel.
Is it an uncommon artistic practice?
Not that many people are doing it. The [late] American sculptor David Smith developed it off the back of Pablo Picasso and Julio González. What I’m very keen on is the powerful link to life drawing, which is easily the most difficult thing I’ve ever done. It was harder than learning classical Greek.
What is its appeal?
I’m interested in trying to capture the essence of the shape of a body. I try to make it not representational. If you look closely, you can start seeing arms and legs or a head. There’s a kind of alphabet of shapes that are then organised in space.
Do you have many works on the go at one time?
A couple, and it takes six about months before I’m happy with one. Each one is based on hundreds of drawings and sketches.
Do you ever exhibit or sell?
Some works are in private collections in the UK. One day I might put these things in the public domain. They tend to end up in my garden in St Albans and if they’ve got a nice bit of metal that I can reuse, then I’ll cut them up.
How did you learn this craft?
I went to some evening classes in welding and you learn from watching other people doing. I’m a great believer in apprenticeship. Also I was on the board of the National Art School so am fortunate to have access to some great teachers who are incredibly generous with their time.
Is it physically demanding?
It can be tiring, partly because it draws on every part of my mind and experience. It’s absorbing.
Your other interests are as varied as engineering, philosophy, ham radio and playing harpsichord, but you’ve been practising art for 40 years. Why is it so important?
The word art has an ancient Greek root origin that suggests fitting different things together. Art potentially brought together all the disparate interests that I had. It sounds like I’m a dabbler but an interest in art has been the spine that has held everything together. Philosophy has been the gateway to understand intellectually what I’m trying to do. As I get older, it’s art that is helping to make me understand my own life and that of others.
You spend about 20 hours a week in your studio. Do you treat it as a break from your work at the State Library?
Almost everything that I do is relevant in some way to everything else I do. I get a lot of ideas about work in the process of my sculpting. And I’m encouraging more play among colleagues at the library. People don’t have to see themselves as broken creatures with lives divided between work and play...’

Publishing details: https://www.afr.com/life-and-luxury/health-and-wellness/director-s-unusual-art-is-harder-than-learning-classical-greek-20201125-p56hxt
Fabian Erwin view full entry
Reference: Erwin Fabian - Works on Paper and Late Sculpture
Publishing details: Australian Galleries, 2023, [details to be entered]
Ref: 1009
Abstract art Contemporaryview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Bell Amber Creswell view full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Archer Suzanneview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Besser Emilyview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Brennan Angelaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Butt Eleanor Louiseview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Cassidy Catherineview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Clarke Amyview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Coats Lizview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Collins Davidview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Consalvo Lottieview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Cusack Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Davenport Joview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Drinkwater Jamesview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Eager Helenview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Fairbairn Emberview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Feldman Nathanview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Fell-Fracasso Aaronview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Ferretti Emilyview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Gresswell Louiseview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Gullett Celiaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Harris Juliaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Higgs Paulview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Hodge Gregoryview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Johnson Matthewview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Jones Gabrielleview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Lett Bellemview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Messiah Toneeview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Perricone Antoniaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Mrljakview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
O’Connor Laurenview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Ormandy Stephenview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Purcell Marisaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Routledge Elliottview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Sibinovski Jadeview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Skoczek Mirandaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Smith Helenview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Tobler Chanelview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Tomescu Aidaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Tuckwell Louiseview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Wagner Oliverview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Wallis Amberview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Wormald Aliceview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Young Anaview full entry
Reference: see Australian Abstract - Contemporary abstract painting , by Amber Creswell Bell. 42 Contemporary artists included with an essay on each, with colour illustration/s.
'There is an internal monologue, and a world of decisions and possibilities behind each work that the viewer does not see. Abstraction is akin to learning a new language.' Ana Young.

There is no single neat definition of abstract art. It makes no attempt to represent reality; instead it has its own visual language using shape, colour and form with no rules. An explosion of creative expression and gestural force, Australian Abstract explores the constantly evolving genre and how it offers unparalleled artistic freedom, inviting deeply personal connection and interpretation from both artist and viewer. Works often straddle a mid-point between recognition and the sensed experience through the materiality of paint encompassing a pastiche of styles.
Publishing details: Thames & Hudson Australia Pty Ltd , 2023, hc, 272pp [review from Sydney Morning Herald 28.3.23 inserted]
Clark Rolandview full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, 30.3.23:
5. CLARK, Roland.
The Jetty at Mornington, Port Phillip Bay, Australia.
Watercolour, 280 x 489 mm, professionally mounted, signed lower left R. Clark.
Mornington Peninsula, late 19th century.
This idyllic late-nineteenth-century Australian painting shows the jetty at Mornington, 40 kilometres south-east of Melbourne, and resonates with rich Australian historical content; it captures a fleeting moment in a place now forever changed. Only through the existence of paintings like this that encompass such details of local character is it truly possible to glean even a small understanding of the everyday life of early settlers at the end of the nineteenth century.
Roland Clark spent a few years painting in Australia between the 1890s and 1905, and is represented today by just a handful of surviving paintings, three of which are in the Mornington Peninsula Gallery. “The Mornington Peninsula has been a well-known haven for artists from the 1850s and many of Australia’s best known artists have produced memorable works based on the distinctive coastal environment of the region. Highlights of the Gallery’s regional collection include three early watercolours of Sorrento township by Roland Clark” (Mornington Peninsula Gallery).
The first European settlement on the peninsula, established in 1803 by Lieutenant-Colonel David Collins, was a short-lived penal colony dating 30 years before the establishment of Melbourne. It survived for a few years but was soon abandoned due to a lack of fresh water. A second attempt to establish a convict settlement in Port Phillip Bay was made in 1826, but was again a failure, abandoned by order of Governor Darling in 1827. From the 1840s the Mornington Peninsula was developed as an important area for agriculture, timber gathering and fishing area, and had lucrative grazing for cattle and horse breeding. The jetty as shown portrays a bevy of activity with vessels being loaded and unloaded, perhaps with supplies on the well-worn route to and from Melbourne. In the background can be seen a well-constructed observatory situated at a point overlooking Bass Strait and Port Phillip Bay.
The home of the Boonwurrung or Bunurong people, Mornington Peninsula was the site of the first European settlement in Victoria, established in what is now Sorrento. In this painting Clark depicts Schnapper Point, where Flinders landed in 1802 and charted much of Port Phillip Bay from the headland above today’s picturesque Mornington harbour. This area still shows evidence of some of the earliest European settlement in Victoria. The importance of the fishing community to the area can be gauged from the naming of Schnapper Point, a placename that persists in use today although the town’s name was officially changed to Mornington in 1864.

Sydney Cove Medallion
view full entry
Reference: see Hordern House catalogue, 30.3.23:
THE FIRST EUROPEAN ARTEFACT TO BE MADE FROM AUSTRALIAN MATERIALS JOSIAH WEDGWOOD CELEBRATES THE SETTLEMENT OF NEW SOUTH WALES IN CLAY SENT BACK TO JOSEPH BANKS BY GOVERNOR PHILLIP.
23. SYDNEY COVE MEDALLION. WEDGWOOD, Josiah.
A fine example of the very rare Sydney Cove Medallion in its original issue.
Clay medallion, 57 mm diameter, 2 mm depth; modelled from dark brown unglazed earthenware, with crisply moulded decoration.
“Etruria”, Josiah Wedgwood, 1789.
Provenance: Private collection in UK (owner speculated on a connection with Alexander Turnbull, the New Zealand collector, but no evidence adduced for this to date).
5000814
An exceptional survival of an object of great importance: Wedgwood’s highly important first casting of Botany Bay clay, in the form of a medallion celebrating art and summoning hope for the future of the new colony while commemorating its beginnings in Sydney Cove.
Of all historical relics, it is the Sydney Cove Medallion that is most emblematic of the beginnings of European settlement in Australia immediately following the voyage of the First Fleet under the colony’s first governor, Arthur Phillip.
The beautiful design commissioned by Josiah Wedgwood from Henry Webber shows, on the obverse, in moulded decoration, the figure of Hope, wearing classical robes and standing on rocks before an anchor, on the shores of a bay with a ship in the distance. She extends her right
hand to Peace, Art and Labour; Peace holds an olive branch in her right hand with a horn of plenty at her feet; Art holds a palette; the bearded figure of Labour wears a loin cloth and holds a sledgehammer over his shoulder; the imprint ‘ETRURIA / 1789’ appears below the scene in raised letters. The reverse side has the impressed legend in classical lettering ‘MADE BY / IOSIAH WEDGWOOD / OF CLAY / FROM / SYDNEY COVE’. It was made at Wedgwood’s Etruria factory in 1789 from Webber’s design by Wedgwood’s principal modeller, William Hackwood. The original medallions range in colour from pale biscuit to a dark brown, almost black colour, as represented by the example being offered.
Exhibiting a fineness of detail made possible by the unique qualities of the Sydney Cove clay, the medallion is a superb embodiment of the ingenuity of one of 18th-century Britain’s leading industrialists and can be considered as the first work of art connected to the fledging colony. It also represents the colony’s earliest export and application of raw materials, which would become a lynchpin of the state’s modern economy.
Its contemporary significance was well understood: indeed, it was immediately reproduced as an engraving on the title page of the 1789 Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay, the first official account of the new colony to be published. A full-page “Account of the Vignette” explains that ‘The elegant vignette in the title-page, was engraved from a medallion which the ingenious Mr. Wedgewood caused to be modelled from a small piece of clay brought from Sydney Cove. The clay proves to be of a fine texture, and will be found very useful for the manufacture of earthern ware. The design is allegorical; it represents Hope encouraging Art and Labour, under the influences of Peace, to pursue the employments necessary to give security and happiness to an infant colony...”. On the facing page is a 26-line poem written in its honour by Erasmus Darwin (Charles Darwin’s grandfather)

Murmurationsview full entry
Reference: Murmurations, Hyde Park Barracks exhibition opens 30 March, 2023.
Murmurations is this year’s Hyde Park Barracks annual art commission by First Nations artist Tony Albert and Sāmoan-Australian artist Angela Tiatia with Lille Madden, Alina Olivares-Panucci and Corin Ileto.
Presented in a large-scale digital format, Murmurations brings together First Nations perspectives from Australia and the Pacific to explore the history of the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Hyde Park Barracks as a site of migration.
Publishing details: Hyde Park Barracks, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Albert Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Murmurations, Hyde Park Barracks exhibition opens 30 March, 2023.
Murmurations is this year’s Hyde Park Barracks annual art commission by First Nations artist Tony Albert and Sāmoan-Australian artist Angela Tiatia with Lille Madden, Alina Olivares-Panucci and Corin Ileto.
Presented in a large-scale digital format, Murmurations brings together First Nations perspectives from Australia and the Pacific to explore the history of the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Hyde Park Barracks as a site of migration.
Publishing details: Hyde Park Barracks, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Tiatia Angela Sāmoan-Australian artist view full entry
Reference: see Murmurations, Hyde Park Barracks exhibition opens 30 March, 2023.
Murmurations is this year’s Hyde Park Barracks annual art commission by First Nations artist Tony Albert and Sāmoan-Australian artist Angela Tiatia with Lille Madden, Alina Olivares-Panucci and Corin Ileto.
Presented in a large-scale digital format, Murmurations brings together First Nations perspectives from Australia and the Pacific to explore the history of the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Hyde Park Barracks as a site of migration.
Publishing details: Hyde Park Barracks, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Madden Lille view full entry
Reference: see Murmurations, Hyde Park Barracks exhibition opens 30 March, 2023.
Murmurations is this year’s Hyde Park Barracks annual art commission by First Nations artist Tony Albert and Sāmoan-Australian artist Angela Tiatia with Lille Madden, Alina Olivares-Panucci and Corin Ileto.
Presented in a large-scale digital format, Murmurations brings together First Nations perspectives from Australia and the Pacific to explore the history of the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Hyde Park Barracks as a site of migration.
Publishing details: Hyde Park Barracks, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Olivares-Panucci Alina view full entry
Reference: see Murmurations, Hyde Park Barracks exhibition opens 30 March, 2023.
Murmurations is this year’s Hyde Park Barracks annual art commission by First Nations artist Tony Albert and Sāmoan-Australian artist Angela Tiatia with Lille Madden, Alina Olivares-Panucci and Corin Ileto.
Presented in a large-scale digital format, Murmurations brings together First Nations perspectives from Australia and the Pacific to explore the history of the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Hyde Park Barracks as a site of migration.
Publishing details: Hyde Park Barracks, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ileto Corin .view full entry
Reference: see Murmurations, Hyde Park Barracks exhibition opens 30 March, 2023.
Murmurations is this year’s Hyde Park Barracks annual art commission by First Nations artist Tony Albert and Sāmoan-Australian artist Angela Tiatia with Lille Madden, Alina Olivares-Panucci and Corin Ileto.
Presented in a large-scale digital format, Murmurations brings together First Nations perspectives from Australia and the Pacific to explore the history of the UNESCO World Heritage–listed Hyde Park Barracks as a site of migration.
Publishing details: Hyde Park Barracks, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Quilty Benview full entry
Reference: Ben Quilty, by Lisa Slade

Publishing details: Brisbane: The University of Queensland Art Museum, 2013. 142 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalismview full entry
Reference: Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism: Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty!

Exhibition catalogue for Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism, held at Queensland Art Gallery, 1996. Featuring illustrations by Max Meldrum, Clarice Beckett, A.D Colquhoun, and Precy Leason.
Publishing details: Queensland Art Gallery
Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery, 1996.
6 pages, colour illustrations. Trifold.
Ref: 1009
Meldrum Maxview full entry
Reference: Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism: Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty!

Exhibition catalogue for Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism, held at Queensland Art Gallery, 1996. Featuring illustrations by Max Meldrum, Clarice Beckett, A.D Colquhoun, and Precy Leason.
Publishing details: Queensland Art Gallery
Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery, 1996.
6 pages, colour illustrations. Trifold.
Beckett Clarice view full entry
Reference: Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism: Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty!

Exhibition catalogue for Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism, held at Queensland Art Gallery, 1996. Featuring illustrations by Max Meldrum, Clarice Beckett, A.D Colquhoun, and Precy Leason.
Publishing details: Queensland Art Gallery
Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery, 1996.
6 pages, colour illustrations. Trifold.
Colquhoun A D view full entry
Reference: Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism: Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty!

Exhibition catalogue for Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism, held at Queensland Art Gallery, 1996. Featuring illustrations by Max Meldrum, Clarice Beckett, A.D Colquhoun, and Precy Leason.
Publishing details: Queensland Art Gallery
Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery, 1996.
6 pages, colour illustrations. Trifold.
Leason Precy .view full entry
Reference: Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism: Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty!

Exhibition catalogue for Max Meldrum and Melbourne Tonalism, held at Queensland Art Gallery, 1996. Featuring illustrations by Max Meldrum, Clarice Beckett, A.D Colquhoun, and Precy Leason.
Publishing details: Queensland Art Gallery
Brisbane: Queensland Art Gallery, 1996.
6 pages, colour illustrations. Trifold.
Oates William 1862-1945view full entry
Reference: see Lawrences Auctioneers of Crewkerne, UK, 19.4.23, lot 510: WILLIAM OATES (ENGLISH/AUSTRALIAN, 1862-1945). HARBOUR SCENE WITH A JETTY, VESSELS BEYOND. Signed and indistinctly dated, with sketch of a rural landscape with barn verso, oil on canvas
35 x 50cm. *CR Needs a clean.
Lacey Johnview full entry
Reference: see Criterion Auctioneers Ltd, UK, 5.4.23, lot 195, John Lacey (Australian), Gathering Cloud & Red Bird, watercolour, signed and dated 91 lower right. H.43.5 W.52.5cm
James Trevor 1866-1942view full entry
Reference: see Palm Beach Modern to Antique Estate Auction, Apr 17, 2023, Lantana, FL, USA, lot 204:Trevor James (Australian, 1866-1942) oil on canvas, titled "Royal Forth Yacht Regatta, Granton, 25 July 1859". Signed lower right. Very good condition. Has been cleaned and relined and shows cracklature. Heavy wooden frame. Art measures 39" x 29.5", frame measures 50" x 40".


Hopewell Jennifer Australian B. 1960.view full entry
Reference: see SPRING IS IN THE AIR SALE
Apr 27, 2023, Cornwall, NY, USA, lot 195: American School, 20th century, sunset with muezzin tower. The work is oil/canvas and is signed Hopewell. Possibly be Jennifer Hopewell, Australia B. 1960. It is presented in a simply black frame. Measures: H 12" x W 15" Rabbet: 11" x 14"
Smith Bernhard 1820–1885view full entry
Reference: See Australian Dictionary of Biography essay by Marjorie J. Tipping:
Bernhard Smith (1820-1885), sculptor and painter, was born at Greenwich, London, England, third son of Lord [Christian name] Henry Smith and his wife Jane Mary, née Voase. He joined the Antique School of the Royal Academy of Arts in 1840 and later that year enrolled at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. His first notable sculpture (1838) was a memorial to his sister. After his return to London he wrote 'The World in Miniature' in 1842 but there is no evidence that it was published. By 1851 he had exhibited nineteen works at the Royal Academy, including an oil painting, 'Puck', the inspiration of T. Woolner's statuette. Smith and Woolner shared a studio in Stanhope Street and their circle included Browning, Carlyle, Lamb, Tennyson and Mary and William Howitt. Smith's daughter Minnie later claimed that he was one of the seven original members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood; he certainly belonged to it by 1850 when he helped D. G. Rossetti to plan the Germ. Both Woolner and Rossetti acknowledged Smith's influence on them.
Disillusioned with the movement, Smith planned to go to Canada, but instead he and Woolner decided to accompany E. L. Bateman to Melbourne. Their departure in the Windsor in July 1852 inspired Ford Madox Brown's painting, 'The last of England'. Arriving on 23 October, Smith and Woolner set out for the Ovens diggings and then went to Fryer's Creek and Sandhurst. Smith's brother Alexander John (1813?-1872) had become a commissioner of crown lands for the goldfields; on 17 May 1854 Bernhard became assistant commissioner for the Westernport District, with salary of £400 and allowances, and by 1857 was at Ballarat. On 8 February 1858 he became warden of the goldfields and Chinese protector. In 1860 he was transferred to Pleasant Creek (Stawell) as police magistrate, but resigned on 31 March 1861 and joined Alexander, who had taken up Langley Vale station near Kyneton and who won the Legislative Assembly seat of Castlemaine in May. Bernhard became commissioner of crown lands in August and warden for the goldfields of Victoria in September. Interested in astronomy, in the early 1860s he took meteorological observations for R. L. J. Ellery's geodetic survey; he was assisted by his wife Olivia Frances Josephine, née Boyes, whom he had married at St Paul's Church, Melbourne, on 12 February 1863. He was police magistrate and deputy-sheriff at Stawell from 9 October 1865. Along with many other civil servants he was dismissed on Black Wednesday in January 1878 while stationed at Smythesdale, but he was later reinstated and transferred to Alexandra.
Smith had corresponded with his English friends and continued to paint, though he was not interested in Australian subjects; he remained isolated from colonial artistic trends: 'A thorn pierced my foot in 1854', he wrote of his work for the government, 'So among Gum Trees I lived listlessly dreaming; jangling with sweet music, all out of tune'. In 1881 he dislocated his right arm, but continued his work, painting ethereal and heavenly objects in the manner of Blake and Fuseli; a recent art historian has noted that his art and prose are closer to surrealism than any of the other Pre-Raphaelites. Among his commissions were five illustrations of Macbeth and four of Much Ado About Nothing for a music hall. He wrote verse and sketched fairies and birds for his children. He sent for Rossetti's engravings, but in his isolation he feared for his perception; on seeing a picture of Woolner's statue of Captain Cook he commented, 'No, no, no … Gum Trees and Kangaroos may have ruined my taste'.
W. M. Rossetti described Smith as 'six feet (183 cm) broad … with a hearty English look and manner, and a clear resonant voice'. Alfred Howitt thought him rather fussy but 'a useful man of business'. His habits were abstemious: he customarily drank a handful of oatmeal in a jug of cold water and warned his student son in England against the evils of beer that 'bemuddles the clear brains'. Aged 64, he died of pneumonia at Alexandra on 7 October 1885 after trying to rescue two children from a flooded stream. Buried in the Alexandra cemetery, he was survived by his wife, three of their four sons and four of their five daughters; his estate was valued for probate at £1999, including a property at Elgar Park, Box Hill. Two of his portrait medallions, of Sir John Richardson and Sir James Clark Ross, are in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
Select Bibliography
• M. Howitt (ed), Mary Howitt. An Autobiography (Lond, 1889)
• W. M Rossetti (ed), Pre-Raphaelite Diaries and Letters (Lond, 1900)
• W. Holman Hunt, Pre-Raphaelitism and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (Lond, 1905)
• W. M. Rossetti, Some Reminiscences, vol 1 (Lond, 1906)
• A. Graves, The Royal Academy of Arts, vol 7 (Lond, 1906)
• U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexikon der Bildenden Künstler (Leipzig, 1912)
• B. Smith, Place, Taste and Tradition (Syd, 1945)
• M. B. Smith, Bernhard Smith and his Connection with Art (manuscript, 1917, copies at State Library of Victoria, State Library of New South Wales and State Library of Queensland)
• Howitt papers (State Library of Victoria)
• Woolner diary (copy at National Library of Australia)
• Chief Secretary, letters (Public Record Office Victoria).
Hewitt Charles (1837-1912)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
HEWITT, Charles (1837-1912)
Co., close Railway Station, C. Hewitt, Manager’, and the wet stamp (in red) of ‘Cahill’s Reward Gold Mining Co.’; a superb print – incredibly sharp, and in excellent condition; the mount has a chipped bottom corner (not affecting the print).
Gold was discovered at Cahill’s Reward, near Stawell in the Wimmera region of Victoria, in 1895. The following initial report was published in The Age, on 13 September 1895:
‘MINING AT STAWELL. STAWELL, Thursday. A sensationally good prospect has been obtained by boring on a lease area known as ” Cahill’s Reward,” situated on Chambers Flat, more than 2 miles west of the John Woods claim, and about the same distance south from the Welshman’s. Thebore was bottomed at 130 feet, and the prospect obtained by the auger was 14 gr. of gold. This discovery indicates that the lead continues down the fiat for a considerable distance, the gold and wash exactly resembling those met with in the John Woods.‘
The lease seems to have been divided between the Cahill’s Reward Gold Mining Company (managed by William Cahill), whose mine is pictured in this apparently unrecorded photograph, probably taken in late 1895 or 1896, during the mine’s early stages, and Kempson’s Company. In 1907 the entire lease was taken over by the Pleasant Creek Alluvial Gold Mining Company.
The photograph, which was taken by the renowned former Melbourne photographer Charles Hewitt, shows an assembly of well-to-do looking men and women gathered around the poppet head. Among them is no doubt William Cahill himself (he is possibly the tall, bearded man in bow-tie, three-piece suit and long overcoat towards the left of the group). The wooden building in the background is still under construction, suggesting a relatively early date of late 1895 or early 1896.
Trove locates no other examples of this historically significant photograph in Australian public collections.

Meeson Dora Village scene, Brittanyview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
ed genre scene by Australian expatriate artist and suffragist Dora Meeson (1869-1955) are both dressed in the traditional costume of Brittany: the woman wears a plain style of Breton coif, and the man a Breton cap and clogs. Behind them is pictured the facade of a typical Brittany-style thatched-roof cottage.
Although it is possible the work was completed during her time in France in 1898-99, it is more likely to have been painted by Meeson to appeal to a French market in the period after World War One, when, as ‘an ardent feminist who sought financial independence, Meeson became the principal breadwinner [in her marriage to George Coates] by painting a broad range of popular subjects for the market, including sentimental topics, studies of children, tourist souvenirs and rural scenes’ (DAAO). 
Melbourne-born Meeson received her early training at the Christchurch School of Art, New Zealand, and at the National Gallery School (Melbourne), before continuing her studies as a private student in London at the Slade School of Art (1896-98 ) and in Paris at the Académie Julian (1898-99). After returning to London, she married fellow Australian artist George Coates in 1903, and found intermittent work as an illustrator. She and Coates settled into the artistic Bohemia of Chelsea. From around 1906 she became became very active the suffragist movement: she was a founding member of Women’s Freedom League (Kensington Branch), a member of the Women’s Council of the Conservative and Unionist Women’s Franchise Association, and a member of the Artists’ Suffrage League. She is famous for having painted the Commonwealth of Australia’s Suffrage Banner, with the legend Trust the Women Mother As I Have Done, which was carried at the head of the ANZWVC Contingent in the Women’s Suffrage Coronation Procession on 17 June 1911. (The banner is now in the Parliament House Art Collection). In 1919 Meeson became the first Australian woman to be admitted to the Royal Institute of Oil Painters (ROI).
‘[Meeson] exhibited her paintings in Australia in 1913 and 1928 and had a major touring exhibition with her husband in 1921. Meeson was awarded a Honourable Mention at the 1923 Paris Salon. An ardent feminist who sought financial independence, Meeson became the principal breadwinner by painting a broad range of popular subjects for the market, including sentimental topics, studies of children, tourist souvenirs and rural scenes. In her Thames River paintings, e.g. The Thames at Chelsea (1916, GAG), she attempted to break down the social barriers that limited women artists to domestic subjects by appropriating subject matter usually the preserve of male artists – marine painting – and her pictures show scenes of the smog-laden industrial waterfront where women’s presence was normally considered unacceptable. Mindful of East End poverty, she also recorded the vulnerability of working men to storms and accident. A group of ‘social conscience’ paintings aimed to draw attention to official discrimination against underprivileged women, women war-workers and women artists….’ (DAAO)

Webb T D and Son photographersview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
A pair of husband and wife carte de visite portraits housed in a double union case. Launceston, Tasmania, late 1860s.
Two albumen print photographs, carte de visite format, mounts trimmed to 75 x 60 mm (approx.), both with the identical back mark of Webb & Son, St. John Street, Launceston, Tasmania, mounted under glass in their original oval-shaped brass mats within octagonal gilt brass foil preservers (spots of verdigris to the mats, otherwise both in fine condition), and housed in the original octagonal wood-based thermoplastic union case with double hinge, manufactured by S. Peck & Co., 85 x 95 x 25 mm (small chip at one corner, otherwise fine). Note: the preservers can be gently removed from the case, exposing the backs of the cartes de visite.
For an Australian studio of the second half of the 1860s this is a highly uncommon example of a union case being used to house inexpensive paper prints; in this period, cases would have been used almost exclusively for ambrotypes.
We are confident that this pair of carte de visite portraits of an unidentified Launceston couple have been enclosed within their preservers in this double union case since around the time they were taken in T. D. Webb & Son’s studio over 150 years ago. The foil on the backs has clearly been pressed flat for all that time, so there is no question that the cartes are later “ring-ins”: they are integral to the case.

Waddington T C phographerview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Studio portrait of a woman with her dogs. Melbourne, mid 1880s.
Albumen print photograph, cabinet card format, 166 x 108 mm (mount); verso imprinted ‘E. C. Waddington & Co., 109 Elizabeth Street,  Melbourne’; a few tiny scratches to the bottom of the print and the recto of the mount, otherwise both the print and mount are in very good condition.
A lovely studio portrait of a Melbourne woman with her arm around her fairly large dog – a Gordon setter? – while she holds a smaller dog – a pit bull terrier? – by its collar.
This cabinet card came from an album compiled by a member of one of the branches of the Handfield family of Melbourne in the second half of the nineteenth century. Three Handfield brothers arrived in Melbourne from Ireland in the 1850s: William Hopton Handfield (m. Isabelle Tatham; the couple had 4 children); Lieutenant Frederick Oliver Handfield (m. Mary Ellen Tatham; the couple had 7 children); Rev. Henry Hewett Paulet Handfield (m. Mary Leigh Tripp; no issue). We believe the woman in this portrait is one of the daughters of William Hopton Handfield, secretary of the Melbourne Cricket Club.
 

Rose George stereographsview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Armadale, Vic. : The Rose Stereographs [George Rose], [1920-22]. Series: “Racehorse post-card series”. Group of 15 (fifteen) gelatin silver print photographs, in uniform format 86 x 132 mm, printed on postcard stock; a few with hand colouring; the original owner – evidently a racing fan – mounted the cards for display by pinning them at the corners, and several also have some creasing; the versos are uninscribed.
Violoncello, W. Foulsham; Ethiopian, G. Harrison; Rosier, G. Dally; Sir Ibex, F. Dempsey; Sandule, C. Williams; Stare, E. O’Sullivan; Richmond Main, A. Wood; Purser, W. Duncan; Molly’s Rose, P. O’Neil; Wedge, H. Cairns; Red Dome, J. Mahony; Sister Olive, F. O’Sullivan; Iolaus, H. Thompson; Westcourt, W. H. McLachlan; Tavistock, J. Killorn.
Large group of photographic postcards of Australian thoroughbred racehorses and their jockeys. Melbourne, early 1920s.
Chuck Thomas Foster view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Studio portrait of Nellie Handfield, aged 11 years. Melbourne, 1875; [together with] a second portrait of Nellie around the age of 3, taken in Williamstown, circa 1867.
format, 102 x 62 mm (mount); verso with the imprint of ‘T. F. Chuck, Photographer to His Excellency the Governor, the Trustees of the National Gallery, and Prize Medalist, London Exhibition 1874. Royal Arcade, London Portrait Gallery, Melbourne’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in ink identifying the sitter as ‘Nellie Handfield, 11 years, 1875’; both the print and mount are in excellent condition.
II. Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 98 x 62 mm (mount); verso with the elaborate imprint (in the form of a ship’s mast) of ‘A. Rider, Williamstown, Photo Artist, Prize Medallist Intercolonial Exhibition 1866’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in pencil (quite faded) ‘Miss Handfield’; the print has some very light foxing, but the mount is clean and stable.
These two cartes de visite were sourced together in an album that had been compiled by a member of one of the branches of the Handfield family of Melbourne in the second half of the nineteenth century. They are both studio portraits of Nellie Handfield (b. 1864, Melbourne). The earlier one, by the maritime photographer Rider of Williamstown, shows her around the age of three, while the later one shows Nellie grown into a confident and intelligent-looking young girl aged 11.
Nellie was the first child (and only daughter – she was followed by six boys) of Lieutenant Frederick Oliver Handfield – a naval lieutenant who had served on the expedition of HMCSS Victoria to the Gulf of Carpentaria in search of Burke and Wills, and was later commander of the Victorian Colonial Navy’s training ship Sir Harry Smith – and his wife, Mary Ellen Tatham. Frederick had resigned from the Royal Navy to follow his brothers, Henry Hewett Paulet and William Hopton Handfield, to Melbourne in 1858. (His brother William had married Isabelle Tatham, Mary Ellen’s sister, in Melbourne soon after his arrival).
Nellie’s parents, Frederick and Mary Ellen, were married at St. Peter’s Church, Melbourne, on 14 May 1862, by the Rev. H. H. P. Handfield, brother of the groom.
Some two-and-a-half years later, on 8 October 1864, the following birth notice appeared in The Age (Melbourne):
‘HANDFIELD.— On the 6th October, at St. Peter’s Parsonage, Melbourne, the wife of Mr F. O. Handfield, late H.M.C.S. Victoria, of a daughter.‘
Eleanor Frederica Handfield was known informally to family and friends as ‘Nellie’ – a popular abbreviation of the name Eleanor in the nineteenth century. Very late in life – in 1913, at the age of 48 – Nellie married Arthur Alfred Kenny Walker, who was thirteen years her senior.
The Australian War Memorial holds in its collection the naval uniform of Lieutenant F. O. Handfield, and a brief summary of his interesting naval career can be read on the AWM website https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C110208
 

Rider Andrewview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Studio portrait of Nellie Handfield, aged 11 years. Melbourne, 1875; [together with] a second portrait of Nellie around the age of 3, taken in Williamstown, circa 1867.
format, 102 x 62 mm (mount); verso with the imprint of ‘T. F. Chuck, Photographer to His Excellency the Governor, the Trustees of the National Gallery, and Prize Medalist, London Exhibition 1874. Royal Arcade, London Portrait Gallery, Melbourne’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in ink identifying the sitter as ‘Nellie Handfield, 11 years, 1875’; both the print and mount are in excellent condition.
II. Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 98 x 62 mm (mount); verso with the elaborate imprint (in the form of a ship’s mast) of ‘A. Rider, Williamstown, Photo Artist, Prize Medallist Intercolonial Exhibition 1866’, and with a fully contemporary inscription in pencil (quite faded) ‘Miss Handfield’; the print has some very light foxing, but the mount is clean and stable.
These two cartes de visite were sourced together in an album that had been compiled by a member of one of the branches of the Handfield family of Melbourne in the second half of the nineteenth century. They are both studio portraits of Nellie Handfield (b. 1864, Melbourne). The earlier one, by the maritime photographer Rider of Williamstown, shows her around the age of three, while the later one shows Nellie grown into a confident and intelligent-looking young girl aged 11.
Nellie was the first child (and only daughter – she was followed by six boys) of Lieutenant Frederick Oliver Handfield – a naval lieutenant who had served on the expedition of HMCSS Victoria to the Gulf of Carpentaria in search of Burke and Wills, and was later commander of the Victorian Colonial Navy’s training ship Sir Harry Smith – and his wife, Mary Ellen Tatham. Frederick had resigned from the Royal Navy to follow his brothers, Henry Hewett Paulet and William Hopton Handfield, to Melbourne in 1858. (His brother William had married Isabelle Tatham, Mary Ellen’s sister, in Melbourne soon after his arrival).
Nellie’s parents, Frederick and Mary Ellen, were married at St. Peter’s Church, Melbourne, on 14 May 1862, by the Rev. H. H. P. Handfield, brother of the groom.
Some two-and-a-half years later, on 8 October 1864, the following birth notice appeared in The Age (Melbourne):
‘HANDFIELD.— On the 6th October, at St. Peter’s Parsonage, Melbourne, the wife of Mr F. O. Handfield, late H.M.C.S. Victoria, of a daughter.‘
Eleanor Frederica Handfield was known informally to family and friends as ‘Nellie’ – a popular abbreviation of the name Eleanor in the nineteenth century. Very late in life – in 1913, at the age of 48 – Nellie married Arthur Alfred Kenny Walker, who was thirteen years her senior.
The Australian War Memorial holds in its collection the naval uniform of Lieutenant F. O. Handfield, and a brief summary of his interesting naval career can be read on the AWM website https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C110208
 

Dailey S Jview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Timber cutting scene, Kangaroo Island, South Australia, circa 1890.
Sepia-tone gelatin silver print photograph, 155 x 210 mm; verso with the wet stamp of ‘S. J. Dailey, Photographic Artist, 151 Franklin Street, Adelaide’, and a fully contemporary caption in pencil: ‘Timber cutting, Kangaroo Island, S. A.’; the print has a few short edge tears and some loss at the corners; nevertheless, it is an exceptionally sharp image with a wealth of detail, including of the timber cutters and their implements, larger equipment, a storage shed and bullock teams and drays – plus, of course, lots of scattered timber debris in the foreground.
An historically significant photograph documenting the timber cutting industry on Kangaroo Island in the 1890s. It was taken by professional photographer S. J. Dailey, first president of the South Australian Photographic Society.
Trove locates no other examples of this image in Australian public collections.


Yeoman & Co photographersview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Studio portrait of two young children with the family cocker spaniel. Melbourne, late 1880s.
Albumen print photograph, cabinet card format, 165 x 108 mm (mount); recto imprinted ‘Yeoman & Co., 107 Swan Street, Richmond’; verso blank; the print has some tiny ink spots at upper right, but is otherwise in good condition.
Yeoman & Co. operated their Swan Street, Richmond studio in the years 1886-88 (Davies & Stanbury, The Mechanical Eye in Australia).
This cabinet card came from an album compiled by a member of one of the branches of the Handfield family of Melbourne in the second half of the nineteenth century. Three Handfield brothers arrived in Melbourne from Ireland in the 1850s: William Hopton Handfield (m. Isabelle Tatham; the couple had 4 children); Lieutenant Frederick Oliver Handfield (m. Mary Ellen Tatham; the couple had 7 children); Rev. Henry Hewett Paulet Handfield (m. Mary Leigh Tripp; no issue).



Lindsay Percyview full entry
Reference: The Bulletin book of humorous verses and recitations.
publisher’s wrappers with front cover design by Percy Lindsay, lower wrapper with advertisement for Heenzo with numerous b/w illustrations also by Percy Lindsay, accompanying texts by a host of contributors including G. Bennett, Ed Dyson, H. E. Horne, Zora Cross, V. J. Daley, Vance Palmer, C. J. Dennis and Harry (“Breaker”) Morant;
Publishing details: Sydney : N.S.W. Bookstall Co., 1926. Series: The Bulletin reciter, series 2. Octavo (180 x 122 mm),
Ref: 1009
Mawurndjul Johnview full entry
Reference: John Mawurndjul : painting the spirit. 8 April – 12 May 2022, including works from the Bill & Anne Gregory Collection. photography, Leslie Haworth; foreword, Bill Gregory

Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC. : D’Lan Contemporary Pty Ltd, 2022. Quarto (280 x 215 mm), illustrated stiff wrappers, 54 pp., illustrated in colour; cataloguing and research, Vanessa Merlino;
Ref: 1000
Haworth Leslie view full entry
Reference: John Mawurndjul : painting the spirit. 8 April – 12 May 2022, including works from the Bill & Anne Gregory Collection. photography, Leslie Haworth; foreword, Bill Gregory

Publishing details: Melbourne, VIC. : D’Lan Contemporary Pty Ltd, 2022. Quarto (280 x 215 mm), illustrated stiff wrappers, 54 pp., illustrated in colour; cataloguing and research, Vanessa Merlino;
Periodicalsview full entry
Reference: see 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
Pstle Bruceview full entry
Reference: Bruce Postle : the image maker
The definitive collection of photography by one of Australia’s leading and most accomplished photo-journalists. Bruce Postle’s archive is held in the State Library of Victoria.
‘Bruce Postle is a multi-award winning photojournalist. He began his career at Queensland Country Life, moving on to Brisbane’s Courier Mail and then to The Age in 1969. In 2007 Bruce was awarded a Quill Lifetime Achievement Award by the Melbourne Press Club. In September 2014 he was made an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Institute for Professional Photography (AIPP) ‘for his outstanding contribution to the photographic industry’ and in October 2014 he was inducted as one of the foundation members of the Victorian Media Hall of Fame.’ – SLV website.

Publishing details: Melbourne : Elm Grove Press, 2011. Oblong folio, illustrated laminated boards in slipcase, light handling marks, pp. xxvi; 374, extensively illustrated. Limited to 1000 numbered copies

Ref: 1000
Breaden J Cview full entry
Reference: J. C. Beaden - Port Arthur … 16 souvenir views by J. C. Breaden

Publishing details: Hobart : a souvenir from The Hotel Arthur, circa 1950. Oblong duodecimo, self-wrappers, pp. 16, photographically illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Duryea Townsend (junior)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Studio portrait of young girl in summer dress, standing on a rustic bench. Adelaide, South Australia, 1890s.
Albumen print photograph, cabinet card format, 165 x 108 mm (mount); recto with embossed imprint of ‘T. Duryea, 51 Rundle Street, Adelaide’; verso blank; a superb print in excellent condition;
The photographer, Townsend Duryea (junior), was born in Adelaide in 1854. He was the eldest of the 12 children of New York-born photographer Townsend Duryea (senior), who, along with his brother Sanford, was one of the most significant of South Australia’s pioneer photographers. Townsend (junior) and his brothers Edwin, Richard and Frank would all follow in the footsteps of their father and uncle and become professional photographers. Although he appears to have been associated in the 1870s with the Adelaide Photographic Company, Townsend (junior) first set up as a photographer with a studio under his own name in Moonta, on the Yorke Peninsula, from around 1880. From 1884 he was back in Adelaide, where he continued working as a photographer for the remainder of his career. He died in Port Pirie in 1925.

Stewart & Co pghotographersview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Albumen print photograph, cabinet card format, 164 x 107 mm (mount), recto with the imprint of ‘Stewart & Co., 217 & 219 Bourke St. East, Melbourne’;
MARCHANT Philip James (1846-1910)view full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Two portraits of elderly couples, one taken in a garden, the other in the studio. Gawler, South Australia, late 1890s.
I. Couple seated in a garden. Sepia-tone gelatin silver print photograph, cabinet card format, 166 x 112 mm; recto of round-cornered mount with silver-embossed imprint of ‘Marchant’s Studio, Gawler, S.A.’; verso blank; both the print and mount are in excellent condition.
II. Couple in a studio with elaborate painted backdrop. Gelatin silver print photograph, cabinet card format, 166 x 112 mm; recto of square-cornered mount with silver-embossed imprint of ‘Marchant’s Studio, Gawler, S.A.’; verso blank; the print has a tiny spot of silverfishing at top left corner, otherwise print and mount are immaculate.
A highly contrasting pair of portraits when juxtaposed – but they were both taken by the same photographer, around the same time!
In 1897 Philip Marchant returned to Gawler, South Australia from Tasmania, where he had spent a decade working as a photographer in Latrobe. Marchant is probably best known for his famous double self-portrait taken around 1865.
Read
FRÜHLING STUDIO photographersview full entry
Reference: see Douglas Stewart Fine Books list 3.4.23:
Studio portrait of a three-generation family. Adelaide, circa 1895.
Albumen print photograph, Paris Panel format, 175 x 250 mm (mount); recto of mount with embossed imprint of ‘Frühling Studio, 62 Rundle Street, Adelaide’, and royal coat of arms in gilt; a superb print with rich tones and great clarity, in fine condition; the mount is also excellent.
A beautifully composed portrait photograph of an Adelaide family, dating to just before Federation. The matriarch is seated at centre, flanked by her husband and her daughter, each with a hand resting on the back of her chair; her son-in-law is seated to her right, and her two grandchildren at either side of the group.
 

Clark Roland 1904 watercolourview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons auction, Australian & International Art, April 16, 2023, lot 16:
ROLAND CLARK (ACTIVE LATE 19TH CENTURY)
View Of The Sorrento Township From The Pier 1904
watercolour
signed and dated lower left: R CLARK 04
18.5 x 66.5cm
Anderson R Normanview full entry
Reference: see Gibsons auction, Australian & International Art, April 16, 2023, lot 26:
R NORMAN ANDERSON (CIRCA LATE 18TH/EARLY19TH CENTURY)
Sailor In The Marble Bar, George Adams' Tattersall's Hotel 1906
oil on canvas
signed and dated lower right: R NORMAN ANDERSON 1906
116.5 x 74.5cm

CATALOGUE NOTE
This charmingly candid painting by artist R Norman Anderson depicts a pair of sailors on a leave of absence from HMAS, indulging in a sweepstake or ‘ticket in Tatts' at the famous Tattersall's Hotel Marble Bar. Their jovial and glassy-eyed expressions give an impression of a stroke of luck and several steins of lager enjoyed. The young lads buoyantly dazzle their company with tales of the sea.
Built in 1893, Marble Bar was said to rival any Grand hotel bar that graced Paris or London. Reportedly costing 30,000 pounds, the bar rooms are adorned with marble panels, a stained glass ceiling, mosaic tiling, decadently hand-carved mahogany cabinetry, and several large panels painted by Julian Ashton.
Tattersall's Hotel was demolished in the 1970s replaced by the current Hilton Hotel; the Marble Bar, however, remains intact as it was painstakingly dismantled and restored. Anderson has captured the essence of the place, and it's grandiosity. Though darkly lit, every detail of the bar is captured with accuracy, the atmosphere of cheeky bar antics shines through the smoky mise-en-scène
POIGNANT REGALIA: 19TH CENTURY ABORIGINAL IMAGES & BREASTPLATESview full entry
Reference: POIGNANT REGALIA: 19TH CENTURY ABORIGINAL IMAGES & BREASTPLATES
A catalogue of Aboriginal breastplates held in public, regional and private collections in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory. This copy signed by Cleary.

Publishing details: Sydney: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 1993. 136 pages, black and white illustrations
Ref: 1009
BREASTPLATESview full entry
Reference: see POIGNANT REGALIA: 19TH CENTURY ABORIGINAL IMAGES & BREASTPLATES
A catalogue of Aboriginal breastplates held in public, regional and private collections in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory. This copy signed by Cleary.

Publishing details: Sydney: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 1993. 136 pages, black and white illustrations
King platesview full entry
Reference: see POIGNANT REGALIA: 19TH CENTURY ABORIGINAL IMAGES & BREASTPLATES
A catalogue of Aboriginal breastplates held in public, regional and private collections in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory. This copy signed by Cleary.

Publishing details: Sydney: Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales, 1993. 136 pages, black and white illustrations
Monteith Sybil view full entry
Reference: ROCKS AND LANDSCAPES OF THE GOLD COAST HINTERLAND
Warwick Willmott
Geology and excursions in the Gold Coast and Albert and Beaudesert Shires. Illustrations by Sybil Monteith and Helen Thomson.

Publishing details: Brisbane: Geological Society of Australia, Queensland Division, 1999. Second Edition. Second Printing.
24cm x 17cm. iv, 60 pages, black and white illustrations, maps. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Thomson Helen
view full entry
Reference: ROCKS AND LANDSCAPES OF THE GOLD COAST HINTERLAND
Warwick Willmott
Geology and excursions in the Gold Coast and Albert and Beaudesert Shires. Illustrations by Sybil Monteith and Helen Thomson.

Publishing details: Brisbane: Geological Society of Australia, Queensland Division, 1999. Second Edition. Second Printing.
24cm x 17cm. iv, 60 pages, black and white illustrations, maps. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Queensland Heritage Sketchbookview full entry
Reference: Queensland Heritage Sketchbook, by Evan Winkle (illustrator), Janet Hogan (text)
Publishing details: Sydney: Weldon Publishing, 1988.
First Edition.

26cm x 24cm. 95 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated glossy papered boards, illustrated jacket.
Ref: 1000
Winkle Evanview full entry
Reference: see Queensland Heritage Sketchbook, by Evan Winkle (illustrator), Janet Hogan (text)
Publishing details: Sydney: Weldon Publishing, 1988.
First Edition.

26cm x 24cm. 95 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated glossy papered boards, illustrated jacket.
Abdullah Abdulview full entry
Reference: see Look Magaxine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p17-19 choice of works by 4 selected artsts - Richard Bell, Hugh Ramsay, Juan Davila, Tracey Moffatt
Rae Judeview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p31-4 article on Jude Rae, Tom Carment, Robert Malherbe
Carment Tomview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p31-4 article on Jude Rae, Tom Carment, Robert Malherbe
Malherbe Robertview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p31-4 article on Jude Rae, Tom Carment, Robert Malherbe
Swann Heather Bview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p51-5 article by Gabriella Goslovich
Beckett Clarice new acquisition Bay Road c1932view full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p65
Olsen John new acquisition portrait of Brett Whiteleyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p66-7
Whiteley Brett portrait by John Olsen new acquisition view full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine AGNSW, Members magazine, April May, 2023, p66-7
Bateman Edward la Trobeview full entry
Reference: For Bateman, who worked in Australia until 1867, see e.g. Kerr Dictionary (1992), pp.51-52 (entry by Daniel Thomas). In 1861, he designed the floral “initials and finals” included in the Melbourne Public Library’s catalogue, and was also responsible for the Greek Revival decorations in Queen’s Hall (recently restored): refer SLV catalogue for details of these and other drawings by Bateman, including a series of sketches of La Trobe’s cottage at Jolimont (all apparently acquired after 1904/5) 
Publishing details: beforefelton.com/artists/
Woolner Thomasview full entry
Reference: For Woolner, especially his Australian work, see http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/woolner-thomas-4887 (by Marjorie Tipping; ADB vol.6, 1976); Radford, Early Australian Sculpture (1976), text (unpaginated) and cat.nos.66-68;  see also Bénézit 14, p.1075. Caroline Clemente is currently engaged on detailed research on Woolner’s Australian years, under the auspices of the SLV; see also her article, “Thomas Woolner’s Portrait Medallion of C.J.La Trobe,” The La Trobe Journal 80 (Spring 2007), pp.52-64, citing further references
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: article by Karl Quinn in Sydney Morning Herald 7.4.23 announcing death of Bruce Petty
Publishing details: [a copy inserted in Women and Men by Bruce Petty] in Scheding Library
Bateman Edward la Trobeview full entry
Reference: see Leader (Melbourne, Vic. : 1862 - 1918, 1935)Sat 14 Nov 1903
Page 42 THE EARLIEST SCULPTOR IN VICTORIA. Report mainly on Thomas Woolner but includes references to Edward la trobe Bateman and Bernhard Smith
Smith Bernhardview full entry
Reference: see Leader (Melbourne, Vic. : 1862 - 1918, 1935)Sat 14 Nov 1903
Page 42 THE EARLIEST SCULPTOR IN VICTORIA. Report mainly on Thomas Woolner but includes references to Edward la trobe Bateman and Bernhard Smith
Woolner Thomasview full entry
Reference: see Leader (Melbourne, Vic. : 1862 - 1918, 1935)Sat 14 Nov 1903
Page 42 THE EARLIEST SCULPTOR IN VICTORIA. Report mainly on Thomas Woolner but includes references to Edward la trobe Bateman and Bernhard Smith
Napoleon, the Empress & the artistview full entry
Reference: Napoleon, the Empress & the artist - The Story of Napoleon, Josephine's Garden at Malmaison, Redouté & the Australian Plants, by Jill Duchess of Hamilton. [Napoleon and science? Napoleon the intellectual? Napoleon with his boot pushing a spade? Napoleon the artistic gardener in his own vegetable patch? Napoleon and Australia? Josephine and Australia? Josephine a grande dame of botany. a patron of botanical art? These are concepts seldom associated. But Jill, Duchess of Hamilton, while searching for the colour plates of the Australian flora painted by Pierre Joseph Redouté, found an unexplored side of Napoleonic France]
Publishing details: Published by Kangaroo Press, 1998
244 pages, illus., many coloured, bibliography and index.
McDiven Bryant 1923-2015 view full entry
Reference: SEE Chiswick Auctions, UK, 18.4.23, LOT 47: BRYANT McDIVEN (AUSTRALIAN 1923-2015)
Untitled landscape
Oil on board
Signed and dated 68 (lower left)
86 x 153 cm
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: Bruce Petty's Megalomedia (a film about the Great Media Puzzle - Australia cinema flyer booklet)


Publishing details: 1980s 4 page booklet flyer
Ref: 1000
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: The Best Of Petty, edited by Ron Smith
Publishing details: London : Horwitz Publications, 1968 
1 v. (unpaged) :
Ref: 1009
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: Petty’s Money Book
Publishing details: Sydney : Collins, 1983 [188] p. : ill. (some col.)
Ref: 1000
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: Global Haywire A short history of planet malfunction
Publishing details: Roadshow Entertainment, DVD 2006
Ref: 1000
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: The Penguin Petty / [by] Bruce Petty
Publishing details: Penguin Books Australia, 1972 
110p. : chiefly ill.
Ref: 1000
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: Bruce Petty's parallel worlds / edited by Russ Radcliffe
Publishing details: Melbourne : High Horse, 2008 
186 p. : ill. (some col.)
Wolseley Johnview full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Olsen John view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Thomas Roverview full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Kngwarreye Emily Kame view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Mitelman Alan view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Mais Hilarie view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Dunn Richard view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Parr Mike view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Williams Caroline view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Brown Lyndell view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
Green Charles curator?view full entry
Reference: see Southern Reflections: Ten contemporary Australian artists- an exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999
Curated by Elizabeth Cross under the auspices of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. An exhibition of Australian art touring northern Europe 1998-1999. Introduction by Barry Pearce.


Publishing details: The Art Gallery of New South Walse, Australia (1998), Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 60, illustrated.
New England Regional Museum: The First Show,view full entry
Reference: New England Regional Museum: The First Show, March 1983, by B. J. F. Wright. Exhibition catalogue for the museum’s first show which included works by Charles Blackman, Margaret Preston, Tom Roberts, Peter Booth, William Dobell, Arthur Streeton, Jeffrey Smart, Rupert Bunny, Nora Heysen, and Norman Lindsay, among others.

Publishing details: Armidale: New England Regional Museum, 1983. [20] pages. Pictorial saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1000
NERAM The First Showview full entry
Reference: see New England Regional Museum: The First Show, March 1983, by B. J. F. Wright. Exhibition catalogue for the museum’s first show which included works by Charles Blackman, Margaret Preston, Tom Roberts, Peter Booth, William Dobell, Arthur Streeton, Jeffrey Smart, Rupert Bunny, Nora Heysen, and Norman Lindsay, among others.

Publishing details: Armidale: New England Regional Museum, 1983. [20] pages. Pictorial saddle-stapled wrappers.

Wright Michael Jview full entry
Reference: Theodore Bruce auction, Sydney: The Eclectic Collection of Balmain Artist Michael J Wright, April 23, 2023. The Eclectic Collection of Balmain Artist Michael J Wright Auction will be conducted via our Timed Bid Auction Format. THIS IS AN ON-SITE AUCTION. Buyers Premium: Theodore Bruce Website 25% (including GST) Invaluable Website 28% (including GST) VIEWING Viewing will be held in on-site in Balmain on Saturday 22 April 12pm-4pm by appointment only Over 100 works by the artist.
Russell John Peter portrait of Dadoneview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 30, JOHN PETER RUSSELL 
(1858 - 1930) 
DADONE, c.1900 
oil on canvas 
32.0 x 25.5 cm 
signed with initials and inscribed with title upper right: Dadone / J.R / FeciT 

PROVENANCE 
The artist 
Thence by descent 
Jeanne Jouve, the artist’s eldest child and only daughter 
Private collection, a gift from the above in 1948 
Private collection, Paris, purchased in 2000 
Sotheby's, Melbourne, 19 September 2005, lot 10 
The Reg Grundy AC OBE and Joy Chambers-Grundy Collection (label attached verso) 
Important Australian Art from the Collection of Red Grundy AC OBE and Joy Chambers-Grundy, Bonhams, Sydney, 26 June 2013, lot 72 
Private collection, Melbourne 

ESSAY 
John Peter Russell holds a unique place in Australian art history for his close association with avant-garde circles in 1880s Paris and his firsthand acquaintance with masters of European Impressionism and Post-Impressionism. As a student at Fernand Cormon’s atelier in Paris in the mid-1880s, Russell worked alongside Émile Bernard, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and later, Vincent van Gogh, with whom he established an enduring friendship.1 On a summer break from Paris in 1886, Russell spent several months on Belle-Île, one of a group of small islands off the coast of Brittany. It was here that he met and befriended Claude Monet who he saw working en plein air, famously introducing himself by asking if Monet was indeed ‘the Prince of the Impressionists’. Inevitably flattered, Monet, who was eighteen years Russell’s senior, took a liking to the young Australian and dined with him and his beautiful wife-to-be, enjoying their hospitality and company during his stay on the island. Uncharacteristically, Monet also allowed Russell to watch him work and on occasion, to paint alongside him, experiences that provided an extraordinary insight into the techniques and working method of one of the founders of the Impressionist movement. The influence on Russell was significant and the paintings he made in Italy and Sicily only a few months later show him working in a new style, creating compositions that are made up of strokes of pure high-keyed colour.2   

Captivated by the rugged beauty of Belle-Île and attuned to the possibilities the environment presented for the development of his art, Russell – whose inherited wealth meant he didn’t have to find paid employment – bought land overlooking the inlet of Goulphar in 1887. Writing to Tom Roberts, he said, ‘I am about to build a house in France. Settle down for some five years. Get some work done. It will be in some out of the way corner as much as a desert as possible.’3 Living there permanently until 1909, Russell developed an intimate knowledge of the island’s geography, both from the land and the sea, and this informed many of his best known paintings such as Port-Goulphar, Belle-Île, 1887 (Art Gallery of New South Wales) and Rough Sea, Belle-Île, 1900 (National Gallery of Victoria), which capture the distinctive light, changing colours and atmospheric conditions of his island home. 

Russell was also a talented painter of portraits and just as his images of the Belle-Île landscape describe areas he knew intimately, so too, the subjects of his portraits are typically people with whom he had a close relationship. His great friend, van Gogh, is the subject of a fine 1886 portrait which is in the collection of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. Russell’s wife, Marianna – an Italian beauty who had modelled for the sculptor, Rodin – was the subject of numerous works. Her mother also sat for Russell and this intimately-scaled profile portrait depicts her father, Pasquale Mattioco – the colloquial Italian term ‘Dadone’ acknowledging his status as a senior male relative. The artist’s respect for his subject is clear and, as well as rendering the subject’s physical appearance, the portrait speaks to the wisdom and experience of a long life. With an emphasis on shades of blue, with white and grey highlights, the painting recalls Russell’s seascapes, and the image is built up in a series of energetic and assured brush strokes which reflect what Russell scholar, Ann Galbally, described as the artist’s distinctive ‘intensity of vision.’4 

1. Although Russell did not see van Gogh again after he departed for Arles in the south of France in early 1888, their friendship continued via an extensive correspondence. See Galbally, A., 
A Remarkable Friendship: Vincent van Gogh and John Peter Russell 
, The Miegunyah Press, Carlton, 2008 
2. Taylor, E., ‘John Russell and friends: Roberts, Monet, van Gogh, Matisse, Rodin’, Australian Impressionists in France, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2013, p. 60 
3. Russell to Tom Roberts, 5 October 1887 quoted in Tunnicliffe, W., (ed.), John Russell: Australia’s French Impressionist, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2018, p. 193 
4. Galbally, op. cit., p. 15 

KIRSTY GRANT
Hinder Margel 2 worksview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lots 1 and 2, MARGEL HINDER 
(1906 - 1995) 
WOMAN, ALSO KNOWN AS WOMAN CARRYING BASKET, 1938 
New Guinea wood 
50.0 x 15.0 x 17.0 cm 

PROVENANCE 
Robert Klippel, Sydney, acquired directly from the artist 
Private collection, Sydney 

EXHIBITED 
Frank and Margel Hinder Retrospective, Newcastle City Art Gallery, New South Wales, 30 August – 30 September 1973, cat. 2 
Five Decades: Frank Hinder, Paintings, Margel Hinder, Sculptures, Gallery A, Sydney, 7 – 28 June 1980, cat. 1 (as ‘Woman Carrying Basket’) 
Margel Hinder: Modern in Motion, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 30 January – 2 May 2021 and Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 30 June – 10 October 2021, cat. 5 

LITERATURE 
Cornford, I., The Sculpture of Margel Hinder, Phillip Matthews Book Publishers, Sydney, 2013, p. 40 (as ‘Woman Carrying Basket’) 
Harding, L., and Mimmocchi, D., (ed.), Margel Hinder: Modern in Motion, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney and Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 2021, pp. 116 (illus.), 178 

ESSAY 
American-born sculptor Margel Hinder cut a unique figure in the modern art scene of Sydney when she arrived on the S. S. City of Rayville, beside her husband Frank, in July 1934. Having had a privileged middle-class upbringing particularly supportive of artistic pursuits, the young Hinder was devotee of the modernist and theosophic theories of Vitalism and Dynamic Symmetry, encountered through the teachings of Howard Giles and Emil Bisttram. Both Margel and Frank followed Bisttram to Taos, New Mexico, to participate in his experimental summer school in 1933. This sojourn proved to be formative experiences for both artists, informing their adoption of geometric abstraction and introducing them to the revolutionary social realism of the Mexican New Order (Bisttram having studied mural painting alongside Diego Riviera). Applying these concepts to wood carvings upon her return to Australia, Hinder demonstrates a strong influence of these artists, whose teachings she shared keenly with her new artist friends. 

Although Hinder had been disappointed by Australia’s retrograde notions of modern art and continuously fought against the ‘little understanding of, or desire for the three-dimensional’,1, by the close of the 1930s, she encountered like-minded internationally engaged artists in the George Street studio of the Crowley-Fizelle School. Margo and Gerald Lewers in particular, provided tutelage in carving and deepened Hinder’s awareness of the precept of ‘truth-to-materials’ and ‘purified forms’, as advocated Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth, whom the Lewers had recently met in England.2 

Woman, or Woman Carrying Basket, is a simple character study of a woman at work, carved directly from a block of New Guinean hardwood. 3 This sculpture belongs to a small group of figurative works, carved in relief panels or in freestanding forms, local tableaux of work and rural lifestyle, inspired by the local Pueblo women of Taos. The Hinders’ fascination with this first nations community was founded on an admiration for their traditional way of life, considered to be an ancient and unadulterated connection to the land and its natural cycles. Hinder carved the first of these works, Taos Women, during her long boat journey back to Australia, quickly followed by a freestanding figure, Pueblo Indian. Characterized by simplified blocky forms, the governing geometry of these sculptures attempted to convey the movements and inner metaphysical life forces of her subjects. 

Woman is a later harmonious and resolved synthesis of these diverse artistic and philosophical theories from Taos. Carrying a basket on her head in the same pose that can be seen in both Taos Women and Pueblo Indian, the heavy rounded forms of Woman are elegantly carved, with forms blending imperceptibly in the smooth surface. Hinder’s anonymous woman is proud, her striding stance determined in its progress, the rhythmic folds of her skirt reinforcing the directing lines of her upheld arm. Romanticizing manual labour and social enterprise with an archetypal and easily legible figurative form, Woman becomes a robust and idealized example of physical vitality. 

In the face of institutional disdain for sculpture, and systemic sexism, Margel Hinder became an extraordinarily successful artist. At a time where modelling was the preferred form of sculpture, Hinder created opportunities for herself to be on the forefront of progressive practice, becoming ‘an excellent example of a modern woman who can successfully combine a career and the running of a home’.4 

1. Hinder, M., ‘A Personal view. 1930 – 1940’, Australian Women Artists. One Hundred Year 1840 – 1940, Melbourne University Union, Melbourne, 1975, p. 19 
2. Harding, L., and Mimmocchi, D., (ed.), Margel Hinder: Modern in Motion, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney and Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 2021, p. 39 
3. ‘“the harder the wood the more pleasure there is in the work”. Most of the wood Mrs. Hinder uses is sent from a plantation in New Guinea’, Page, M., ‘She Sculptures in Wood’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 13 November 1939, p. 2 
4. Page, M., ibid 

and
lot 2
MARGEL HINDER 
(1906 - 1995) 
MAQUETTE (ADELAIDE TELECOMMUNICATIONS BUILDING), 1971 
beaten copper and copper pipe on wooden base 
120.0 x 65.0 x 82.0 cm 

PROVENANCE 
James Baker, Brisbane 
The James Baker Collection, Christie’s, Brisbane, 2 March 1996, lot 386 
William (Bill) Burge, Sydney 
The W. R. Burge Collection, Christie’s, Sydney, 6 March 2006, lot 40 (as ‘Untitled’) 
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above 

EXHIBITED 
Marland House Sculpture Competition, Age Gallery, Melbourne, June – July 1971, cat. 29 
Frank and Margel Hinder 1930 – 1980, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 12 June – 13 July 1980 

LITERATURE 
Lynn, E., ‘Big business peps up the sculptors’, The Bulletin, Sydney, vol. 93, no. 4761, 26 June 1971, p. 50 
Free, R., Frank and Margel Hinder 1930 – 1980, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1980, cat. M80, pp. 61, 71 (illus., as ‘Marland House Sculpture Competition’) 
Cornford, I., The Sculpture of Margel Hinder, Phillip Matthews Book Publishers, Sydney, 2013, pp. 104, 105 (illus.), 107 

RELATED WORK 
Sketch for ‘Three Form Revolve – Form 1’, 1969, copper shim, brass, solder, in the collection of the Bathurst Regional Gallery, New South Wales 
Untitled (Free Standing Sculpture), 1972 - 1973, Lyten steel and stainless-steel tubing, Telecommunications Building, Adelaide 

ESSAY 
By the 1970s, Margel Hinder had an established reputation as a modernist sculptor and like Barbara Hepworth, now invested her considerable talent in public sculpture. Both artists were conceptually ahead of their peers and confident of the role of the contemporary artist in the post-war reconstruction boom, with Hinder becoming one of the few women to create site-specific industrially fabricated sculpture in Australia. Hinder entered her soldered maquettes into numerous sculpture competitions for architectural, monumental and public art, winning those leading to the creation of sculptures for the Reserve Bank, Sydney; the Civic Park Fountain in Newcastle; and in Woden Town Square, Canberra. Thus Hinder’s artworks, at the height of their innovation and impact, were experienced and enjoyed directly by everyday Australians, their dynamic and futuristic forms complementing the roaring progress of urban and technological development. 

Working within the framework of Dynamic Symmetry, Hinder’s conception of sculpture was deeply rooted in three-dimensionality. This copper maquette relates to a public sculpture commissioned for the forecourt of the Waymouth Street Adelaide Telecommunications exchange building.1 A complex ovoid, its open form is dynamic with implied centrifugal motion. Ringed like a planet, the criss-crossing and acentric ribs of this ‘revolve’ presented a pleasing expression of interconnected, encircling energies. Found to be an apt metaphor for global telecommunication, this sculpture fortuitously appealed to the architect of a $6M building project, facilitating its large-scale commission and installation in 1972. 

In 1947, Frank and Margel purchased Vision in Motion, a landmark publication on International Constructivism written by avant-garde Russian émigré artist Naum Gabo. Gabo’s radical incorporation of implied movement into modern sculpture informed Hinder’s of acentric stringed forms and a ‘space-age’ constructivist aesthetic. As Renée Free noted in 1980, Hinder followed Gabo’s preference for transparency to convey movement without actual motion.2 

The linear forms of this maquette elegantly enclose space, their transparency creating an effect of lightness and free flowing motion apparently independent of gravity. Much larger than Hinder’s previous maquettes, this sculpture’s scale is monumental in its own right, encouraging immersive attention to its flow of internal oval forms, the looping ribbons revolving as the viewer walks around the work. This monumentality prompted Elwyn Lynn to remark the work ‘seemed too demanding of space and perhaps needed isolation like a Henry Moore on the hillside.’3 

This Adelaide Telecommunications maquette is realised in plate and tubed copper, providing a harmonious textured grey-green patina quite distinct from the gleaming contrast of polished stainless-steel and rusted Lyten steel in its monumental counterpart. This maquette escaped the need for additional stabilising struts at the base, balancing instead on crossed wires. Being viewed completely in the round, this maquette can be enjoyed as Hinder intended, with internal and external graduated ovals seizing light and shadow, concavities and tunnels introducing inner lightness and a hint of the transcendental. 

1. Although initial entered to a sculpture competition in 1971 for Melbourne’s Marland House (won by Ken Reinhard), this Maquette formed the basis of a different commissioned public sculpture, erected in Adelaide in 1972. 
2. Free, R., Frank and Margel Hinder 1930-1980, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1980, p. 54 
3. Lynn, E., ‘Big business peps up the sculptors’, The Bulletin, Sydney, 26 June 1971, p. 50 

LUCIE REEVES-SMITH  
LUCIE REEVES-SMITH 
Klippel Robert no 266A Cynthiaview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 3, ROBERT KLIPPEL 
(1920 - 2001) 
NO. 266A, CYNTHIA, 1970 
brazed steel geometric sections and synthetic polymer paint on original wooden base 
47.0 cm height (including base) 

PROVENANCE 
Mr and Mrs Les Wild, Sydney 
Watters Gallery, Sydney 
Private collection, Sydney 
Estate of the above  

LITERATURE 
Gleeson, J., Robert Klippel, Bay Books, Sydney, 1983, pl. 256, pp. 338, 339 (illus. another example as ‘Opus 266a’), 474 
Edwards, D.,  Robert Klippel: Catalogue Raisonné of Sculpture, (CD ROM), Deborah Edwards and the Trustees of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2002 (illus. CD–ROM Artworks, as ‘no. 266a’) 

RELATED WORK 
No. 266b (Cynthia), 1971, welded steel and paint, 253.0 cm height, private collection, formerly in The W. R. Burge Collection, Sydney 

ESSAY 
Between 1970 and 1971, Sydney sculptor Robert Klippel created a suite of small geometric constructions, each composed of slices of extruded steel pipe, their arrangements handsome in their simplicity and monumental in appearance. With serenity and delicate precision, the filigree geometric pattern of Klippel’s No. 266a teeters improbably on the vertical axis only to billow elegantly at its apex. With an intimate scale, this two-sided freestanding sculpture was first owned by Klippel’s collaborator, the metalsmith Les Wild. Proprietor of Electric Welders, in Rozelle, Wild was already working with the sculptor Tony Coleing to create large metal sculptures and was a pivotal presence in Klippel’s artistic journey at this time. Another small version of 266a, unpainted, was given to the artist’s wife, after whom it was named, while a large example of over 2m, fabricated by Wild, was later installed in the garden of Sydney collector, William Burge, a frequent visitor to the artist’s studio. 

Completed in 1970, a few years after Klippel’s return to Australia from America, No. 266a belongs to a group of small geometric linear works far removed from the baroque and mechanical ‘junk’ sculptures that preceded them. The reduction in scale, use of a new visual vocabulary and different mode of fabrication of this group of sculptures was directly influenced by Klippel’s access to space, materials and his budding relationships with local Australian artists. In 1968, with his new wife, Cynthia Byrne, and their young son Andrew, Klippel purchased a large old house in the harbourside suburb of Birchgrove, hopeful to turn its boathouse into a home studio. Two short years later, with his marriage under pressure, Klippel resorted to purchasing a workshop on Liverpool St, Paddington on the advice of the artist Peter Powditch. 1 It was in this studio that Klippel created this entire suite, including the fourteen geometric constructions that were to be industrially fabricated on large-scale by Wild between 1971 - 1974, including No.266a. 

Presenting a parsimonious counterpoint to the exuberance of previous constructions, Klippel’s small works employed a pared-back visual vocabulary, derived entirely from graduated geometric sections of steel piping. As his biographer James Gleeson noted, Klippel must have envisaged this aesthetic change some years before, having already amassed a large supply of materials and his first attempts in brazed steel demonstrating the confidence of resolved ideas. 2 The process of brazing joined the sections using molten metal, whose low melting point allowed it to fill gaps using capillary action. While, as an intimist, Klippel valued the authenticity of these minute traces of the artist’s hand in small works, this example 266a bears a painted grey-green finish closer in quality to Wild’s industrially perfected versions. 

No. 266a demonstrates the whimsical assertiveness of a master sculptor, exercising his aesthetic judgment in a new format, a culmination of the refined linear and geometric themes that underpinning his earlier constructive works. Relying on intimate human scale and dynamic tension, the open lattice of No. 266a balances on a circular segment anchored on a solid cylindrical base. Confined to a single plane, the dynamism of this sculpture is created solely through the asymmetric relationships between the geometric building blocks. Klippel valued highly the ‘springiness and vitality’ of these small sculptures, their delicate equilibrium and traces of the artist’s hand, concerned that these qualities would disappear in larger copies.3 

No 266a’s chain of unadulterated geometric shapes is improbably stacked, balancing meditatively like river stones, topped by a featherlight cloud of arced segments. Characterised by a curious combination of solemnity and lyrical whimsy, 266a is an elegant object quite unique in Klippel’s oeuvre. 

1. Edwards, D., Robert Klippel, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2002, p.244 
2. Gleeson, J., Robert Klippel, Bay Books, Sydney, 1983, p. 328 
3. Artist’s notebook, 13 February 1973, cited in Gleeson, ibid, p. 330 

LUCIE REEVES-SMITH  

Hirschfeld-Mack Ludwig view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: 5 works including lot 41, LUDWIG HIRSCHFELD-MACK 
(German/Australian, 1893 - 1965) 
COMPOSITION WITH CYLINDERS, c.1922 
tempera on cardboard 
37.5 x 44.5 cm 
signed lower right: L. H. MACK 

PROVENANCE 
The estate of the artist 
Private collection, Italy 

EXHIBITED 
Bauhaus e visioni, Museum of Modern Art, Bolzano, Vienna, 17 March – 28 May 2000; Jewish Museum of the City of Vienna, Austria, 14 June – 22 October 2000 and Jewish Museum Frankfurt, Germany, 13 December 2000 – 22 April 2001, cat. 62 (as ‘Untitled (Composition of planes with Cylinders)’) 

LITERATURE 
Stasny, P., Ludwig Hirschfeld–Mack: Bauhaus e visioni, Hatje Cantz Verlag, Germany, 2000, cat. 62, pp. 69 (illus., as ‘Untitled (Composition of planes with Cylinders)’), 70, 173 

RELATED WORK 
Composition, 1922, watercolour over graphite on off–white wove paper, 21.1 x 25.7 cm, in the collection of Harvard Art Museums, USA 

ESSAY 
Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack’s arrival in Australia aboard the infamous HMT Dunera in 1940 established a direct link between avant-garde European modernism and the development of twentieth century Australian art. An artist and a teacher, he had studied at the Weimar Bauhaus from 1919 until 1925. Founded by architect, Walter Gropius, in 1919, the Bauhaus was a highly influential school whose manifesto proposed a radical challenge: ‘Let us create a new guild of craftsmen, without the class distinctions which raise an arrogant barrier between craftsman and artist. Together let us conceive and create the new building of the future, which can embrace architecture and sculpture and painting in one unity’.1 The idealism and democratic approach that the school represented struck a chord with many following the experience of the First World War, and Hirschfeld-Mack’s first wife, Elenor, recalled, ‘We were all totally fulfilled by the new ideas that surrounded the Bauhaus.’2 

Hirschfeld-Mack began his apprenticeship in the graphic printing workshop, learning various printmaking techniques and mastering the use of the printing press. His interests and creative output at the time however, incorporated a diverse range of activities which mirrored the breadth of Bauhaus teaching. Of particular note during this period, and indeed throughout his life, is Hirschfeld-Mack’s focus on colour and its theory, especially the farbenlichtspiele, or colour-light plays, in which he presented projected light compositions alongside a musical score. Despite his status as a journeyman (which followed the successful completion of an apprenticeship) rather than a master (as teachers were known), he also taught a colour seminar at the Bauhaus in the winter of 1922 – 23, and colour charts he made for these lessons are now held in the Bauhaus Archive, Berlin, as well as the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York.3 

Painted during these years, Composition with Cylinders, c.1922 is characteristic of Hirschfeld-Mack’s Bauhaus abstraction, with an irregular patchwork of geometric shapes in red, blue and white providing the backdrop for a series of vertical cylindrical forms, which are open at each end. Line, form and colour combine to create a dynamic composition, as well as a sense of three-dimensional space in which the cylinders recede and advance in a jostling, rhythmic movement. Texture is often a distinctive feature of Hirschfeld-Mack’s paintings and here, brush strokes remain visible in the smooth surface of the tempera medium and the material qualities of the work are emphasised by a section of the cardboard support being left exposed. A closely related watercolour, which is dated 1922 and assumed to precede the painting, in the collection of Harvard University’s Busch-Reisinger Museum, tells us something about Hirschfeld-Mack’s working method. Although the colour palette is slightly varied – more purple and pink, than blue and red – the arrangement of background forms is very similar and the placement of cylinders is almost identical. While elements of the composition have been refined between the watercolour and the painting, it is evident that the artist’s clarity of intent, as well as a strong visual design were both present and well-formed from the outset. 

1. Schwarzbauer, R. with Bell, C., Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack: More Than a Bauhaus Artist, HistorySmiths, Melbourne, 2021, pp. 36 – 37 
2. Ibid., p.36 
3. Colour charts are also held in the collection of the Ian Potter Museum of Art, University of Melbourne, and the Busch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard University, see ibid., p. 49 

KIRSTY GRANT  

Badham Herbertview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 47, HERBERT BADHAM 
(1899 - 1961) 
NUDE MODEL, 1934 
oil on canvas on board 
39.5 x 34.0 cm 
signed and dated lower left: H. BADHAM ‘34 

PROVENANCE 
Private collection 
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 8 November 1989, lot 44 (as ‘The Model’) 
Private collection 
Leonard Joel, Melbourne, 31 July 1990, lot 246 (as ‘The Striped Cloth’) 
Private collection, Melbourne 
Thence by descent 
Private collection, Melbourne 

EXHIBITED 
probably:  Herbert Badham, Grosvenor Galleries, Sydney, May 1939, cat. 12 (as ‘Nude Study’) 

LITERATURE 
Ashton, H., ‘Herbert Badham. Interesting Painter’,  Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 25 May 1939, p. 4 (as ‘Nude Study’) 

ESSAY 
It seems more than likely that this painting is the work first exhibited as Nude Study, 1934 in Herbert Badham’s solo exhibition held in 1939 at Sydney’s Grosvenor Gallery. The exhibition was opened by Sir Marcus Clark and reviewed by the critic Howard Ashton who, after commenting on some of Badham’s compositions being deliberately overcrowded with detail, turns to Nude Model ‘as a work which shows what the artist can do when he is content to express things more simply and broadly.’1 

Indeed, compared to works such as Travellers, 1933 or Hyde Park, 1933 which contain a wealth of detail as Badham strives to capture the complexity of everyday life, Nude Model exhibits a quiet classicism indicative of the training he had received at the Julian Ashton Art School. Under the tutelage George Lambert, Henry Gibbons and Julian Ashton, Badham, along with fellow students William Dobell, Douglas Dundas, Charles Meere and Rah Fizelle, had been encouraged to place a great emphasis on drawing which was seen as the foundation of all art while figure studies and landscape were the dominant subject matter. 

Badham was born in Watsons Bay, Sydney in 1899 and upon completing his schooling, worked briefly as a clerk before signing up to the Royal Australian Navy in 1917. As a result, it was not until 1921 that he was able pursue his studies at the Julian Ashton Art School In 1932 where notably, just two years before he painted Nude Model, he was runner up to fellow student William Dobell for the prestigious New South Wales Travelling Scholarship. 

Although Nude Model is a quietly classical composition, in typical Badham style, it is rich in information about the period in which it was painted. He has positioned his classically-posed model on a window seat beneath a narrow band of stained-glass casement windows which were typical of the 1920s bungalow. This referenced the Arts and Crafts movement and was the most common form of housing in the Sydney suburb of Vaucluse in the 1930s.2 Badham also records their exteriors in works such as The Travellers and South Head, 1935. It would seem highly possible that this is the artist’s own home, as he was living in the area at this time. His interest in geometry and perspective which was to become a major feature of his work during the fifties is also beginning to surface here, as the angle of the model’s legs echoes the angle of the abstract shapes in the stained-glass window. 

The model’s identity has yet to be established but it appears to be the same person as portrayed in the work The New Scarf, also from 1934. Another unifying factor for works of this period is Badham’s inclusion of fabric. Here he uses the striped cloth and coloured cushion against the abstracted window pattern, while in Breakfast Piece, 1936 (Art Gallery of New South Wales), the play of blue and white cloth, crockery and clothing creates a highly active surface, as does the art deco pattern of the women’s hats and men’s blazers in The Travellers. Apart from their competence, these early works by Badham are important in that they signify a break away from post-Heidelberg pastoral landscapes and record an interest in the immediate world of everyday Sydney. 

1. Ashton, H., ‘Herbert Badham. Interesting Painter’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 25 May 1939, p. 4 
2. See Raworth, B., Our Inter-war Houses: How to Recognise, Restore and Extend Houses of the 1920s and 1930s, National Trust of Australia (Victoria), Melbourne, 1991 

CHRISTINE FRANCE 

Martens Conrad Govett’s Leapview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 66, CONRAD MARTENS 
(1801 - 1878) 
GOVETTS LEAP, 1876 
watercolour and gouache on paper 
44.5 x 64.5 cm 
signed and dated lower left: C. Martens. / 1876 

PROVENANCE 
William Busby Esq., New South Wales, acquired directly from the artist, 28 July 1876 
Thence by descent 
Private collection, New South Wales 
Thence by descent 
Private collection, New South Wales 

LITERATURE 
Conrad Martens Account Book, 1856 – 1878, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney (as ‘Govets [sic.] Leap Wm. Busby £21.0.0’) 
de Vries–Evans, S., Conrad Martens on the Beagle and in Australia, Pandanus Press, Brisbane, 1993, pp. 196, 202, and in supplement p. 31 (as ‘Govett’s Leap’) 
Ellis, E., Conrad Martens, Life & Art, State Library of New South Wales Press, Sydney, 1994, p. 187 (as ‘Govet[t]s Leap’) 

RELATED WORK 
Govett's Leap, showing Mount King George. 1874, pencil on paper, 28.5 x 46.0 cm, inscribed with date and title lower left: 'Govets [sic] Leap December 16. 1874’ and upper centre: 'N.E. Mt King George' in Conrad Martens Sketchbook, Volume 02: Conrad Martens sketches from the Blue Mountains, Lithgow and Capertee, 1873–76, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, accession number: ZPXD 307 Vol. 2, f.6 
Govett's Leap, looking south east. 1874, pencil on paper, 28.5 x 46.0 cm, inscribed with date and title lower left: 'Govets [sic] Leap December 16. 1874’ and upper right: 'SE', in Conrad Martens Sketchbook, Volume 02: Conrad Martens sketches from the Blue Mountains, Lithgow and Capertee, 1873–76, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, accession number: ZPXD 307 Vol. 2, f.7 

ESSAY 
The most significant landscape artist working in Sydney in the mid nineteenth century, Conrad Martens first witnessed the breathtaking geological formations of the Blue Mountains a few short weeks after his arrival in Sydney on 18 June 1835. He had intended only to visit Australia but soon recognised the rich opportunities for artistic inspiration and a potential market in the burgeoning colony of New South Wales. It was reported on 31 July 1835 that ‘a gentleman of the name of Martin’ was travelling ‘in search of the picturesque’, which he soon found amid the towering sandstone escarpments and the seemingly endless forested valleys of the ranges.1 Martens sold his first view of Govett’s Leap, near Blackheath, as early as 6 August, with similarly impressive natural landscapes forming an important part of his oeuvre from that time.2 

In December 1874, Martens, then in his seventies and having travelled widely throughout eastern NSW and southern Queensland, undertook another trip to the Blue Mountains. This decision may have been prompted by recent public recognition he had received. In 1873 the Trustees of the new National Gallery of Victoria commissioned a watercolour, One of the falls on the Apsley, for their developing collection. The following year a variant view of the spectacular gorges of the Apsley River, in the northern tablelands of NSW, was commissioned for the New South Wales Academy of Art (later Art Gallery of New South Wales).3 The interest provoked by these important acquisitions may have encouraged Martens’ return to the increasingly accessible Blue Mountains for further inspiration and opportunities. A number of paintings resulted, including depictions of the recently opened trainline, which paved the way for the establishment of new townships and ever-expanding tourism.4 

Fortuitously many of Martens’ sketchbooks survive, including that from his 1874 journey which shows his route and demonstrates his superlative draughtsmanship. Two pencil studies of Govetts Leap, drawn on 16 December, are included – one of which was most certainly the source for the watercolour being offered here.5 In the study we see his meticulous attention to the topography of the terrain and strata of the columns, positioning himself so that a damaged gum tree counterbalances the nearest cliff-face, framing the scene and leading the viewer’s eye along the meandering valley. The painting is similar but has been enhanced for picturesque effect. We can no longer see the top of the left cliff and are thus immersed within the dramatic scene. Martens’ use of blues and purples for the shadowed valley enhances the sensation of vast depth, which is further highlighted by the tiny figure in white who provides scale and, by holding carefully to a branch as he peers tentatively over the precipice, encourages an understandable sense of awe in the ‘wild magnificence’ and ‘wonderful natural sublimity’ of the New South Wales escarpments.6 

Marten’s Account book, kept throughout his career, provides invaluable information about his output and his clientele. This watercolour was acquired by William Busby, a pastoralist and parliamentarian, in July 1876 for £21 – it has remained with the family ever since. 

1. ‘Domestic and Miscellaneous Intelligence’, The Australian, 31 July 1835, p. 2 
2. Sold to J. Macarthur. Martens painted oils and watercolours of the same scene in 1837, 1839 and 1847. 
3. One of the falls on the Apsley, 1873, watercolour, collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne and Apsley Falls, 1874, watercolour, collection of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney. These were based upon pencil sketches made when Martens visited in 1852. 
4. The trainline first ran as far as Weatherboard in July 1867; see Conrad Martens, Crossing the Blue Mountains, Deutscher and Hackett, Sydney, 12 Sept. 2007, lot. 65 
5. See Related works above. 
6. John Oxley, upon sighting the Apsley Falls; see Oxley, J.,  Journals of Two Expeditions into the Interior of New South Wales, John Murray, London, 1820, pp. 296, 299 

ALISA BUNBURY
Roberts Tom 1901 oil on panelview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 67, 
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 
Alan Greenway, Australia and USA, acquired from the above in 1972 
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
Vauthier Antoine-Charles view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 72, ANTOINE-CHARLES VAUTHIER 
(French, 1790 - 1879) 
ECHIDNA, c.1827 
watercolour, pen and ink on paper 
11.0 x 15.5 cm 
bears inscription on mount lower right: Vauthier 

PROVENANCE 
Marcel Jeanson, Paris 
The Jeanson Collection, Christie’s, London, 19 June 2000, lot 209 
Arader Galleries, New York, 23 April 2022, lot 57 
Private collection, Adelaide 

RELATED WORK 
L’Echidné Australien, Echidna Australis Lefs, engraving by J. F. Cazenave after A.C Vauthier, 10.0 x 16.0 cm, published in Oeuvres complètes de Buffon, Paris, Île-de-France, France, 1837-39, pl. 52, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra 

The National Gallery of Australia also holds another Antoine–Charles Vauthier watercolour of Australian interest, of the thylacine or Tasmanian Tiger. 
  
Antoine-Charles Vauthier’s ‘parent’ echidna watercolour appears in print form in at least three important publications: 
Hyacinthe-Yves-Phillippe-Potentien, Baron de Bougainville,  Journal de la Navigation autour du globe de la Frégate la Thétis et de la Corvette l'Espérance pendant les années 1824, 1825, et 1826, Paris: Arthus Bertrand, Paris, 1827 
Achille Richard,  Histoire Naturelle Générale et Particulière des Mammifères et des Oiseaux Découverts Depuis 1788 Jusqu’à Nos Jours, Badouin Frères, Paris, 1822-44 
René Lesson,  Voyage Autour du Monde Entrepris par Ordre du Gouvernement sur la Corvette La Coquille, P. Pourrat Frères, Paris, 1839 

Williams Fredview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 8, FRED WILLIAMS 
(1927 - 1982) 
PONDS, LYSTERFIELD, 1966 
oil on canvas 
86.0 x 71.0 cm 
signed lower right: Fred Williams. 

PROVENANCE 
Leonard French, Victoria, acquired directly from the artist 
Private collection, Melbourne 
Deutscher and Hackett, Melbourne, 30 November 2011, lot 9 
Private collection, Sydney 
Deutscher and Hackett, Melbourne, 13 June 2018, lot 5 
Private collection, Jakarta 

RELATED WORK 
Ponds, Lysterfield, 1965 – 66, etching and aquatint, in Mollison, J., Fred Williams: Etchings, Rudy Komon Gallery, Sydney, 1968, cat. 225, p. 129 (illus. Fig. 252) 
  
We are grateful to Lyn Williams for her assistance with this catalogue entry. 

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. 

ESSAY 
Fred Williams is rightfully acclaimed as one of Australia's finest artists of the twentieth century. As a landscape painter he has no equal – as attested by Ponds, Lysterfield, 1966, which raises invention and subtlety of vision to a level of singularity that led us to see the Australian landscape with different eyes. As James Gleeson wrote of Williams’ sell-out exhibition of 1966 at Rudy Komon's Gallery in Sydney – ‘It has been clear for some time that Williams was a landscapist of rare distinction, but this exhibition places him in that thinly populated category of painters who have helped to shape the vision a country has of itself.’1 Part of the miracle of Williams’ art is its transformation of the subject, especially its scrubbiness and monotony, into paintings elegant, rich in colour, textural variation and imagination. 

A highlight of the 1966 exhibition, Lysterfield Landscape I, 1965 – 66 entered the collection of Rupert Murdoch. The following year Murdoch would acquire another Lysterfield painting from Williams’ sell-out solo exhibition at Georges Gallery, Melbourne ( Hillside Landscape Lysterfield, 1966 – 67) while  Lysterfield Landscape II, 1967 entered the collection of mining legend Sir Roderick and Lady Carnegie. Williams frequently visited the Lysterfield region from the winter of 1965 onwards. It was not very far from his then home at Upwey and he would continue to paint there over a number of years into the 1970s, capturing the changing light and colours of the seasons. ‘At Lysterfield' as his close friend James Mollison points out, 'he often had to paint from the edge of the road, and tall foreground grasses are the key to many of his Lysterfield paintings.’2 Significantly, the area would inspire Williams to such heights as the magnificent  Triptych Landscape, 1967 – 68 in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra and Yellow Landscape, 1968 – 69 in the collection of the Geelong Art Gallery – the latter of which has been described by McCaughey as ‘the crowning glory of the whole Lysterfield group...’3 
  
With its predominance of cool tones,  Ponds, Lysterfield evokes winter. The scrubby but empty countryside is created by a few impasto strokes of the brush across a smooth field of velvety greys. These expressionist textures also contrast against the balance achieved through the accent on verticals and horizontals, and the classical association they give to the composition. A masterpiece of minimalism, the absence of a horizon line achieves greater harmony, earth and sky are one, supported by the multi-viewpoint and its combination of motifs seen from above and in profile. His art is ‘both intimate and remote’ wrote Elwyn Lynn in  The Bulletin of Williams’ 1966 exhibition’.4 Williams’ remote intimacy is almost Chinese in its mixture of immediate gesture, of spontaneous notation, with contemplation and serenity’, he continued. In  Ponds, Lysterfield the landscape provided Williams with the inspiration for a singular, lyrical essay on the Australian scene in all its casual formality. It is a painting of ineffable beauty. 

1. Gleeson, J., ‘Williams is at His Best’,  Sun, Sydney, 12 October 1966 
2. Mollison, J.,  A Singular Vision: The Art of Fred Williams, Australian National Gallery, Canberra, 1989, p. 100 
3. McCaughey, P.,  Fred Williams, Bay Books, Sydney, 1980, pp. 190-91 
4. Lynn, E., 'Poetic Bushland',  Bulletin, Sydney, 22 October 1966, p. 54 

DAVID THOMAS 

Brack John gymnast imageview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 10
JOHN BRACK 
(1920 - 1999) 
ONE BALANCING GIRL, 1977 
watercolour, pen and ink on paper 
66.0 x 48.0 cm 73.0 x 55.5 cm (sheet) 
signed and dated lower right: John Brack ‘77 
inscribed with title on artist’s label verso: ONE BALANCING GIRL / MRS / BROOKS  

PROVENANCE 
Rudy Komon Gallery, Sydney (label attached verso) 
Pauline Brooks, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1978 
Thence by descent 
Private collection, Sydney 

EXHIBITED 
John Brack, Rudy Komon Gallery, Sydney, 27 May – 21 June 1978, cat. 14 

LITERATURE 
Grishin, S., The Art of John Brack, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1990, vol. II, cat. P238, p. 67 
Lindsay, R., John Brack: A Retrospective Exhibition, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 1987, p. 132 
The First Gallery in Paddington: The Artists and their Work tell the Story of the Rudy Komon Art Gallery, Edwards & Shaw, Surry Hills, New South Wales, 1981, p. 14 (illus. installation) 

ESSAY 
The following excerpts are from Grishin, S., The Art of John Brack, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1990, vol. I, pp. 121 – 22: 

‘The series of gymnasts… thematically presents a logical progression from the ballroom dancing series – the concern with senseless ritual as recreational activities are converted into difficult and testing labour. In its formal language, however, there are signs of a fundamental change. A constant preoccupation in Brack’s art is identity. This can be traced back to a youthful interest in books on physiognomy as well as a later study of Nigel Dennis’  Cards of Identity with its questions of ‘re-identification’ and ‘personal distinctiveness’ ... Up to this point, Brack’s images of still-life objects – scissors, knives and forks – were kept separate from figure compositions, although he did imbue these still life objects with a symbolic existence. In the gymnast series, the stick-like figures start to lose a little of their human identity and increasingly become formal elements that symbolically convey humanity as observed from a distance. The whole setting is reduced to a minimum – the featureless floors and walls of the gymnasium, with a few lines on the bare floorboards marking off the extent of the playing arena. They are very sparse compositions where the figures remain the dominant elements but no longer occupy most of the picture space. 

‘The origins of the gymnast motif probably can be traced back to Brack’s observation of his own children when they were young, although when he commenced the series his youngest daughter was almost twenty and all the gymnasts in the first series are boys. Implied in this association is the artist's concern that angst is being pushed down onto our children: “... a series of pictures dealing with children doing gymnastic exercises, the idea here is related to balancing and falling, but not absolutely collapsing – you know, the world is going on in a series of stumbling lurches, but not absolutely collapsing... it is not the abyss, it is stumbling, but it is not the abyss.”1 

‘The series of gymnasts is largely preoccupied with exploring a number of premeditated ambiguities intended as a visual metaphor commenting on the complexity of life... there is statement about balance and imbalance, movement and stability, unity and discord, implying in the antinomical sense that at the moment of greatest balance there exists the greatest potential for imbalance, that ascent implies descent, and so forth. These slight, almost sexless figures cast against the naked floorboards are involved in part of a ritual as complex as life itself. Having attained for a brief moment a state of triumph, they hover as if frozen on the pinnacle of their success, precariously balancing, tottering on the brink of collapse without actually collapsing.’ 

1.  John Brack on John Brack, Lecture, Australian National University, Canberra, 1977, p. 7
Smart Jeffrey Intersection 1977view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023:
lot 11, JEFFREY SMART 
(1921 - 2013) 
SECOND STUDY FOR HOUSE AT INTERSECTION, 1977 
oil on canvas on composition board 
27.5 x 37.5 cm 
signed lower right: JEFFREY SMART 

PROVENANCE 
Australian Galleries, Melbourne (label attached verso) 
John Sleigh, Victoria 
Savill Galleries, Sydney (label attached verso) 
Private collection, Sydney 

EXHIBITED 
Jeffrey Smart, Australian Galleries, Melbourne, 29 March – 11 April 1978, cat. 19 
On loan to Benalla Art Gallery, Victoria, 1984 – 1990 (exhibited December 1989 – January 1990) 

LITERATURE 
Quartermaine, P., Jeffrey Smart, Gryphon Books, Melbourne, 1983, cat. 708, p. 115 
McDonald, J., Jeffrey Smart / Paintings of the '70s and '80s, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1990, cat. 149, p. 158 

RELATED WORK 
House at Intersection, 1977, oil on canvas, 53.0 x 60.0 cm, private collection, illus. McCulloch, A., ‘The Fantin of the Autostrada’, Melbourne Herald, Melbourne, 6 April 1978 


We are grateful to Stephen Rogers, Archivist for the Estate of Jeffrey Smart, for his assistance with this catalogue entry. 

ESSAY 
Few paintings better exemplify Jeffrey Smart’s pictorial intelligence and wit than this image of a pristine traffic intersection before a double-storey modern townhouse. There is no mistaking we are in Italy, on the outskirts of a town or city, and it is late afternoon on an idyllic summer’s day. The artist even alludes to a theme used by painters who evoked the melancholy Italian verse of the poet Shelley: this is a moonrise picture.1 
  
Smart had been settled near Arezzo for seven years when he produced this painting. Familiarity with the area saw him directing attention upon otherwise unremarkable motifs passed daily in his car: traffic signs, bus stops, overpasses, apartment blocks. For him they represented a sort of mute theatrical cast, objects he might deploy in different combinations across pictures. The creative challenge in working this way was to develop a striking design, hitting upon a visual drama that might serve as a source of endless fascination. 
  
The solitary townhouse in this study is an invention. There was no small building precariously sited on a traffic island. Instead the artist devised it from architectural drawings in his sketch books, then finished his paint with an orange hue and shadows to convey illumination from a setting summer sun. The accompanying road markings—which feature in several 1970s paintings—are adapted from the Arezzo turnoff on the A1 motorway from Rome to Florence. The artist used variants of this configuration to display his mastery of geometry, always having one edge curve gracefully upward. Optically he also used turnoff markings to lead the viewer’s eye through the centre of his compositions, while also stabilising an overall design. The remaining elements in this study are five signs and a very distant building. Smart positions them evenly along his horizon line, using colour and size to highlight the ‘No Entry’ traffic sign on the left of centre. With it Smart uses the white bar against red to echo the horizon behind, while he has the sign’s circular shape also rhyme visually with the adjacent ascending moon, an identically sized blue disc in the serene sky. 
  
The artist graded this particular work as a ‘second’ study. Smart’s initial studies—some of them pencil drawings, others small oil sketches—will employ one or more motifs he intended to use in a picture. But they can show him grasping for a definitive composition. Props are still being moved around his stage, the backdrop is undecided, lighting is yet to be confirmed. Then comes Smart’s so-called ‘second’ study. Technically it might be more than the second variant on a theme, but this tasty piece sees him cement the picture’s design. It amounts to the dress rehearsal. Objects are placed and posed like actors with, apart from a few details, the visual elements seen in their final settings. So, as visual summations of a major composition, his ‘second’ studies are hardly to be classed as lesser pictures. Indeed, as this Second Study for House at Intersection, 1977 shows, certain studies by Jeffrey Smart amount to minor masterpieces. 
  
1. Smart would quote snatches of Shelley’s verse in conversation, sometimes explaining how Italy had inspired particular lines. 
  
DR CHRISTOPHER HEATHCOTE
Drysdale Russell Children dancing 1950view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 12
RUSSELL DRYSDALE 
(1912 - 1981) 
CHILDREN DANCING, 1950 
oil on canvas 
66.0 x 102.0 cm 
signed lower right: Russell Drysdale 
inscribed with title verso: 'CHILDREN DANCING' / RUSSELL DRYSDALE / c/o MACQUARIE GALLERIES, / 19 BLIGH ST / SYDNEY 

PROVENANCE 
Macquarie Galleries, Sydney (partial label attached verso) 
Mervyn Horton, Sydney 
The Estate of Mervyn Horton, Sydney 
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne 
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above in November 1983 

EXHIBITED 
Russell Drysdale, The Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, 9 – 21 August 1950, cat. 10 
Russell Drysdale, The Leicester Galleries, London, 30 November – 23 December 1950, cat. 16 
First Loan Exhibition: Contemporary Australian paintings selected from private collections in Sydney, Art Gallery Society of New South Wales, Sydney, 28 September – 19 October 1955, cat. 21 (as ‘Dancing Children’) 
Contemporary Australian Paintings: Pacific Loan Exhibition, on board Orient Line S.S. Orcades, Sydney, 2 October 1956; Auckland, 8 October 1956; Honolulu, 16 October 1956; Vancouver, 22 October 1956; San Francisco, 25 October 1956; National Art Gallery, Sydney, November 1956, cat. 22 (label attached verso, as ‘Dancing Children’)  
Famous Paintings from Australian Homes, David Jones Art Gallery, Sydney, 14 – 24 May 1957, cat. 36 (as ‘The Children’) 
Contemporary Australian Art, Auckland City Art Gallery, Auckland, May 1960, cat. 18 (label attached verso) 
Russell Drysdale Retrospective 1937 – 1960, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 5 October – 6 November 1960, cat. 66 (label attached verso, as ‘Children Dancing, No. 2’) 
On long term loan to the Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 2005 – 2023 

LITERATURE 
Gleeson, J., ‘Drysdale reveals the ‘gold of art’’, The Sun, Sydney, 9 August 1950, p. 30 
McKie, R., ‘Drysdale takes Australia to London’, The Daily Telegraph, Sydney, 12 October 1950, p. 8 (as ‘Dancing Children’) 
‘Sundry Shows: Russell Drysdale’, The Bulletin, Sydney, vol. 71, no. 3679, 16 August 1950, p. 23 
‘Drysdale Paintings’, The Bulletin, Sydney, vol. 72, no. 3729, 1 August 1951, p. 2 (as ‘The Dancing Children’) 
Hamilton, G., Summer Glare, Angus and Robertson, London, 1960, illus. front cover 
Haefliger, P., Russell Drysdale Retrospective 1937 – 1960, Ure Smith, Sydney, 1960, cat. 66, p. 58 (as ‘Children Dancing, No. 2’) 
‘Sundry Shows: Russell Drysdale’, The Bulletin, Sydney, 12 October 1960, vol. 81, no. 4209, p. 23 (as ‘Children Dancing in the Desert’) 
Dutton, G., Russell Drysdale, Thames and Hudson, London, 1964, pl. 66 (illus., as ‘Children Dancing, No. 2’), p. 188 
Dutton, G., Russell Drysdale, Thames and Hudson, London, 1969, pl. 65, pp. 88, 91 (illus., as ‘Children Dancing, No. 2’), 204 
Pringle, J., Russell Drysdale’s Australia, Sydney Ure Smith, Sydney, 1974, p. 1 (illus., as ‘Children Dancing, No. 2’) 
Thomas, D., 'The Mervyn Horton collection', Art and Australia, Fine Arts Press, Sydney, Spring 1983, pp. 78 (illus., as ‘Children Dancing, No. 2’), 79 

ESSAY 
Russell Drysdale’s paintings of Australia and its inhabitants helped define our national identity, capturing the essence of the country and the character of its people. When his now iconic depictions of rural Australia first appeared in the early 1940s however, there was no artistic precedent for the imagery of a harsh and unyielding landscape populated by stoic, resilient people. Representing a decisive break from the romantic pastoral imagery of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Drysdale’s vision focussed on the experience of outback and country life, infusing elements of Surrealism and Expressionism into his realistic approach, and making a profound contribution to the visual representation of Australian life. One of the best-known artists of his generation, Drysdale’s art is on permanent display in major galleries throughout the country and he remains a household name. 

His path to a career as an artist was more coincidence than the result of focussed planning. Recovering from eye surgery in 1932, he passed the time by drawing. Impressed by what he saw, Drysdale’s doctor, Julian Smith – ‘that strange and brilliant mixture of surgeon, artist and photographer’1 – showed his work to Daryl Lindsay. A successful painter, member of the famed artistic family, and later director of the National Gallery of Victoria, Lindsay recalled that Drysdale’s work ‘showed a curious sensitivity and a sharp observation.’2 Born into a family with extensive farming interests – including Boxwood Park in the Riverina district – the young Drysdale ‘liked Lindsay because he had had the same sort of life that I had led… He had been a jackeroo [sic.] and a station manager and we could talk about horses and sheep.’3 Although Drysdale had always imagined a life on the land, this attention from respected artworld figures prompted him to consider a creative career and a subsequent introduction to George Bell, the influential modern artist and teacher, sealed his fate. 

Drysdale enrolled at the Shore–Bell School in Melbourne in 1935 after extended travel in England and Europe. Having seen the work of the Impressionists and modern artists there for the first time, he was fuelled with the desire to paint, later saying, ‘I… got to like these things tremendously and I wanted to do it… quite suddenly they had a meaning which they never had in books.’4 He absorbed Bell’s teaching, which emphasised the importance of imagination and encouraged individual expression, as well as developing a sound technical knowledge of the materials and processes of his craft. Bell also instilled in his students the importance of drawing, believing that its practice ‘is as essential to an artist as practising scales to a pianist.’5 Drysdale’s first solo exhibition at Riddell Galleries, Melbourne in 1938 included The Rabbiter and his Family, 1938 (National Gallery of Australia) and Monday Morning, 1938 – purchased by his friend Maie Casey, who sold it a few years later to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York – and the critical response was overwhelmingly positive. Writing in the Melbourne Herald, Basil Burdett proclaimed, ‘I have seldom seen a more promising exhibition by a young painter anywhere.’6 

During a trip to Australia in 1949, renowned British art historian Kenneth Clark visited Drysdale’s studio and bought The Councillor’s House, 1948 – 49 – a painting based on the artist’s recent trip to Hill End – for his personal collection. Early the following year Clark wrote to Drysdale advising that Leicester Galleries in London wanted to present a major solo exhibition of recent paintings. While a June 1950 date was suggested, he did not have enough work ready to show, and the exhibition was scheduled for December that year. Inspired by the prospect of an exhibition at such a respected London gallery – where artists including Matisse and Picasso had also had their first London solo shows – Drysdale worked at a solid pace, but he was also excited by recent travels through Queensland which had presented him with a wide range of new subject-matter. Fourteen of the paintings exhibited in London were finished by August – including Emus in a landscape, 1950 (National Gallery of Australia) and Broken Mountain, 1950 (National Gallery of Victoria) – when they were shown at Macquarie Galleries in Sydney prior to being packed and shipped.7 Children Dancing, 1950 was among this group of paintings and it was the subject of considerable positive commentary from the local critics. The Daily Telegraph writer described it eloquently as ‘a rare, beautiful, and tragic canvas, in which two children dance against an empty landscape, not to music, but to the silence of their red and rainless outback world.’8 James Gleeson regarded the greatest works among the ‘rich and exciting’ presentation as those which depicted figures in the landscape, and highlighted Children Dancing among this group. Summing up the exhibition, he wrote: 

‘These pictures have the impact of a profound emotional experience, yet every element in them is controlled by a clear and watchful intelligence that rigorously suppresses any hint of emotionalism. No other artist, with the possible exception of Sidney Nolan, has succeeded in capturing so much of the essence of inland Australia, yet these landscapes have been constructed with quite as much respect for the verities of classical art as one would find in a Poussin.’9 

Children Dancing follows a closely related, smaller work which was painted the previous year.10 The earlier image depicts two young girls dancing barefoot, with arms raised, in a flat and featureless desert landscape. Space is condensed in this picture, the figures are close to the picture plane, and the viewer feels part of an intimate scene. In contrast, the pictorial space in the current work is vast, with low-lying hills just visible on the distant horizon. Tall, spindly trees on the left, painted with the utmost delicacy, are balanced by a windmill on the far right, and the strong verticality of these elements – such ubiquitous features of the Australian outback – in turn echoes the figures of the dancing children. Drysdale describes the dry, dusty earth with a palette of ochre, dark red and brown. The sky is immense and luminous, palest blue and green above the horizon and along the top of the painting, is a band of orange and pink which speaks to the heat of the day, as well as signalling that there is more to come. While the landscape of this painting is tough and spare, it is the joyous free-spirited dancing of the figures that prevails. 

Although London audiences were unfamiliar with the physical reality of Drysdale’s subject-matter and sometimes challenged by the ruggedness of the landscape he described, his paintings struck a chord. Reviewing the exhibition in a broadcast on the BBC Pacific Service, Eric Newton said, ‘There’s nothing lush or exuberant about Mr Drysdale’s Australia. I don’t feel an irresistible urge to emigrate to Australia – his Australia – as a result of visiting the show. But that has nothing to do with Mr Drysdale’s excellence as an artist. There are plenty of good pictures that take me to places I don’t particularly want to visit in real life’.11 He continued, ‘ he is a first-rate painter. His pictures are authentic accounts of a distant and unfamiliar continent. They are creations in their own right, and as such they have an authority, a unity, a presence of their own.’12 

Alongside the positive reviews came good sales. Nine paintings were sold on the opening day, including one to Sir Laurence Olivier, who had previously met Drysdale and his wife in Sydney. War Memorial, 1950 was selected for the Tate Gallery, and while the artist was reportedly disappointed by this choice, representation in such an important international collection added significantly to his developing reputation. Drysdale was one of a small handful of twentieth century Australian artists to achieve this level of recognition during his lifetime. In addition to being represented in the Tate and New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, his work was also included in major private collections including that of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Acknowledgement of his great talent also came in 1954, when he was selected alongside Sidney Nolan and William Dobell to represent Australia at the XXVII Venice Biennale – the first time Australia had participated in this pre-eminent international exhibition of contemporary art – and in 1969, when his contribution to Australian art was recognised with a knighthood. 

Having been owned by Mervyn Horton, Children Dancing has a distinguished provenance. Employed as an editor by Sam Ure Smith in 1951, he was also secretary to the Society of Artists, as well as being gallery manager for their annual exhibition, and in this way was very familiar with the Sydney art world. In addition to editing several books on contemporary Australian art during the 1960s-early 80s, Horton is probably best known as editor of Art and Australia, which was launched in May 1963.13 

1. Klepac, L., Russell Drysdale, Murdoch Books, Millers Point, 2009, p. 15 
2. Ibid. 
3. Drysdale interviewed by Geoffrey Dutton, quoted in Eagle, M. and Minchin, J., The George Bell School: Students, Friends, Influences, Deutscher Art Publications, Melbourne and Resolution Press, Sydney, 1981, p. 91 
4. Klepac, op. cit., p. 21 
5. Drysdale quoted in J.F. Nagle, ‘Preface’, Russell Drysdale, Richmond Hill Press, Melbourne, 1979 
6. Burdett, B., ‘Young painter shows brilliant promise’, Herald, Melbourne, 26 April 1938, p. 10, quoted in Smith, G., Russell Drysdale 1912 – 81, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 1997, p. 19 
7. The Leicester Galleries exhibition also included a number of earlier works loaned from collectors including Kenneth Clark: see Klepac, op. cit, p. 217 
8. McKie, R., ‘Drysdale takes Australia to London’, The Daily Telegraph, Sydney, 12 October 1950, p.8 
9. Gleeson, J., ‘Drysdale reveals the ‘gold of art’’, The Sun, Sydney, 9 August 1950, p. 30 
10. Dancing Children No. 1, 1949, oil on canvas, 30.5 x 40.6 cm, illustrated in Klepac, op. cit., p. 206 
11. Quoted in Klepac, ibid., pp. 220 – 221 
12. Ibid. 
13. Daniel Thomas, ‘Horton, Mervyn Emrys Rosser (1917 – 1983)’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/horton-mervyn-emrys-rosser-12657/text22809, published first in hardcopy 2007, accessed online 6 March 2023 
  
KIRSTY GRANT 

Perceval John Boy Beside a Fruit Barrow 1943view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 13, JOHN PERCEVAL 
(1923 - 2000) 
BOY BESIDE A FRUIT BARROW, 1943 
oil on canvas on composition board 
69.0 x 42.0 cm 
signed and dated lower left: Perceval / Jan 43 
bears inscription with title on handwritten label verso: Boy by the Fruit Barrow / 1943 

PROVENANCE 
Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne 
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above in April 1979 

EXHIBITED 
Rebels and Precursors, Aspects of Australian Painting in Melbourne 1937 – 1947, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, August – September 1962; Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, September – October 1962, cat. 90 (as 'Boy on the Fruit Barrow') 
John Perceval Canberra Exhibition, ANU and Department of Interior, Albert Hall, Canberra, 13 – 24 July 1966, cat. 12 (label attached verso, as ‘Boy by the Fruit Barrow’) 
Autumn Exhibition 1979, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne, 5 – 20 April 1979, cat. 105 (illus. in exhibition catalogue) 
John Perceval: A Retrospective Exhibition, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 30 April - 12 July 1992 and Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 6 August - 20 September 1992 (label attached verso) 
On long term loan to the Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria, 2005 – 2023 

LITERATURE 
Plant, M.,  John Perceval, Lansdowne Press, Victoria, 1978, pl. 3, pp. 16, 17 (illus.) 
Haese, R.,  Rebels and precursors: the revolutionary years of Australian art, Penguin, Victoria, 1981, p. 204  
Allen, T.,  John Perceval, Melbourne University Press, Victoria, 1992, pp. 140, 141, (illus.), 146 

ESSAY 
John Perceval was the youngest member of the group of artists forever known as the Angry Penguins. They gained this collective title during World War II through their association with Max Harris’ magazine of the same name, and further benefited from the patronage of John and Sunday Reed at Heide. The Angry Penguins each created momentous series of artworks in the years 1942 – 1944: Albert Tucker with the harrowing Images of Modern Evil; Sidney Nolan and his acclaimed paintings of the Wimmera; Arthur Boyd’s twisted scenes of Melbourne populated by gargoyles and cripples; and Joy Hester with her emotive and lyrical ink-wash drawings. In many ways, the most intimate and psychologically complex were John Perceval’s images of a small, blonde child with a bowl haircut navigating landscapes of personal memory. This child was the artist himself, trawling through events from his troubled childhood located within a setting of pre-war Melbourne. Boy beside a fruit barrow, 1943, is a significant work from the series and one of the few remaining in private hands. 
  
To say that Perceval had a difficult childhood is a major understatement. Born Linwood Robert Stevens South, he and his older sister Betty were initially raised on large wheat property ‘Illamurta’ 220 kilometres east of Perth, near Bruce Rock. Perceval’s parents’ marriage failed soon after his birth and his mother moved to Perth. As an act of early defiance and self-invention, the young boy rejected his given name and began using ‘John’ instead. At the age of five, he and his sister re-joined their mother in Perth and it was here that he first gained encouragement for his art. Three years later, the children again returned to ‘Illamurta’ and the harsh realities of life on a working farm became part of the boy’s daily routine. In the interim, his mother married William de Burgh Perceval. Betty and John, now aged 11, moved again to join them and he adopted Perceval as his surname. In late 1937, however, he contracted the crippling disease of polio, leading to a year bedridden in hospital, followed by a long rehabilitation. His latent talent was recognised by visiting journalist who wrote a large article for The Sun, headlined ‘Paralysed boy of 15 paints like a master’, and illustrated with a powerful self-portrait.1 This painting is now one of the treasures in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria. 
  
Having experienced such a fractured family life, the outbreak of war soon after his recovery was of unexpected benefit to Perceval, for he was assigned to the army’s cartographic unit, and it was here that he met Arthur Boyd in 1942. Such was their immediate rapport that Perceval soon moved into the rambling Boyd compound at Murrumbeena. He had found a new and embracing surrogate family, which became permanent when he married Arthur’s younger sister Mary in 1944. Following encouragement from Albert Tucker, Boyd and Perceval studied Max Doerner’s The materials of the artist and their use in painting (1934), which described in detail traditional techniques, and began using these to imbue their paintings with the gravitas of the old masters.     
               
The first connected series that Perceval completed included the extraordinary Boy with cat I and II, 1943, where, as Bernard Smith described, ‘the child becomes…a figure of pity and terror’2 as the cat’s claws tear into his flesh. The series progressed and other characters started to appear as Perceval recalled specific childhood episodes of himself in a wheelchair being guided through the streets, encountering vaudeville side shows of performing dogs and circus entertainers on stilts. Seen together, these images portray a haphazard, dystopian carnival, whose participants leer over the boy as he navigates his way through the world. Boy beside a fruit barrow connects directly to these, and Perceval’s biographer Margaret Plant vividly describes its tension with ‘the fair-haired child, small in front of a huge mother figure with hair in a chignon and her arm taut with the weight of her purchases; and the fruit man, hunched up and fingering the money. Behind the three hollow-eyed figures is a Caligari set of tall houses with windows black and vacant like the people’s eyes.’3 It is a powerful and compelling scene, one which underscores Perceval’s belief that ‘children are the real world.’4 
  
Perceval’s ‘childhood’ paintings from 1943 may be found in major Australian collections including the National Gallery of Australia; National Gallery of Victoria; Heide Museum of Modern Art; and the Museum of Old and New Art in Tasmania. Together with Boy beside a fruit barrow, they are now regarded as a pivotal and critically important sequence in Australian art of the 1940s. 
  
1. Pimlott, F.L., ‘Paralysed boy of 15 paints like a master’, The Sun News Pictorial, Melbourne, 25 June 1938, p. 43 
2. Bernard Smith, cited in Reid, B., Of Light and Dark: the art of John Perceval, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 1992, p. 14 
3. Plant, M., John Perceval, Lansdowne Press, Victoria, 1978, p. 16 
4. The artist, cited in Reid, B., ibid., p. 3 
  
ANDREW GAYNOR 

Tucker Albert self portrait 1948view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 14, ALBERT TUCKER 
(1914 - 1999) 
SELF PORTRAIT, 1948 
oil pastel, synthetic polymer paint and gouache on cardboard 
50.5 x 37.0 cm (sight) 
signed and dated lower right: Tucker / 1948 

PROVENANCE 
Estate of Albert Tucker, Melbourne (label attached verso, no. 30107) 
Thence by descent 
Barbara Tucker, Melbourne 
Sotheby's, Sydney, 27 August 2013, lot 6 
Private collection, Sydney  

EXHIBITED 
Albert Tucker: Works on Paper 1928–1978, Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, 25 October – 12 November 1978, cat. 94 
Albert Tucker: The Endurance: of the Human Spirit, Lauraine Diggins Fine Art, Melbourne, 1 March – 1 April 2000, cat. 10 
Meeting a Dream: Albert Tucker in Paris 1948–1952, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 18 July – 5 November 2006  

LITERATURE 
Harding, L., Meeting a Dream: Albert Tucker in Paris 1948–1952, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, p. 53 (illus.) 

ESSAY 
In an interview with fellow artist James Gleeson in 1979, Albert Tucker reflected on the challenges of describing his own appearance in visual form, saying ‘Yes, it is very hard dealing with one’s own image… One gets trapped in a curious delusional state’.1 Despite these fears, Tucker’s self portraits speak honestly and directly of their subject at particular times in his life. The delicately painted Self-Portrait, 1937 (National Gallery of Australia), for example, depicts a young novice, serious and wide-eyed. In Self, 1983 (National Gallery of Victoria), a painting made almost fifty years later – by which time Tucker was a highly respected senior figure with a firm place in the history of twentieth century Australian art – we witness a dramatic transformation of attitude, appearance and painterly confidence. Creating self portraits throughout his career, Tucker was motivated in part by the opportunity that this subject presented for self-analysis and expression, and as well as documenting his physical appearance through the years, together, they chart the development of his artistic identity. 

This 1948 self portrait was painted in Paris, a city which enchanted Tucker with its ‘wide boulevards, open skies, easy relaxed people and… the impossible gardens of Versailles’.2 Rather than presenting a recognisable image of the artist, it discards the traditions of naturalistic representation and adopts instead, a bold Cubist approach, fragmenting the human form into a series of interconnected abstract shapes. Outlined by strong painted lines, these shapes allow various perspectives of the subject to be combined into one image, facilitating the rendering of a three-dimensional subject in two dimensions. Texturally rich, the image is enlivened by a combination of painting and drawing media – oil pastel, gouache and synthetic polymer paint – and their lively, expressive application across the surface of the work. The use of simplified shapes to represent aspects of the human form was not entirely new to Tucker’s work. His renowned Images of Modern Evil series, produced during the mid-1940s, had also utilised this approach and the elegant red lips of this self portrait (echoed by the band of blocky, white teeth below), hark back to the crescent mouth – also typically coloured red – which is such a distinctive element of those now iconic images. 

Like all Australian artists of his generation, Tucker had seen very little modern art and his knowledge of contemporary European painting was drawn primarily from books and magazines. But in Paris he encountered exhibition after exhibition, and this experience, he said, threw him ‘into a tailspin of awe [and] filled this screaming hunger… I’d had all my life.’3 The influence of Picasso is strong in this painting and indeed, in much of Tucker’s work from this time. Describing the Spanish master as ‘everything and more than we could have hoped … there is no one else anywhere near him’4, Tucker later observed that, ‘When one deals with a distortion, it’s impossible to avoid Picasso because of the way he… disintegrated the image, pulled it completely to pieces and kept putting it back together in different ways.’5 

1. Tucker, A., interviewed by Gleeson, J., 2 May 1979, National Gallery of Australia Research Library, https://nga.gov.au/Research/Gleeson/pdf/Tucker.pdf, accessed 20 February 2023, p. 6 
2. Tucker to John and Sunday Reed, Sidney Nolan and Sweeney Tucker, 14 February 1948, Barrett Reid papers, State Library of Victoria, quoted in Harding, L., Meeting a Dream: Albert Tucker in Paris 1948-1952, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, 2006, p. 26 
3. Tucker, A., interviewed by Blackman, B., 14 July 1988, quoted in Burke, J., Australian Gothic: A Life of Albert Tucker, Random House, North Sydney, 2003, p. 302 
4. Tucker, 1948, op. cit., p. 31 
5. Harding, L., ‘Re-picturing the Modern World 1940 – 1949’ in Harding, L. & Cramer, S., Cubism and Australian Art, The Miegunyah Press, Carlton, 2009, p. 119 

KIRSTY GRANT 

Blackman Charles Gladioli c1964view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 15,
CHARLES BLACKMAN 
(1928 - 2018) 
GLADIOLI, c.1964 
oil on canvas 
122.0 x 102.0 cm 
signed upper left: BLACKMAN 
bears inscription on stretcher bar verso: “WOMAN WITH GLADIOLI” / 1964 
bears inscription on partial label verso : […] dioli 48 x 40 

PROVENANCE 
Skinner Galleries, Perth 
Private collection, Perth 
Lister Gallery, Perth 
David Davies, London, acquired from the above in April 1982 
The Collection of Sir David Davies, Sotheby’s, Melbourne, 5 May 2003, lot 13 (as 'Woman with Gladioli') 
Private collection, Sydney 

EXHIBITED 
Charles Blackman, Skinner Galleries, Perth, 28 May 1974, cat. 4 

LITERATURE 
Amadio, N.,  Charles Blackman The Lost Domains, second edition, Alpine Fine Arts Collection Ltd, New York, 1982, cat. 3.14, pp. 39, 40 (illus.), 142 
  

ESSAY 
‘Bathed in a light that has its source in the luminous colours, these inward gazing faces full of a gentle sadness, these flowers, which often seem like souls of flowers, have a stringent poetry that lingers in the minds...’1 

Fusing the beautiful with the enigmatic, Charles Blackman’s exquisitely lyrical images of women and flowers are arguably among his most widely admired achievements. Appearing in such celebrated examples such as The Presentation, 1959 (National Gallery of Victoria) and The Bouquet, 1961 (Queensland Art Gallery I Museum of Art), the trope is central to Blackman’s art, punctuating every decade of his vast oeuvre; as the artist’s biographer, Thomas Shapcott, elaborates, ‘the motif… must be seen as a long series of inventions on a theme capable of infinite variety within the form.’2 Painted sonnets capturing moments of great sensitivity and poignant beauty, indeed for Blackman, such images of girls and flowers were ‘…an eloquent form for his personal poetry’, and invariably, as Nadine Amadio adds, ‘…reflections of his wife’.3 For while no doubt betraying affinities from his haunting investigations of loneliness in his Schoolgirl series previously, as well as his iconic Alice paintings with their abundant floral blooms, Blackman’s depictions of women with flowers were most profoundly inspired by the encroaching blindness of his first wife and muse, Barbara Patterson – a writer and poet who was already legally blind when the couple married in 1951, with her condition deteriorating dramatically over the decade subsequently. 

Emerging from Blackman’s fruitful London sojourn in the first half of the sixties during which he was at the height of his creative powers and critical success (see lot 9), Gladioli, c.1964 is a superb example of the artist’s remarkable ability to illuminate an inner ‘world of things sensed rather than seen.’4 Featuring his signature use of the ‘double image’ in the female profile set against an atmospheric dark ground devoid of any subject beyond its brushwork and enlivened by the brilliant colour-burst of gladioli, notably the composition engages all the senses, invoking a deeper, more intimate scrutiny. As Blackman himself reflected upon his women and flower images created during these years, ‘…what emerged was that in relation to [flowers] human beings start to do certain kinds of things… that is, the flowers evoked the people, in a certain kind of gentility, or substance, or reverence, or sensitivity.’5 In the present work, such wider sensitivity is heightened by the figure’s closed eyes – the absence of sight emphasising a greater reliance on smell (her head inclined towards the flowers recalls their perfume) and touch (the prominence of her hand speaks of their delicate textures). Meanwhile, the sombre notes of the backdrop perhaps allude to music, the fleeting transience of a nocturne with ‘…the lyrical balance of light and shade… suggest[ing] an inner listening.’6 A poetic work imbued with melancholy and tenderness, Gladioli not only encapsulates the artist’s unique intuitive response to his subjects, but offers powerful insight more specifically into the female psyche – a complex inner realm of dreams and emotions to which few others have given such eloquent expression. As Amadio elucidates, Blackman ‘…admits that what he attempts to paint is ‘virtually unpaintable’… The form of a girl’s face lit with flowers like a radiant echo of herself, is one of his best-known images, as well as one of his many powerful devices for painting the ‘unpaintable’. The floral flower shape is part of the woman; the singing colours of the flowers are the music of her psyche. They are so often held like a gift of herself. The flowers are in no sense a decoration even when they are not closely knit into the girl form; in fact the space between them and her make a bridge of emotions.’7 

1. Langer, G., Courier Mail, Brisbane, 18 November 1958 
2. Shapcott, T., The Art of Charles Blackman, André Deutsch, London, 1989, p. 28 
3. Amadio, N., Charles Blackman: The Lost Domains, Alpine Fine Arts Collection, New York, p. 44 
4. ‘The Antipodeans’, Modern Art News, Contemporary Art Society, Melbourne, vol. 1, no. 1, August 1959, p. 9 
5. The artist cited in Shapcott, T., Focus on Blackman, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane, 1967, p. 36 
6. Amadio, op. cit., p. 39 
7. Smith, B., ‘The Antipodeans’, Australia To-day, Melbourne, 14 October 1959, p. 104 

VERONICA ANGELATOS 

Boyd Arthur Wimmera c1958view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 16,
ARTHUR BOYD 
(1920 - 1999) 
WIMMERA LANDSCAPE WITH DAM AND WHITE COCKATOO, c.1958 
oil on composition board 
39.5 x 49.5 cm 
signed lower left: Arthur Boyd 

PROVENANCE 
Andrew Ivanyi Galleries, Melbourne 
Private collection, Melbourne, by 1978 
Estate of the above, Melbourne 

ESSAY 
An untiring and extremely skilful painter of landscapes, Arthur Boyd is undoubtedly among Australia’s most revered artists with his highly personalised images of his homeland now iconic within the national consciousness. Among the more revelatory and widely acclaimed of his achievements, the extended sequence of luminous, sun-parched landscapes inspired by his travels to the Wimmera region in north-west Victoria are particularly celebrated. As Janet McKenzie elaborates, ‘…[in these paintings] Boyd created an archetypal Australian landscape. Possessing both a poetic lyricism and a down to earth quality and capturing the glorious light, these works… [offer] a sense of acceptance that many country-dwelling Australians could identify with.’1 
  
Boyd first encountered the Wimmera region during the summer of 1948 – 49 when he accompanied the poet Jack Stevenson on a number of expeditions to Horsham in north-west Victoria. With its flat, semi-arid paddocks and endless horizons, the wheat-farming district presented Boyd with such a stark contrast to the verdant, undulating hills of Berwick and Harkaway (where he had recently undertaken an expansive mural series of Brughelesque idylls at his uncle’s property, The Grange) that he found himself required to develop a new visual vocabulary in order to capture this desolate landscape. Although the Wimmera could not be described as ‘uninhabitable’, it was for Boyd, his first glimpse of the vastness of Australia’s interior. As Barry Pearce notes, ‘…He discovered there a hint of something that had drawn other painters of his generation, a subject tentatively recorded by a few artists of the nineteenth century and touched on by even fewer of the twentieth: the empty spaces of the great interior. Of course, the Wimmera was wheat country and not by any means forbidding, nor forsaken. But in hot dry weather it could have, over sparse, unbroken horizons, a searing expanse of sky that elicited an acute sense of the infinite…’2 
  
When initially unveiled at the David Jones Gallery in 1950, the Wimmera landscapes were greeted with universal acclaim – no doubt, as more than one author has observed, ‘because their sun-parched colours were so reminiscent of the Heidelberg school.’3 Significantly the paintings resonated not only amongst the public, but also with institutions such as the National Gallery of Victoria who purchased arguably the most famous work from the series, Irrigation Lake, Wimmera, 1950, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales who acquired Midday, The Wimmera, 1948 – 49 – thereby representing the first works by Boyd to enter a major public collection. Imbued with the spirit of the land, these works represented for many their first encounter with these ‘more intimate aspects of the Australian landscape’4 and thus, not only established Boyd’s reputation as ‘an interpreter of the rural Australian environment’5, but moreover, launched his career on the international stage, with Boyd subsequently awarded the honour of representing Australia at the Venice Biennale in 1958. 
  
So profound was the impact of the stark simplicity and shimmering light of the Wimmera upon Boyd’s psyche that he would subsequently revisit the subject on several occasions over the following decades – whether painting at his property ‘Riversdale’ on the Shoalhaven river in southern New South Wales, or abroad while residing in London and Italy. A later iteration most likely completed towards the end of the fifties, Wimmera Landscape with Dam and White Cockatoo, c.1958 is one such ‘re-imagining’ of the Wimmera region, illustrating well the complexity of Boyd’s vision which is invariably an amalgam of visual observation, artistic experience and emotional response. Offering a sophisticated reappraisal of the theme in its absolute sparseness, economy of detail and restrained palette, the image is one of intimacy and warmth, enhanced by the slightly rose-tinged sky which infuses the entire composition with a sense of joyous optimism. Here there is no angst, no challenge, no dramatic dialogue between man and nature as may be found elsewhere in Boyd’s oeuvre; to the contrary, the work exudes a mood of stillness and calm acceptance, as Franz Philipp astutely observes of such Wimmera paintings ‘…the phrase ‘landscapes of love’ comes to mind.’6 

1. McKenzie, J., Arthur Boyd: art and life, Thames and Hudson, London, 1967, p. 62 
2. Pearce, B., Arthur Boyd Retrospective, The Art Gallery of New South Wales and The Beagle Press, Sydney, 1993, p. 20 
3. Campbell, R., ‘Arthur Boyd (1920 – )’, Australia: Paintings by Arthur Streeton and Arthur Boyd, XXIX Biennale, Venice, 1958, n. p. 
4. Pearce, op. cit., p. 20 
5. Philipp, F., Arthur Boyd, Thames and Hudson, London, 1967, p. 67 
6. Ibid., p. 64 

VERONICA ANGELATOS
Gascoigne Rosalieview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 20,
ROSALIE GASCOIGNE 
(1917 - 1999) 
SHEEP WEATHER ALERT 5, 1992 – 93 
torn and cut bitumen-based printed linoleum, paint and weathered plywood (diptych) 
78.0 x 240.0 cm (overall) 
left panel: signed, dated and inscribed with title lower right: 5A/ SHEEP WEATHER ALERT / Rosalie Gascoigne / 1992–1993 5A 
right panel: signed, dated and inscribed with title upper right (inverted): 5B/SHEEP WEATHER ALERT / Rosalie Gascoigne / 1992–1993 5B 

PROVENANCE 
Pinacotheca, Melbourne 
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1993 
Sotheby’s, Melbourne, 5 May 2009, lot 212 
Private collection, Sydney  

EXHIBITED 
Rosalie Gascoigne, Pinacotheca, Melbourne, 5 – 22 May 1993, cat. 32 
Blue Chip: The Collector’s Exhibition, Niagara Galleries at Liverpool Street Gallery, Sydney, June – July 2010 
The Daylight Moon: Rosalie Gascoigne and Lake George, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, New South Wales, 26 June – 22 August 2015, cat. 4 (pp. 17, 30, illus. and inside back cover) 
Spring 2016, Justin Miller Art, Sydney, October – November 2016 (illus. in exhibition catalogue) 
Blue Chip 2020, Liverpool Street Gallery, Sydney, 24 September - 10 October 2020 

LITERATURE 
Macdonald, V., Rosalie Gascoigne, Regaro, Sydney, 1998, pl. 22, pp. 60 – 61 (illus.) 
Gascoigne, M., Rosalie Gascoigne. A Catalogue Raisonné, ANU Press, Canberra, 2019, cat. 488, pp. 95, 265 (illus.), 339, 356  

ESSAY 
‘…Somebody gave me a lot of that lino. I couldn’t stand the interior red and green on it, which in theory were the colours, but the black and grey were good, so I tore it by hand. It turned out in a way like sheep shapes, especially if you saw a mass of them.’1 

With her training in the formal discipline of Ikebana complementing her intuitive understanding of the nature of materials, her deep attachment to her environment and later interest in modern art, Rosalie Gascoigne remains one of Australia’s most revered assemblage artists. Bespeaking a staunchness and scrupulous eye, her works are artful and refined, yet always maintain a close connection with the outside world, powerfully evoking remembered feelings or memories in relationship to the landscape; they are ‘instances of emotion recollected in tranquillity’ to quote a phrase of Wordsworth's which was so dear to her. 

Occupying that space between ‘the world and the world of art’2, Sheep Weather Alert 5, 1992 – 93 offers an impressive example of the assemblages inspired by Gascoigne’s everyday experience of her immediate surroundings on the outskirts of Canberra – and specifically, the region’s biting cold temperatures that posed a tangible threat to newborn lambs and recently shorn sheep. As the artist herself elaborates, ‘‘Sheep weather alert’ is what they say on the weather report. It’s a good name. it means you jolly well get your sheep or you’re going to lose a lot to the cold – it’s a bitter climate here.’ Referring to the present work, she continues ‘This is a misted-over one; they’re washed over, and it reads like shapes looming in the mist. When you have shearing time around Canberra, the yards are full of sheep, the trucks are full of sheep, the hills are full of shorn sheep – sheep, sheep, sheep – you’re just surrounded by it. That was what I was after.’3 Originally part of an eight-piece installation which was later dismantled by the artist, the present diptych features a cool palette of neutral whites, greys and touches of blue to suggest ice, while the scattered forms evoke a myriad of notions from sheep and lambs grazing across fields, to tufts of shorn wool, frozen icicles or even falling snowflakes. 

Thus, although inextricably linked in their inspiration and materials to her physical surroundings, Gascoigne’s achievements almost always encapsulate a larger, more intangible sense of place that is, paradoxically, ‘both nowhere and everywhere at once’.4 Having eschewed the use of iconography, she favours rather allusion and suggestion to capture the timeless ‘spirit’ of the landscape so that her art ‘may speak for itself’, awakening ‘… associations that lie buried beneath the surface of consciousness; inviting a higher degree of sensitivity and attentiveness to the world around us’.5 Yet if Sheep Weather Alert 5 functions ‘allusively’ as a rich repository of memories and associations, it also exists ‘illusively’ as a purely abstract form of art, transcending both the materials of its construction and the landscape itself with its formal interest in qualities of colour, texture and repetition. For indeed, as Gascoigne reiterates, ultimately such works are about ‘the pleasures of the eye’, with her manipulations of natural and semi-industrial debris to be appreciated simply as objects of aesthetic delight. Like the materials themselves, beauty is a quality that is easily and thoughtlessly discarded; as John McDonald muses, ‘When we value things for their perceived usefulness, we overlook a more fundamental necessity. Life is impoverished by the inability to recognise beauty in even the most humble guise.’6 

1. The artist, quoted in MacDonald, V., Rosalie Gascoigne, Regaro, Sydney, 1998, p. 60 
2. Edwards, D.,  Rosalie Gascoigne: Materials as Landscape, Trustees of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1998, p. 11 
3. The artist, quoted in MacDonald, 1998, op. cit., p. 60 
4. Cameron, D.,  What is Contemporary Art?, exhibition catalogue, Rooseum, Malmo, Sweden, 1989, p. 18 
5. McDonald, J., ‘Introduction’ in MacDonald, 1998, op. cit., p. 7 
6. McDonald, ibid. 

VERONICA ANGELATOS 

Tuckson Tonyview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 19,
TONY TUCKSON 
(1921 - 1973) 
TP 174A UNTITLED, c.1963 
synthetic polymer paint on composition board 
122.0 x 91.5 cm 

PROVENANCE 
Estate of the artist, Sydney 
Watters Gallery, Sydney (labels attached verso) 
Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 2006  

EXHIBITED 
Tony Tuckson, Paintings, Pinacotheca, Melbourne, 18 October – 4 November 1989, cat. 10 (illus. in exhibition catalogue, dated as c.1962 – 1965) 
Tony Tuckson. Important Paintings, Watters Gallery, Sydney, 23 August ­– 16 September 2006, cat. 10 (illus. in exhibition catalogue, dated as c.1963)  

ESSAY 
When Tony Tuckson held his first commercial exhibition at Watters Gallery, Sydney, in 1970 at the age of 49, it was to reveal an astonishing original painter, one who stamped an immediate and lasting mark on modern Australian art. 

At the time Untitled, 1963 was painted, very few knew of Tuckson’s work. His was a career happening in the shadow of strident division between abstraction and figuration. The Sydney 9 group formed in 1960 and all were abstractionists and included Robert Klippel and Clement Meadmore amongst others. It was an immediate response to Melbourne’s Antipodeans and their exhibition – all seven artists were figurative. Robert Hughes championed the former; Bernard Smith the latter.1 By 1960, John Passmore’s paintings had evolved into abstraction, and Peter Upward painted his wildly energetic  June celebration in 1960. Ian Fairweather had painted abstract works in the late 50s and Monastery was finally completed in 1961 –  the same year John Olsen painted You Beaut Country No. 2. Contemporaneous accounts reveal Tuckson is missing amongst all the action. 
  
Tuckson’s place in art history’s canon of great abstractionists is one written in hindsight, where respected critical reaction frequently places him as Australia’s finest abstract expressionist. Prolific weekend and evening studio activity were kept at arm’s length from his position as deputy director of the Art Gallery of New South Wales. However, his self-imposed studio isolation didn’t restrict his worldliness and the reach of his curiosity. Tuckson had studied art in his native England (he was born in Egypt), flew Spitfires in WWII and was sent to Darwin in 1942; at the end of the war he enrolled at East Sydney Technical College. As Deputy Director, he developed a keen and conversant interest in Aboriginal and Melanesian art, something not shared by uninterested gallery trustees, but it informed his own art. 

Tuckson’s distinctive figurative work was shaped by European modernism, especially the School of Paris, and Picasso and Matisse in particular. He also reveals an indebtedness to Ian Fairweather, both in terms of the arrangement of elements within compositions and an easy-going disregard for the quality of materials themselves. By the end of the 50s, figuration had been abandoned and the expressive potential of abstraction became a tour de force.  

While American Abstract Expressionism can be regarded as a pivotal underpinning of his approach to painting and drawing, Aboriginal and Melanesian art also shaped his essential aesthetic and stylistic repertoire.2 Tuckson looked at, thought about and absorbed art that interested him. Viewers won’t find revelatory moments of identifying a source and then the application of an assumed influence. His discursive interests become rather a sophisticated part of his intellectual character, discrete elements within his unrestrained intuition and expressive exuberance.  

Between 1961 and 1965 Tuckson worked on red, black and white paintings. Untitled suggests nothing beyond the gestures themselves in their orchestrated, well-practiced and seemingly haphazard characteristic. But the various marks, incidents and painterly sweeps all converge into an experiential whole, where no part of the painting might exist without its interconnected counterpoint.3 If Tuckson produced no further work after these formative abstractions, his reputation would be undiminished. But he continued to paint ambitiously, often larger in scale, until his premature death in 1973. 

1. Antipodeans, Victorian Artists’ Society Galleries, East Melbourne; 4 – 15 August 1959 ( The Antipodean Manifesto written by Bernard Smith) 
2. Mendelssohn, J., Passion and Beauty: the paintings of Tony Tuckson; The Conversation, 28 November 2018 at https://theconversation.com/passion-and-beauty-the-paintings-of-tony-tuckson-107591 The author suggests the exhibition 8 American Artists, organised by the Seattle Art Museum and shown in Sydney in 1958, had a profound effect on Tuckson, especially the work of Markey Tobey. 
3. Mimmocchi, D., et al., Tony Tuckson, Art Gallery New South Wales, Sydney, 2018. 

DOUG HALL AM
Robinson William 2 lotsview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 21 and 21,
WILLIAM ROBINSON 
born 1936 
CHOOK YARD WITH BATH-TANK, c.1984 
oil on linen 
72.0 x 87.0 cm 
signed lower right: William Robinson 
bears inscription on stretcher bar verso: “CHOOK YARD WITH BATH-TANK” 

PROVENANCE 
Art Galleries Schubert, Queensland (label attached verso) 
Private collection 
Phillips Auctioneers, Sydney, 23 May 2000, lot 25 
Private collection 
Deutscher~Menzies, Melbourne, 1 May 2002, lot 23 
Private collection, Victoria 

ESSAY 
It would be foolish to dismiss Robinson’s early Farmyard paintings as quirky humorous vignettes. These portrayals of the animals and farm detritus that occupied Robinson’s hobby farm are complex compositional arrangements, which ultimately pointed to way towards Robinson’s celebrated mature landscapes. When these works were initially exhibited at the Ray Hughes Gallery in Brisbane, Robinson was exhibiting alongside the Australian artist Ken Whisson (1927 – 2022). Whisson, by now had been resident in Italy for several years, while Robinson was still teaching at the Kelvin Grove campus of the CAE; a position he would keep until he retired in 1989 to begin painting full time. At around this time, Robinson’s compositional experiments had him poised on the precipice of convention and his exposure to the rigour of Whisson’s approach may well have metaphorically eased him over. 

The whimsical farmyard paintings are in fact variable compositional arrangements, each one a further version of the other. The cows become regular features of his work and are recognisable by the names as we have come to know them through other examples. In the Chook Yard with Bath-Tank, c.1984, Josephine peers suspiciously from behind the water tank and Rosie trots at pace towards the viewer – farmer – artist. As the years passed, Robinson’s view finder would zoom out and away from the features of the farm and begin to take in the surrounding landscape. And it was from this base that the majestic works he is best known for developed. In the years that followed he would exhibit annually at the Ray Hughes Gallery. The group of artists that exhibited with Ray Hughes in those years would pursue major art prizes such as the Archibald, Wynne and Sulman as a pack. Robinson would go on to win the Archibald and Wynne prizes twice; Davida Allen and Keith Looby from the same stable would also win the Archibald Prize. 

Robinson’s place in the canon of Australian art has long been secured. His landscape paintings in the years since these farmyard works began are considered among the most accomplished in the land. Whereas many landscape painters were drawn to the romantic heroics of the outback however, Robinson stuck to the lush hinterland of the east coast. In the mid-nineties following trips to Europe, his paintings gained a profound spiritual resonance as the artist looked closer to the heavens as the source of his inspiration – a long way from these humble farmyard paintings that were the springboard for the towering, spiritual crescendos that followed. 

and WILLIAM ROBINSON 
born 1936 
SUN AND LIGHT RAIN NUMINBAH, 2004 
oil on linen 
51.0 x 66.0 cm 
signed and dated lower left: William Robinson 2004 
bears inscription on backing board verso: SUN AND LIGHT RAIN NUMINBAH 

PROVENANCE 
Australian Galleries, Sydney (label attached verso) 
Private collection, New South Wales, acquired from the above in 2005 

EXHIBITED 
William Robinson, Australian Galleries, Melbourne, 21 – 29 May 2005; Sydney, 14 June – 2 July 2005, cat. 19 (illus. in exhibition catalogue, p. 51) 

ESSAY 
In relation to a sense of place, William Robinson has made a unique contribution to the Australian landscape tradition, moving beyond conventional notions to encompass a fluctuating environment; of rainforest and ocean, ground and sky, day and night, elemental forces of wind, lightning, rain and fire. His multidimensional grasp of time and space also suggests metaphors for states of mind and being, life and death, continuity and transcendence. The profound spiritual resonances in Robinson’s art remind us of the need to preserve an ancient natural world in the present; ‘to keep the faith’, as Simon Schama wrote in  Landscape and Memory, ‘with a future on this tough, lovely old planet’.1 

Robinson’s treatment of the horizon and distorted perspective set him apart from his contemporaries. While many Australian landscape painters traditionally looked towards the arid interior for inspiration, he embraces the lush south-eastern Queensland mountain ranges. The dramatic features of the granite belt, with its soaring cliffs, meandering rivers, creeks and waterfalls, offer the perfect subject for Robinson to flaunt his painterly innovations. 

The steep ravines, high annual rainfall and proximity to the coast combine to provide dramatic weather shifts, which Robinson exploits wilfully. As the title of S un and Light Rain, Numinbah, 2004 suggests, it is the ephemeral beauty of this landscape which captivates the artist. He gives equal weight to the physical grandeur of the ancient forms, as he does to the intangible elements of light, mist, mood and atmosphere. 

In the act of painting there is a tipping point where the image takes over and a seamless synergy occurs between the artist, their materials and subject. The artist becomes the vehicle for the work and almost takes a backseat as the painting evolves in inspired revelation. Artists sometimes refer to a work as ‘painting itself’ when describing this shaman-like relationship between the artist and subject. Robinson arrives at this point early and you can feel the urgency his works attain as they reach toward a higher state of observation and translation. Each new painting builds on the achievements of the previous one as he pushes the boundaries of his artistic abilities and the conventions of landscape painting. 

This state of oneness with his work is achieved by continuous immersion in the act of creation and Robinson typically works every day, all day – except Sundays. God rested on the sabbath and so does Robbo, reserving this day for reflection and music in humble observance of the Maker’s achievements. The artist is a deeply spiritual man and his paintings are to be viewed as a personal homage to his creator. The current example conveys this more than others, the central image of painting is the sunrise to the east, which may be considered as the first of its kind. Like the renaissance masters Robinson so much admires, he looks to the heavens for the essence of his inspiration. 

1. Hart, D., ‘William Robinson’s artistic development: An intimate and expansive journey’ in  William Robinson, A Transfigured Landscape, Queensland University of Technology and Piper Press, Brisbane, 2011, p. 38 

HENRY MULHOLLAND 


Quilty Ben 3 lots with essaysview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lots 26-28.
Fullwood Albert Henry Mosman Bay 1899view full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 29,
ALBERT HENRY FULLWOOD 
(1863 - 1930) 
THE OLD WHALING STATION, MOSMAN'S BAY, SYDNEY, 1899 
watercolour and gouache on paper on cardboard 
57.5 x 94.0 cm (sight) 
signed, dated and inscribed lower left: A. H. Fullwood. \ 99 / Old Bridge MOSMAN / Sydney 
framer’s label attached verso: S. A. Parker, Sydney 
bears inscription on framer’s label verso: A. H. Fullwood 

PROVENANCE 
The artist, Sydney 
Thence by descent 
Mrs V. Fullwood, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1930 
Private collection, Melbourne 
Private collection, Melbourne, acquired from the above in 2021 

EXHIBITED 
Spring Exhibition, Twentieth Annual Exhibition of the Royal Art Society of New South Wales, Royal Art Society of New South Wales, Sydney, 19 August – 20 September 1899, cat. 249 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station, Mosmans [sic.] Bay, Sydney’) 
Second Federal Art Exhibition, South Australian Institute Building, Adelaide, 10 November – 9 December 1889 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station’) 
(Studio exhibition), Paling’s Buildings, Sydney, 17 – 24 February 1900 
Sydney Harbour: an exhibition to mark the 175th anniversary of the founding of Australia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 30 October – 19 November 1963, cat. 28 (label attached verso, as ‘Mossman’s [sic.] Bay’, loaned by Mrs. V. Fullwood) 

LITERATURE 
‘The Art Societies. Preparations for August Shows’, The Daily Telegraph, Sydney, 31 July 1899, p. 3 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station at Mosman’s Bay’) 
‘The Spring Art Exhibitions’, The Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 9 August 1899, p. 5 (as ‘Old Whaling Station’) 
'This Year's Pictures. The Annual Exhibitions', The Australian Star, Sydney, 19 August 1899, p. 6 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station, Mosmans [sic.] Bay’) 
‘The Art Exhibitions’, Sunday Times, Sydney, 20 August 1899, p. 10 
'Art Society's Show. Fine Landscape Display', The Daily Telegraph, Sydney, 21 August 1899, p. 7 (illus., as ‘An Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay’) 
‘The Art Exhibitions. The Art Society’, Sydney Morning Herald, 22 August 1899, p. 3 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay’) 
'Art Notes',  Sunday Times, Sydney, 3 September 1899, pp. 2, 9 (illus., as ‘Old Whaling Station and Rustic Bridge, Mosman’s Bay, Sydney) 
‘Art in Adelaide. Second Federal Exhibition’, Quiz and the Lantern, Adelaide, 16 November 1899, p. 7 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station’) 
The Studio (London), vol. XVII, no. 82, January 1900, p. 291 (illus.) 
‘Mr. Fullwood’s Exhibition’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 17 February 1900, p. 5 (as ‘The rickety old footbridge at Mosman’s Bay’) 
‘Mr. Fullwood’s Exhibition’, Evening News, Sydney, 20 February 1900, p. 6 (as ‘The Old Bridge at Mosman’s’) 
‘Reviews’, The Mercury, Hobart, 28 February 1900, p. 5 (as ‘The Old Whaling Station’) 
Souter, D. H., ‘A. Henry Fullwood, landscapist: being a review of his Australian work’, Art and Architecture: the Journal of the Institute of Architects of New South Wales, Sydney, vol. 3, no. 1 (January – February), 1905, pp. 5 (illus. as ‘Mosman’s Bay’), 6 

RELATED WORK 
Not Titled [Old Mosman whaling station], 1899, watercolour, gouache and ink on cardboard, 50.6 x 76.4 cm, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra 

ESSAY 
Mosman has long been one of Sydney’s favourite painting grounds. The artists who stayed at Bulletin cartoonist Livingstone Hopkins (‘Hop’)’s shack behind Edwards Beach in the 1880s (Julian Ashton, A.J. Daplyn, Frank Mahony and John Mather); the more celebrated residents of Reuben Brasch’s ‘Curlew Camp’ at Little Sirius Cove in the 1890s (Tom Roberts and Arthur Streeton); pioneer modernists (Elioth Gruner, Roland Wakelin and Margaret Preston); even Kevin Connor in the 1970s and Michael Johnson in the 1990s – all responded with delight to the sunshine, bright colour and varying distances of the North Shore littoral of Gorma Bullagong.1 
  
For several decades from the 1820s Sirius Cove was a harbour for whaling vessels (it takes its present name from whaling station entrepreneur Alexander Mosman). But as early as the 1850s the area had become ‘a favourite place for picnickers … a beauty spot of the harbour,’ with ‘cheerful views and bracing breezes, secluded nooks with whispering seas and placid reflections.’2 Mosman provided all the seductions of bush and beach, and just a short ferry-ride from the city. 
  
Mosman was also something of a heartland for A.H. Fullwood. While (like so many of his generation) Fullwood has been cast into the art-historical shadows by the quadrumvirate of Roberts, Streeton, Frederick McCubbin and Charles Conder, he was a prominent artist in Sydney during the 1880s and 1890s: as a black and white illustrator for the Picturesque Atlas of Australasia and for various newspapers and magazines, and as a sensitive and productive landscape painter in oils. Fullwood’s later work as an official artist during the Great War was celebrated in an exhibition at the Australian War Memorial in 1983, but only recently has Gary Werskey’s monograph given him the close attention he so warmly merits.3 
  
Having migrated from Birmingham with his widowed mother and younger sisters in 1883, the talented Fullwood easily found work as a black and white artist in Sydney, but his fortunes faltered in the 1890s: he lost his savings in a run on the New South Wales Savings Bank in February 1892, around the same time that the illustrated papers – his bread-and-butter clients – were shifting from wood engravings to half-tone photographic reproduction. He appears to have joined his Australian naturalist colleagues Roberts and Streeton at Curlew Camp, where the rent was only six or seven shillings a week, before rejoining his family at ‘Yebrand’, a Mosman boarding house, in 1895. Married the following year, Fullwood nevertheless maintained the Mosman connection until his departure for London (via the USA) in 1899. 

The present work is a superb example of the artist’s skill in that characteristic 19th century form, the highly-finished exhibition watercolour.4 A larger and more detailed version of a work formerly in the Oscar Paul Collection and now in the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra,  The Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay, Sydney depicts the view eastward across the head of Mosman’s Bay, from the shadowed mudflats of the foreground over opalescent water to the fashionable ‘refreshment rooms’, behind which rise pink sandstone cliffs and gold-green eucalyptus foliage. It combines dramatic landscape chiaroscuro, picturesque structures in the rickety old footbridge (soon to be replaced) and ‘The Barn’, as well as a host of narrative incidents: beachcombing boys; a man in white flannels and boater sitting on the wharf steps; a white tent on the sward centre left (pitched by artists, perhaps?) 

The Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay, Sydney also participates in the artistic conversation of its time: the horizonless plane of the bush background reprises Roberts’s Bailed Up, 1895 (Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney); the picnickers on the old footbridge are equivalent to the pier promenaders in Conder’s A Holiday at Mentone, 1888 (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide); while the figure with the hitched-up skirt in the foreground irresistibly recalls the little girl in Julian Ashton’s The corner of the paddock, 1888 (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne). 

First shown at the 1899 Society of Artists’ Annual (Spring) Exhibition, The Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay, Sydney was widely applauded in contemporary press reviews. The Star called it ‘one of the most striking items in the water colour list’, while for the Sunday Times it was, of the 17 works Fullwood entered, his ‘best picture… The golden evening tints [morning, in fact] creep down the hills and across the old bridge till lost in the cold shadow of the foreground. A lad gathering oysters under the bridge, clever and complete. The best water-color [sic.] in the exhibition.’ The Telegraph declared it was ‘by far the best of its class in the whole show. There is vital human interest in this picture, as well as solid sterling craftsmanship.’5 

The self-evident quality of the picture saw it included in the Second Federal Art Exhibition, Adelaide, and it was also reproduced not only in local papers and journals, but also in London’s Studio magazine. The Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay, Sydney may not be by one of the ‘Australian Impressionist’ gods, nor be in the popularly valorised medium of oil paint, but this work is a remarkable achievement, a rich, complex piece of picture-making and a particularly fine example of fin-de-siècle watercolour. 

1. A comprehensive listing of Mosman Bay pictures is beyond the scope of this entry, but amongst the finest and best-known 19 th century pictures are: Conrad Martens, Mosman’s Bay, 1848, watercolour, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney; Julian Ashton, Mosman’s Bay, 1888, watercolour, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; John Mather, Mosman’s Bay, 1889, watercolour, 1889, AGNSW; Arthur Streeton, The Point Wharf, Mosman’s Bay, 1893, oil on canvas, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; and Tom Roberts, Mosman’s Bay, 1894, New England Regional Art Museum, Armidale. 
2. M.H., ‘Historic Memories. Mosman’s Bay. Forty Years Ago. Opening of Tram’, Evening News, 6 March 1897, p. 4; ‘Old Mosman’, Mosman Mail, 1 September 1899, p. 2 
3. Anne Gray, A. Henry Fullwood: war artist, Canberra: Australian War Memorial, 1983; Gary Werskey, Picturing a nation: the art and life of A.H. Fullwood, NewSouth Books, Sydney, 2021 
4. In the Society of Artists exhibition in which The Old Whaling Station, Mosman’s Bay, Sydney was first shown, there were 120 oil paintings and 135 watercolours, within a total of 294 works. 
5. ‘This Year’s Pictures. The Annual Exhibitions’, Australian Star, Sydney, 19 August 1899, p. 6 

DR DAVID HANSEN 

Boyd Arthur 2 lots with essaysview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 34 and 35
ARTHUR BOYD

and

ARTHUR BOYD 
(1920 - 1999) 
NEBUCHADNEZZAR, RAINBOW AND WATERFALL, 1967 
oil on canvas 
107.5 x 112.5 cm 
signed lower right: Arthur Boyd 
bears inscription verso: 12 

PROVENANCE 
Rudy Komon Gallery, Sydney (stock no. 1974) 
Private collection, Sydney 
Savill Galleries, Sydney (label attached verso) 
Private collection, Sydney 
Sotheby's, Sydney, 12 May 2014, lot 77 
Private collection, Sydney  

EXHIBITED 
Arthur Boyd, Bonython Art Gallery, Sydney, 8 – 24 April 1968, Australian Galleries, Melbourne, 25 June – 5 July 1968, cat. 22 
Four Australian Modern Masters: Arthur Boyd, Sidney Nolan, Brett Whiteley, Fred Williams, Savill Galleries, Sydney, 11 November – 6 December 1988, cat. 7 (illus. in exhibition catalogue, as 'Nebuchadnezzar and Rainbow 1968')  

ESSAY 
‘I’d like to feel that through my work there is a possibility of making a contribution to a social progression or enlightenment. It would be nice if the creative effort or impulse was connected with a conscious contribution to society, a sort of duty of service.’1 
  
According to the Old Testament, Nebuchadnezzar, king of ancient Babylon (602 – 562 BCE), was a successful ruler who fell from grace for placing his own self-aggrandisement before God. As punishment for his pride and arrogance, he thus lost his sanity and was banished into the wilderness for seven years where he underwent various trials and tribulations: ‘...his heart was made like the beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild asses: they fed him with grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven; til he knew that the most high God ruled in the kingdom of men, and that he appointeth over it whomsoever he will.’2 Although the Book of Daniel has provided inspiration to the visual arts for centuries from the medieval façade reliefs of Notre Dame La Grande, Poitiers to the Romantic prints of visionary William Blake, no painter has arguably ever devoted him or herself more fully to imagining the degenerative experiences of Nebuchadnezzar in the wilderness than Australian modernist, Arthur Boyd. 
  
Imbuing his king with Lear-like characteristics, Boyd embarked upon this impressive Nebuchadnezzar series in 1966 to illustrate a text on the theme by the scholar Thomas S.R. Boase (who subsequently published 34 of the works in his dedicated tome in 1974).3 Characterised by its frenzied energy, vivid colour and profound symbolic permutations, the series still remains one of the artist’s most sustained, encompassing more than a hundred works and featuring some of the most sumptuously executed paintings of his career. Elaborating upon the appeal of the theme for the artist, Boase suggests: ‘Here is a subject that leads immediately into Boyd's preoccupation in many other works with the fusion between man and natural forces, the involvement of man and beast... Other echoes link with Boyd’s own symbolism, the sinister dark birds, the gentle mourning dog. Behind the figures there are traces of the Australian landscape of his early inspiration. But if these works are enriched with such references, the myth is newly and freshly created, a second Daniel come to judgment [sic.] our own contemporary obscure and secret impulses.’4 
  
Given the artist’s renowned social conscience, indeed it is perhaps not coincidental that his Nebuchadnezzar series was produced at the height of the Vietnam War when audiences internationally were assailed with images in the mass media of cruel dictatorial regimes: villages incinerated, men and women tortured, children screaming from the pain of napalm. As one author notes, ‘self-immolations in protest actually took place on Hampstead Heath near Boyd’s house... and once more, a biblical subject by him was seen to be an allegory of the descent of humanity in a conflicted world.’5 
  
In Nebuchadnezzar, Rainbow and Waterfall, 1967, the king ablaze in golden flames has become barely distinguishable from the dry Australian bushland and musk pink waterfall – thus inextricably fused with the natural world in a manner that unmistakably foreshadows the artist’s interpretations of the Narcissus myth a decade later. As with other iterations, including Nebuchadnezzar Running in the Rain and Lion’s Head in a Cave and Rainbow6, here Boyd notably includes the motif of a rainbow, perhaps as a symbol of hope or sign of God’s covenant – or conversely, to denote the fruitless pursuit of an illusory aim (the ultimate downfall of his biblical protagonist). Either way, like the finest of Boyd’s Nebuchadnezzar achievements, the present offers an empathetic and emotive response to a harsh tale of moral instruction, giving compelling form to ‘…good and evil; things elemental and mysterious, things intensely human and vulnerable.’7 
  
1. Arthur Boyd, cited at https://www.bundanon.com.au/collection/exhibitions-page/active-witness/ 
2. Boase, T.S., Nebuchadnezzar, Thames and Hudson, London, 1972, p. 20 
3. Pearce, B., Arthur Boyd Retrospective, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1993, p. 26 
4. Boase, op. cit., p.42 
5. Pearce, op. cit. 
6. See Boase, op. cit., plates 22 and 40 
7. Oliver, C., ‘A Welcome to Arthur Boyd’ in  Retrospective Exhibition of Paintings, Drawings and Other Works by Arthur Boyd, ex.cat., Richard Demarco Gallery, Edinburgh, Scotland, 1969, n.p. 
  
VERONICA ANGELATOS 

Graey-Smith Guy 2 lots with essaysview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 39 and 40,
GUY GREY-SMITH 
(1916 - 1981) 
KARRI FOREST II, c.1976 
oil on canvas on board  
122.0 x 183.0 cm 
signed lower right: G Grey Smith 
bears inscription verso: KARRI FOREST / GUY GREY SMITH / No. 15 
bears inscription on frame verso: KARRI FOREST GGS  

PROVENANCE 
Gallery 52, Perth 
Private collection, Perth, acquired from the above in October 1979 

EXHIBITED 
A Festival of Perth exhibition: Paintings by Guy Grey–Smith, The Old Fire Station Gallery, Perth, 24 February – 16 March 1977, cat. 34 
An exhibition of paintings, drawings and woodcuts by Guy Grey–Smith, Gallery 52, Perth, 13 September 1979 – 3 October 1979, cat. 15 

LITERATURE 
Mason, M., ‘Honest, vital art show’, The West Australian, Perth, 18 September 1979  

ESSAY 
The Karri tree ( Eucalyptus diversicolor) is the tallest tree in Western Australia and one of the tallest in the world. Growing exclusively in the south-west of the state, it was a tree that became emblematic for Guy Grey-Smith throughout his career. Indeed, his first painting to enter the collection of the Art Gallery of Western Australia was Karri forest, 1951, described by curator Melissa Harpley as ‘one of his first Australian landscapes where (Grey-Smith) has enough confidence in his composition to focus on the trees and eliminate external reference points.1 More than twenty-five years later, Karri forest II, c.1976 continues this scrutiny in a densely orchestrated paean to colour applied in slabs of thickened paint demarcating the trunks as they soar above the arcs and arabesques of bracken ferns below. 
  
Grey-Smith is one of Australia’s key post-war artists, the first West Australian modernist to have a truly national profile exhibiting with the likes of Kym Bonython, Macquarie Galleries, Rudy Komon, and Ann Lewis of Gallery A. By the early seventies, the famous hospitality that he and his artist-wife Helen provided at their home in the Darling Ranges outside Perth was starting to wane as a constant stream of visitors disrupted much of their studio time. In late 1972, they took a break and drove to Pemberton in the south-west. Hearing that a house nearby was up for sale, ‘Guy went to look and decided to buy. It was one of the original timber-cutter’s cottages on a large sloping block surrounded by stands of majestic Karri trees. The sparse and simple wooden house was quite primitive but suited the two self-described “country personalities” perfectly.’2  They had found their refuge. The forests around Pemberton contain some of the largest Karri trees ever recorded, and unlike Guy’s childhood home of Boyup Brook, these giants grow close together and right to the edge of the roads. He discovered renewed inspiration living with the forests towering all around the town, bisected by clear-water streams, and animated by shafts of light between the leaves. It was a painter’s paradise and work after work emerged from his tiny, cluttered studio. Unlike the previous Karri paintings, Guy steps now stepped deep within the forest, where the densely-packed trunks cause dramatic shifts from shadow where the sun penetrates the canopy high above. One suite from 1974 was described by the noted curator Daniel Thomas as being ‘better than nature’s colours; they are like medieval stained glass, songs of praise by means of colour.’3 Melissa Harpley, who curated the major Survey Guy Grey-Smith: art as life at the Art Gallery of Western Australia in 20144 wrote in the catalogue essay of Guy’s fluency with colour, texture and the occasional brushed gesture. His use of colour and the impasto in the paint ‘is evocative of the visual experience of moving between light and dark, so common in a thickly wooded place, and firmly makes the viewer a part of the scene.’5 
  
Karri forest II was included in what was to become Grey-Smith’s last solo show in Perth. Newspaper art critic Murray Mason pointed to Karri forest II’s ‘interior intimacy’ advising that close inspection revealed ‘the artist’s vision and method impressively.’6  Many works from this Gallery 52 exhibition are now in noted state, university and corporate collections, and this lot’s companion Karri forest I has been part of the Janet Holmes à Court collection for decades. Similarly, Karri forest II was purchased directly from Gallery 52 by a famed Perth collection and has stayed within the family ever since. 
  
1. Harpley , M., Guy Grey-Smith: art as life, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, 2014, p.12 
2. Gaynor, A., Guy Grey-Smith: life force, University of Western Australia Press, Perth, 2012, p.92 
3. Thomas, D., ‘Delicacy in change’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 19 September 1974, p.7 
4. Guy Grey-Smith: art as life, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, 21 March – 14 July 2014 
5. Harpley , Guy Grey-Smith: art as life, ibid., p.13 
6. Mason, M., ‘Honest, vital art show’, The West Australian, Perth, 18 September 1979, p.19 
  
and

GUY GREY-SMITH 
(1916 - 1981) 
NIGHT SISTER, 1963 
oil on composition board 
75.0 x 61.0 cm 
signed and dated lower right: G Grey Smith / 63 
original artist’s frame 

PROVENANCE 
Christian Brothers College, Perth 
Private collection, Perth, acquired from the above in 1963 
Thence by descent 
Private collection, Queensland 

EXHIBITED 
Guy and Helen Grey–Smith, Christian Brothers College, Perth, 28 October – 9 November 1963, cat. 9 

LITERATURE 
Gaynor, A., Guy Grey–Smith: Life Force, University of Western Australia Publishing, Perth, 2012, p. 258 

ESSAY 
In December 1962, Guy Grey-Smith and his artist-wife Helen travelled to Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) for eight weeks. Guy carried a list of Sri Lankan artists and potters he wished to meet, or at least seek out their work; and subsequently delivered a lecture one night near the end of their stay. Unfortunately, his health was not robust having suffered a relapse some years earlier due to the tuberculosis he contracted during World War Two and was forced to seek advice from a chest clinic in Colombo shortly after the new year. This resulted in a prolonged stay in hospital and this image of a nursing sister doing her late night rounds in the wards no doubt stirred strong emotional memories for the artist, recalling his own time as a patient over the years, first as a desperately wounded POW following his near fatal leap from a burning plane during World War II (his left leg remained two-centimetres short as a result); and his subsequent infection by tuberculosis (family lore says he did this whilst assisting in the digging of an escape tunnel). This was then followed by the removal of half a lung due to the disease, an operation undertaken in 1944 whilst still a prisoner. The Grey-Smith’s return from Sri Lanka, however, was sweetened by the announcement that Guy had just been awarded ‘Best WA Entry’ in the Perth Prize for Contemporary Art for the tough and edgy Roebourne Pass. 
  
It was on his release following a POW exchange in 1944 that Grey-Smith began art studies at the famed Chelsea School of Arts in London. He developed his own methods of paint application using paint bulked up with a home-made beeswax emulsion, applied using scrapers onto a Masonite board prepared with an adhered layer of muslin. The years 1962 to 1966 may be considered as ‘classic’ years for Guy Grey-Smith as he gained greater confidence and fluency with his chosen technique; and Night sister, 1963, effectively demonstrates these aspects utilising a colour palette seen in contemporaneous paintings, such as View to the beach (Quinns), 1964, now in the Wesfarmers Collection, Perth; and Whyalla, c.1963, owned by Adelaide University. 
  
Night sister was exhibited as part of an incredible two-person exhibition that the couple held in October 1963 at the then-vacant Christian Brothers School in Perth. Their buildings were temporarily operating as a branch of the Adult Education Board and, spectacularly, the Grey-Smiths selected the enormous gymnasium as venue. Guy’s paintings, watercolours and drawings were perfectly augmented by Helen’s silkscreened fabrics making the vast space resonate with colour and design. Night sister has remained in the same family collection since its purchase there in 1963, and retains its original frame, made by the artist himself. 
  
ANDREW GAYNOR 
  
                                                              

Audette Yvonneview full entry
Reference: see Deutscher and Hackett auction, 3 May, 2023: lot 42,
YVONNE AUDETTE 
born 1930 
LANDSCAPE AT MIDNIGHT, 1966 – 67 
oil on plywood 
152.5 x 114.0 cm 
signed and dated lower right: Y. Audette 66 
signed, dated and inscribed with title verso: Y. Audette 1966 – 67 / landscape at midnight /  

PROVENANCE 
Private collection, Melbourne 

ESSAY 
‘The calligraphy – that’s why I like the transparency because you could see underneath it every form, structure, mark that had been put down before – nothing was ever lost. It is like the inside of a human being, everything is there, what you say and do is always there in human experience. I want to do this in my painting; to build up layer, upon layer – put on top. Everything underneath is important.’1 
  
Unlike many Australian artists at the time, Yvonne Audette took the unusual step, when choosing to venture abroad to further her career, of travelling to New York rather than London – a decision which not only reveals the young artist’s independence of mind and willingness to chart her own path, but more profoundly, impacted the entire course of her artistic development. Arriving in New York in late 1952, she accordingly enjoyed first-hand exposure to the burgeoning school of Abstract Expressionism through the work of celebrated exponents including Willem de Kooning, Robert Motherwell and Mark Tobey, before subsequently travelling to Europe, where she established a studio in Florence in 1955, before finally settling in Milan in 1963. Against the backdrop of Italy’s rich culture and artistic past, she was welcomed into a community of professional artists (including Arnaldo Pomodoro and Lucio Fontana) who encouraged her and provided an aspirational example. When she eventually returned to her hometown of Sydney in 1966, not surprisingly Audette cut an unusual figure among her largely male local peers. Well-travelled and well-connected with influential members of the New York Avant Garde, she had matured as a painter and was now working in a subtle and nuanced abstract style derived from the ambiguous mark-making of European Art Informel.  

A superb example of her work from the sixties,  Landscape at Midnight, 1966 – 67 exudes the confidence of an artist who had reached creative maturity. Although completed upon her return to Sydney, the composition was nevertheless commenced in Italy and thus maintains her European frame of reference through allusion and style, reflecting the multi-layered histories Audette had encountered in Europe: ‘When I went to Europe in the mid-50s… my work responded to the layering of society itself – the remnants of murals on walls, the frescoes, the whole antiquity of the civilisation.’2 Complex, multifaceted abstractions, indeed Audette’s works evolve over time; as Christopher Heathcote notes, ‘each painting… the product of months, sometimes years, spent deliberating over how the next stage should be approached and resolved.’3 In this regard, they betray striking affinities with the work of fellow expatriate, Rome-based American artist Cy Twombly, who shared her fascination with the ‘direct visual poetry’ of random, accumulated graffiti found on walls in ancient Italian streets and encouraged her to loosen up and experiment in the quest to discover her own unique voice. As Audette reflects, 
  
‘It was for me a learning experience – I was excited how images were painted out and worked over, reworked over and over – the courage to destroy in order to get something better, closer to what one wants to express. The ability to manipulate paint and seeing the energy this way of working produces in the painting. The importance given to gestural, spontaneous brushwork, acting as the very meaning of the work in itself. All this is very important to me and always will be, it is my way of working, the very act of painting being the content.’4 

Temporarily departing from her previous Cantata series which had emerged from Audette’s heartfelt love of J.S. Bach’s music, Landscape at Midnight represents an important transition work, inspired rather by Asian art and calligraphy. Significantly, such influence was absorbed both directly through classes with a Zen painting master while living in New York, but also more obliquely, through exposure to the work of artists such as Franz Kline, Pierre Alechinsky and Bradley Walker Tomlin, who were incorporating calligraphic brushwork into their abstractions. In a manner akin to a palimpsest, thus the image here is built up through accretions of colour and form, intuitive lines, shapes and scribbles painted with the brush, alongside shimmering transparent layers applied with a palette knife before being repeatedly scraped back and then applied again over an extended period. Carefully constructed yet seemingly ‘automatic’ in its creation, indeed the work offers a compelling study in space and depth which, enlivened by calligraphic gesture and lyrical colour, elegantly encapsulates Audette’s remarkable legacy as one of the first painters to bring abstract expressionism to Australia. 

1. The artist, quoted in Durie Saines, D.,  The Will to Paint: Three Sydney Women Artists of the 1950s, Joy Ewart, Nancy Borlase, Yvonne Audette, Masters thesis, Power Institute of Fine Art, University of Sydney, 1992, p. 100 
2. The artist, quoted in McCulloch-Uehlin, S., ‘Abstraction’s Forgotten Generation’,  The Australian, 23 April 1999, p. 9 
3. Heathcote, C., ‘Yvonne Audette: The Early Years’ in Heathcote, C., et. al.,  Yvonne Audette: Paintings and Drawings 1949 – 2003, Macmillan, Melbourne, 2003, p. 33 
4. The artist, quoted in Grant, K. ‘Interview’,  Yvonne Audette: Different Directions 1954 – 1966, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2008, n.p. 

VERONICA ANGELATOS
Redoute Pierre-Josephview full entry
Reference: see Arader Galleries auction, NY, Apr 23, 2023, lot 53:
Pierre-Joseph Redoute (Belgian, 1759-1840). “Hibiscus Heterophyllus” [Native Rosella - Australia]
Watercolor over pencil on vellum.
Signed lower left and titled ‘Hibiscus heterophyllus at center.
17" x 13 1/2" vellum, 24 1/2" x 18 7/8" framed.

Hibiscus heterophyllus, commonly known as native rosella or toilet paper bush, is a flowering plant in the family Malvaceae. It a shrub or small tree with white, pale pink or yellow flowers with a dark red centre and grows in New South Wales and Queensland.

-----------------

Pierre-Joseph Redoute is unquestionably the best-known botanical illustrator of any era. His work seems to demand the invention of lofty praise. A critic, writing of the 1804 Salon exhibition, noted that Redoute produced six paintings of flowers executed in watercolor for H. M. the empress ... are realistic and beautifully painted, ... perfectly imitating nature.” He concluded, The delicacy, exactitude, and elegance of the brushwork gives them great merit.” Vivant Denon, Director of Museums under the Empire, stated that Redoute’s gouaches were “masterpieces,” and the artist was similarly described both as the “Rembrandt” and the “Raphael” of flowers by nineteenth-century writers. It is thus unsurprising that Redouté occupies a central position in the development of European floral art, contributing to both the artistry and scientific advancement of botanical study.

Born into a family of artists in the Belgian Ardennes, Redoute’s talents were recognized and encouraged from an early age. His Flemish origins were significant to his development as a botanical painter, for it was in the Netherlands that the genre truly flourished. The eventual recognition of still life painting in France was primarily due to the arrival of Dutch artists, such as Gerard van Spaendonck and Redouté, who popularized the field.

In 1782, Redouté arrived in Paris; his entranve eased by his brother, Antoine-Ferdinand, who had already established himself in the city and had achieved some success as a decorative painter. Redouté was quickly attracted to the greenhouses of the royal Jardin des Plantes, and it was during a drawing expedition to the Jardin that he enjoyed a chance meeting with the noted amateur botanist and collector of rare plants, ...de Broutelle. L’Héritier taught Redouté about the dissection of flowers and their scientific representation and commissioned him to participate in the illustration of his Stirpes novae. This was a crucial turning point in Redouté’s career, increasing the young artist’s interest in the science of floral painting and leading to his involvement as a founding member of the Linnean Society of Paris. His institutional affiliation brought him the position of the painter to the Cabinet of Marie-Antoinette, allowing him access to the Trianon gardens and providing an introduction to Gerard van Spaendonck, Flower Painter to the King. This master was to teach Redouté the technique of painting on vellum, and in ca. 1875, he produced several works for the famous Vélins du Roi under Spaendonck’s direction. By his own account, his student’s work was more exceptional than his own.

Redouté had, as pupils or patrons, five queens and empresses of France, from Marie-Antoinette to Joséphine’s successor, the Empress Marie-Louise. His devotion to botanical illustration was secured during the French Revolution when the competition of 1793 determined that he would continue the botanical illustrations for the Vélins, thus succeeding Spaendonck. Despite many changes of regime in this turbulent epoch, he worked without interruption, eventually contributing to over fifty books on natural history and archeology. However, his masterpieces were those completed at Malmaison for the Empress Josephine.
Hemy Charles Napierview full entry
Reference: see Bonhams London, 26.4,23, lot 45:
‘The Hemy family set sail for Australia when he was 10 years old and, as he later recalled, 'I can remember it (the open sea) entered my soul, it was imprinted on my mind, and I never forgot it'. Hemy sketched and painted at locations on Narrow Street's river front and other notable artists who used Limehouse as a backdrop for their paintings included James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) and James Jacques Joseph Tissot (1863-1902). Whistler was living near the docks in Wapping between 1859-1863 and produced a series of etchings known as 'The Thames Set', which must have been a great influence on Hemy. These concentrated on the picturesque wooden buildings of the lower Thames, the barges, wharfs, warehouses and inns of Wapping, Rotherhithe and Limehouse, together with the barge men and labourers who worked there. Whistler also produced a major oil painting titled Wapping, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1864, no. 585, (collection National Gallery of Art, Washington). In 1869, Hemy was living in Fulham, not far from Whistler's studio in Chelsea. He may have been introduced to Whistler by his friend Tissot, whose work in the 1870s had a more direct influence on Hemy. Tissot painted scenes of beautiful ladies and sea captains on board ships and in interiors with the Thames and the black masts of ships seen through the windows in the background, e.g. An Interesting Story of c. 1872 (collection National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne). An interested spectator of Hemy at work was a young Frank Brangwyn. As a boy in the 1870s, Brangwyn often wandered down among the old buildings of the Thames where he would watch 'a magnificent looking man in a velvet coat painting a big picture. I would sneak up and admire him.'
full entry:
Charles Napier Hemy, RA RWS (British, 1841-1917)
The Riverside, Limehouse
signed and dated 'C.N.H. 1914' (lower right)
oil on canvas
122.5 x 182.9cm (48 1/4 x 72in).
Footnotes:
Provenance
With the Fine Art Society.
Anon. sale, Christie's, 17th May 1923, lot 155 for £157.10.0 (F.A.S vendor), acquired by Gooden and Fox.
William Hesketh Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme (1851-1925), Lancashire.
The Bungalow and Rivington Hall, Horwich, Lancashire sale, Knight, Frank & Rutley, London, 9-17 November 1925, lot 1105, p.68.
Bolton Museum and Art Gallery (acquired from the above sale).
Sale, Bonhams, 25th January 2012, lot 165, where acquired by the current owner.

Exhibited
London, Royal Academy, Summer Exhibition, 1914, no. 369.
London, Royal Academy, Winter Exhibition, 1922.

Literature
Royal Academy Pictures and Sculpture 1914, illustrated p 82.

The name Limehouse comes from the lime kilns established there in the 14th Century and was used to produce quick lime for building mortar. In 1660, Samuel Pepys visited a porcelain factory in Duke's Shore, Narrow Street, whilst the Limehouse Pottery, on the site of today's Limekiln Wharf, was established in the 1740s as England's first soft paste porcelain factory.

Limehouse became a significant port in late medieval times, with extensive docks and industries such as shipbuilding (which was established in the 16th century and thrived well into the 19th century), ship chandlering and rope making. By the Elizabethan era many sailors had homes there and by early in the reign of James I about half of the population of 2000 were mariners. Limehouse Basin opened in 1820 as the Regent's Canal Dock. This was an important connection between the Thames and the canal system, where cargoes could be transferred from larger ships to the shallow-draught canal boats. As the age of steam led to bigger ships, the facilities at Limehouse became inadequate. However, local ingenuity found a highly successful alternative: many of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution's lifeboats were built in Limehouse between 1852 and 1890. Though no longer a working dock, Limehouse Basin with its marina remains a working facility. The wharf buildings that have survived, are now highly desirable residential properties. Taylor Walker began brewing at the site of today's 'Barley Mow' pub in 1830. This stretch of the Thames was known as Brewery Wharf, whilst from a little further along the embankment, the first voluntary passengers left for Australia.

From the Tudor era until the 20th century, ships crews were employed on a casual basis and would be paid off at the end of their voyages. Inevitably, permanent communities of foreign sailors became established, including colonies of Lascars and Africans from the Guinea Coast. From about 1890 onwards, large Chinese communities at both Limehouse and Shadwell developed, established by the crews of merchantmen in the opium and tea trades, particularly Han Chinese, creating London's first and original Chinatown. The resulting opium and gambling dens soon attracted a wider clientele than visiting Chinese sailors, luridly described by, amongst others, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Oscar Wilde. Like much of the East End it remained a focus for immigration, but after the devastation of the Second World War many of the Chinese community relocated to Soho.

The Hemy family set sail for Australia when he was 10 years old and, as he later recalled, 'I can remember it (the open sea) entered my soul, it was imprinted on my mind, and I never forgot it'. Hemy sketched and painted at locations on Narrow Street's river front and other notable artists who used Limehouse as a backdrop for their paintings included James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) and James Jacques Joseph Tissot (1863-1902). Whistler was living near the docks in Wapping between 1859-1863 and produced a series of etchings known as 'The Thames Set', which must have been a great influence on Hemy. These concentrated on the picturesque wooden buildings of the lower Thames, the barges, wharfs, warehouses and inns of Wapping, Rotherhithe and Limehouse, together with the barge men and labourers who worked there. Whistler also produced a major oil painting titled Wapping, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1864, no. 585, (collection National Gallery of Art, Washington). In 1869, Hemy was living in Fulham, not far from Whistler's studio in Chelsea. He may have been introduced to Whistler by his friend Tissot, whose work in the 1870s had a more direct influence on Hemy. Tissot painted scenes of beautiful ladies and sea captains on board ships and in interiors with the Thames and the black masts of ships seen through the windows in the background, e.g. An Interesting Story of c. 1872 (collection National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne). An interested spectator of Hemy at work was a young Frank Brangwyn. As a boy in the 1870s, Brangwyn often wandered down among the old buildings of the Thames where he would watch 'a magnificent looking man in a velvet coat painting a big picture. I would sneak up and admire him.'

The Thames estuary continued to draw Hemy and he painted a series of pictures of the busy mouth of the Thames i.e. The Shore at Limehouse (exh. R.A. 1871, no. 435), Blackwall (exh. R.A. 1872, no. 198), London River - the Limehouse barge-builders (exh. R.A. 1875, no. 108), The harbour master's home, Limehouse (exh. R.A. 1901, no. 1039), 1901, Home at last, 1909, Limehouse Hole, (exh. R.A. 1910, no. 862) and The barge, Limehouse, (exh. R.A. 1918, no. 356). London River, his 1904 R. A. exhibit (no. 236), an evocation of Hemy's favourite stretch of the Thames with Hawksmoor's famous St. Anne's church prominent on the skyline, was bought by the Chantrey Bequest for £1,000 and now hangs in Tate Britain.

The old buildings on the banks of the river at Limehouse and Wapping provided excellent subjects and Hemy used the boatmen as models; his knowledge of the sea enabling him to establish an easy rapport with them. Of his RA exhibit Limehouse barge builders of 1875 (collection South Shields Museum and Art Gallery), Hemy wrote, 'I painted the picture altogether from nature sitting in a barge and talking with the workmen.'

Hemy's memorial exhibition took place at the Fine Art Society in 1918 where 101 of his works were shown.
For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Aboriginal screen-printed textilesview full entry
Reference: Aboriginal screen-printed textiles, from Australia's Top End / Joanna Barrkman, editor ; with essays and contributions by Jilda Andrews, Priscilla Badari, Sylvia Badari, Joanna Barrkman, Diana Wood Conroy, Franchesca Cubillo, Michelle Culpitt, Ingrid Johanson, Louise Hamby, Will Heathcote, Raelene Kerinauia, Cathy Laudenbach, Grace Lillian Lee, Nadine Lee, Gabriel Maralngurra, Raylene Miller, Isaiah Nagurrburrba, Hannah Raisin, Karin Riederer, Bobbie Ruben, Claire Summers, Bede Tungutalum, Phillip Wilson, Jude White, Felicity Wright.
"Aboriginal Screen-Printed Textiles from Australia's Top End presents the work of contemporary Australian textile artists working at five Aboriginal-owned art centers in the Northern Territory: Tiwi Design, Jilamara Arts and Crafts Association, Injalak Arts and Crafts Aboriginal Corporation, Bábbarra Women's Centre, and Merrepen Arts, Culture and Language. This book traces the history of textile screen-printing at these art centers, from its beginnings in the late 1960s to its recent emergence as a vibrant contemporary art form for Aboriginal expression. A profile of each art center is followed by representative artworks. Essays by Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal scholars, curators, and practitioners discuss the history, inspiration, and practical processes underlying these striking creations; the ways screen-printed textile designs express the artists' cultures, identities, and connections to lands; and the art centers' collaborations with fashion and interior designers"--
Publishing details: Los Angeles : Fowler Museum at UCLA, [2020] 
336 pages, hc, illustrations (chiefly color), color map
Ref: 1000
Tan Shaunview full entry
Reference: Shaun Tan : Bilder & Bücher = Books & images / [herausgegeben von Maria Linsmann für das Museum Burg Wissem, Troisdorf ; Übersetzungen: Eike Schönfeld, Gabriele Schröder, John Brogden],. Includes bibliographical references (p. [70-71])
Text in German and English.
This catalogue is published on the occasion of the exhibitions at Museum Burg Wissem, Troisdorf, October 10 - November 22, 2009; Literair Museum, Hasselt, Belgium, March 7 - May 15, 2010; Internationale Jugendbibliothek, Munich, May - August 2010; Museum im Schloss Bad Pyrmont, November 25, 2010 - January 30, 2011. 
Publishing details: Troisdorf : Museum Burg Wissem ; München : Internationale Jugendbibliothek, 2009, 67 p. : ill. (chiefly col.) ;
Ref: 1000
Valenzuela Mark view full entry
Reference: Mark Valenzuela, by Belinda Howden, Anna O'Loughlin.
"Mark Valenzuela is an artist of two worlds. Born and raised in the Philippines, Valenzuela moved to Adelaide, South Australia, as an adult in his thirties. His ceramics and installation practice has since drawn on this duality, oscillating geographically, artistically and politically between the two countries. As a maker of many-pieced iterative installations, Valenzuela has spent the past two decades exploring ideas of occupation, annexation and space-making. His works address themes of conflict, dominance, resistance and rebellion, and frequently combine the personal and the political. This monograph is the first major publication dedicated to Valenzuela's career. Informed by nearly twenty hours of studio interviews and the lived experience and up-close observation of Valenzuela's practice, the essays contained within take inspiration from Valenzuela's approach to art-making. They carve a shape-shifting path through his twenty-year career thus far, revealing a keen technician, a radically antiobject approach to ceramics and, ultimately, an artist who wilfully resists categorisation." -- Print version record.
Full contents • Preface
• Aliwarus / Anna O'Loughlin
• With opposite feet / Belinda Howeden
• Chronology
• Notes
• Acknowledgements.
 
Notes Edited by Penelope Curtin.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Wakefield Press, 2022 
Ref: 1000
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: Credo.
‘Credo brings together essays from different stages in Imants Tillers' career, from 'Locality Fails' to 'Metafisica Australe' and 'Journey to Nowhere', and closes with an essay written especially for the collection, 'The Sources', on the artists and writers he has drawn on in his art. These essays express an aesthetic credo which has larger implications for both literature and art created out of the experience of migration. His self-coined concepts like 'the idea of incommensurability' and 'reversible destiny', his ideas about appropriation and the importance of reproduction in Australian culture, the encyclopaedic range of his work, and his orientation and re-orientation towards Aboriginal art, articulate an Australian aesthetic which constantly seeks connectedness between the local and the international, and a broader understanding of the complexities of provincialism. What he calls 'the revolt of the margins' is evident in the provocative nature of his writing too, in its wit and irony and intelligence.’
Publishing details: Artarmon, NSW : Giramondo Publishing, 2022,
185 pages : illustrations ;
Ref: 1000
Embodied Knowledgeview full entry
Reference: Embodied Knowledge.
[To be indexed] Provides insight into art being produced throughout the state currently and examines the social conditions that have contributed to Queensland art's dynamic character. The book features photography and discussion of new work by 19 Queensland artists and prioritises the voices of people of colour, women and LGBTQIA+ artists.
Partial contents • Message from the Minister for the Arts Leanne Enoch
• Sponsor's message
• Foreward Chris Saines
• Introduction EllieButtrose and Katina Davidson
• Robert Andrew
• Megan Cope
• Heather Marie (Wunjarra) Koowootha
• Archie Moore
• Ethel Murray
• Ryan Presley
Publishing details: South Bank, Queensland : Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, [2022] 
224 pages : colour portaits
Ref: 1000
Airview full entry
Reference: https://www.qagoma.qld.gov.au/exhibition/air
Airview full entry
Reference: Air - \AAGOMA exhibition.
Expansive and inspiring, 'Air' at GOMA showcases more than 30 significant Australian and international artists, reflecting the vitality of our shared atmosphere.
Featuring beautiful and breathtaking moments, ‘Air’ is anchored by an expansive canopy of gently moving, giant air-filled spheres, from artist Tomás Saraceno in his most ambitious works to date.
Iconic Gallery Collection favourites including Ron Mueck’s monumental human sculpture In bed, Anthony McCall’s enveloping installation Crossing and Jonathan Jones’s lyrical evocation of wind, breath and bird call, untitled (giran) offer deeply immersive experiences.
Journey through the invisible, ethereal and vital element of air.
Presented across the entire ground floor of GOMA, the exhibition is a journey through this invisible, ethereal and vital element, reflecting on awareness of our shared atmosphere as life-giving, potentially dangerous and rapidly warming.
When artists address the global issues confronting us today, they have the power to change the world – by changing the way we look at it.
Chris Saines CNZM, Director QAGOMA
Artists
Jananne Al-Ani / Carlos Amorales / Oliver Beer / Dora Budor / Tacita Dean / Max Dupain / Peter Fischli and David Weiss / d Harding with Hayley Matthew / Mona Hatoum / Nancy Holt / Jonathan Jones with Uncle Stan Grant Snr / Ali Kazim / Anthony McCall / Lee Mingwei / Rachel Mounsey / Ron Mueck / Rei Naito / Albert Namatjira / Jamie North / Charles Page / Katie Paterson / Rosslynd Piggott / Patrick Pound / Lloyd Rees / Tomás Saraceno / Yhonnie Scarce / Wolfgang Sievers / Thu Van Tran / Jemima Wyman
Publishing details: Qagoma, 2022, [’catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Davey Philipview full entry
Reference: Philip Davey: The Art of Nature.
Painter, ceramicist, draughtsman and printmaker Philip Davey was born in England, arriving in Australia in 1958. His broad practice incorporates images of urban and natural landscape, as well as figurative narrative works, often inspired by classic Australian texts. He has been artist in residence at several Victorian secondary institutions. Davey has held solo exhibitions in Melbourne and Sydney, and his work is held by Artbank, Sydney; the State Library of Victoria, Melbourne and several regional collections. AUTHOR: Gavin Fry is a writer, artist and museum professional with fifty years experience working in curatorial and management positions in Australian museums, galleries and educational institutions. He is the author of twenty-six books on Australian art and history and a large number of catalogue and journal essays. In retirement Gavin has returned to his art training and exhibits as a painter in Newcastle and Melbourne. Gavin holds the degrees of Bachelor of Arts [Hons] and Master of Arts from Monash University and Master of Philosophy from Leicester University.
Publishing details: Australian Galleries, 2023,
Ref: 1000
van der Gracht Josephusview full entry
Reference: Antarctic landscape 1913 in the Universto\ity of Sydney Art Collection - created on Douglas Mawson’s expedition.
Perceval John the Rosstown Pub 1944 with essay lot 1view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Nolan Sidney Burke and Wills painting with essay lot 2view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Klippel Robert with essay lot 3view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Audette Yvonne with essay lot 4view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Tucker Albert with essay lot 5view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Williams Fred with essay lot 6view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Fairweather Ian with essay lot 7view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Boyd Arthur with essay lot 8view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Whisson Ken 1974 with essay lot 9view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Gleeson James 1999 with essay lot 10view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Booth Peter 2004 with essay lot 11view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Arkley Howard Psychedelic Head 1990 with essay lot 12view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian Art from the Selwyn and Renate Litton Collection
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 68pp
Goldie Charles Frederick with essay lot 32view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Balson Ralph constructive painting 1954 with essay lot 33view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Namatjira Albert 1950 watercolour with essay lot 47view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Mempes Mortimer Indian painting 1903 with essay lot 53view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Nerli Giroiamo 1889 oil Man with beer and cockatoo with essay lot 53view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Feint Adrian x 2 with essay lot 61view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Dupain Max Sunbather 1937 printede 1970s with essay lot 88view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Nolan Sidney River Bank 1965 with essay lot 92view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Dickerson Robert Women with trolleys 2001 with essay lot 94view full entry
Reference: see Smith & Singer catalogue 2.5.23, Important Australian and International Art
Publishing details: Smith & Singer , 2023, 224pp
Aboroginal art view full entry
Reference: see Adorned : traditional jewellery and body decoration from Australia and the Pacific, by Anna Edmundson, Chris Boylan ; photography by David Liddle. With ethnographic notes on each piece, bibliography; Produced to accompany a joint exhibition of the Macleay Museum and the Oceanic Art Society, on display at the Macleay Museum, 23 March 1999 – 30 January 2001.
 

Publishing details: Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 1999. Large quarto (300 x 210 mm), pictorial card in dust jacket; endpaper maps, pp. 112, illustrated throughout in colour and b/w,
Points of Focusview full entry
Reference: Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
photographyview full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Wedgewood C photographer p14 15 57view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
King H photographer p9view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Kaberry P photographer p11view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Martin Josiah photographer p10 45view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Hogbin H I photographer p15view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Hurley F photographer p17 48 49view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Lindt J W photographer p19view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Lawes W G Rev photographer p19 43view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Mawson D photographer attrib p20-21view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Shackelford J B photographer p26 53view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Chinnery E W P photographer p28 49view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Hogbin H I photographer p 15 29 30 39 40 45 50 51view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
English A C photographer p35 36 44 56view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Tattersall A J photographer p37 38view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Groves W C photographer p46 47view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Lowe G photographer p60view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Andrew T photographer p60view full entry
Reference: see Points of focus : historic photographs from the Pacific / curated and written by Rebecca J Conway. Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-63). No index.
Publishing details: University Of Sydney, N.S.W. Macleay Museum, University of Sydney, 2014, 64 pages : illustrations, portraits
Museumview full entry
Reference: Museum : the Macleays, their collections and the search for order, by Robyn Stacey & Ashley Hay. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 182-184.

Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Vic. : Cambridge University Press, 2007, vii, [1], 188 p. : col. ill., plates, ports.
Macleay Museumview full entry
Reference: see Museum : the Macleays, their collections and the search for order, by Robyn Stacey & Ashley Hay. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 182-184.

Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Vic. : Cambridge University Press, 2007, vii, [1], 188 p. : col. ill., plates, ports.
Sydney University museum Museumview full entry
Reference: see Museum : the Macleays, their collections and the search for order, by Robyn Stacey & Ashley Hay. Includes index.
Bibliography: p. 182-184.

Publishing details: Port Melbourne, Vic. : Cambridge University Press, 2007, vii, [1], 188 p. : col. ill., plates, ports.
Conceptual Artview full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013, hc, 92pp
Burn Ianview full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013, hc, 92pp
Cutforth Roger view full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013, hc, 92pp
Ramsden Mel view full entry
Reference: see 1969 The Black Box of Conceptual Art. A reconstruction of the first Conceptual art exhibition in Australia sent by Ian Burn, Roger Cutforth and Mel Ramsden in 1969 to Pinacotheca gallery, Melbourne. Their work – Xerox Books, Six Negatives and photo-documentation – sent from New York proved influential on a generation of Australian artists. The reconstruction will be accompanied by video, journals, paintings and other works made at the time by the three young expatriates to reveal not only a broader context for their work but also how their concept art came out of working at the edge of late modernist painting.
Curated by Ann Stephen
University Art Gallery, The University of Sydney
In association with QUT Art Museum
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2013, hc, 92pp
Light & Darknessview full entry
Reference: Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Modernismview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Late Modernismview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Power Collectionview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Power John Wardellview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Ball Sydney view full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Burchill Janetview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Burn Ianview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Callaghan Michaelview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Debenham Pamview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Henson Billview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Hinder Frankview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Johnson Georgeview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Johnson Timview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Lee Lindyview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Milpurrurru George Malibirrview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Nixon Johnview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Ostoja-Kotkowski Stanislausview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Persson Stiegview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Tillers Imantsview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Watsonn Jennyview full entry
Reference: see Light & Darkness - Late Modernism and the J W Power Collection, Edited by Ann Stephen. With index. With essays on the works and with biographical notes on the artists.
“Light and Darkness is a revelation. The first project to explore the JW Power Collection of contemporary art in its new home at the University of Sydney’s Chau Chak Wing Museum, this anthology and exhibition reveals many works not seen for decades. Under curator Ann Stephen’s deft editorial hand, some 70 works from the 1500 in the Power Collection point to key directions – the wonderful luminal and kinetic works from the late 1960s; the diversity of the 1970s, ranging from Jasper Johns to On Kawara; the turn in the 1980s to collecting art from Australia and New Zealand. All these works are illuminated by fresh research, in probing essays showing that scholarship is the flame that sustains all museums.” – Julie Ewington, Independent writer, curator and broadcaster, Sydney. Former Head of Australian Art, QAOMA, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Power Publications, 2021, pb, 240pp
Swann Heather Bview full entry
Reference: Heather B. Swann - An unmade bed, Station Gallery, 18 March – 22 April 2023.
An unmade bed showcases Heather B. Swann's celebrated, expressive drawing practice. Many of the works in the exhibition explore the perennially interesting subject of intimate human relationships: attractions and excitements, awkward pauses and passionate declarations, unmade beds and unmade bodies. Other bodies described in the show are caught in the rhythms and routines of physical work, while Swann's metaphor of the unmade bed also extends to a group of works declaring the precarity of the natural environment. All of the drawings display Swann’s characteristic visual wit, surrealist subversion and formal grace.
The exhibition sees the artist working on two very different supports: light, almost translucent Japanese papers, and heavy (640 gsm) milled French sheets. Pinned to the wall, crumpled into mosaics of light and shade, and wafting in each passing breeze, the Japanese drawings are raw, scratchy, needle-sharp. The framed European drawings are broad-brushed, wetter, wristier.
Heather B. Swann has established a formidable reputation as a maker of sculptural objects and ink drawings of dark, sensual and fantastic presence. With influences ranging widely across themes and imagery drawn from museum culture, history, mythology and natural science, Swann works outwards from the poetics of intimate sensation, emotion and thought. She is closely engaged with both the eternal present of perception and her own world of feeling, as well as making allusion to the particular crises of our troubled times. Her project is the translation of such fleeting phenomenological observations into form. Swann’s figurative reflexes often produce images of human or animal bodies, semblances of life kinked by surrealist convulsion and an instinct for abstraction.
Swann has been making art for more than twenty years, mostly drawings and sculptures, although in more recent years her practice has expanded to incorporate painting, video, installation and performance. In addition to presenting more than twenty solo shows since 1993, Heather has had work included in numerous significant curated group exhibitions, including Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra (2021); Magic Object: Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide (2016); and Streetwise: contemporary print culture, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra (2015). Her work is held in many private and public collections. In 2022, Swann was commissioned, in collaboration with Nonda Katsalidis, to create a permanent public artwork for the Setouchi Triennale, Japan.
Publishing details: Station Gallery, Suite 201, 20 Bayswater Road Potts Point, New South Wales [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Prentice Patriciaview full entry
Reference: A Place to Paint, by Patricia Prentice.
Publishing details: the artist, 24 pages, illustrations, some in colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Balsaitis Jonasview full entry
Reference: Jonas Balsaitis: A brief look back, exhibition, essay by Kate Nodrum
Born in a refugee camp in Germany in 1948 to Lithuanian parents, Jonas Balsaitis and family arrived in Australia a year later. Between 1964 and1967 he studied at Preston Technical School where Dale Hickey was one of his forward-looking teachers. He received both traditional teaching in painting and an education in avant-garde art history and exposure to contemporary practices. Jean Tinguely’s drawing machines made a particular impression. In 1968 he continued studies at Prahran College of Advanced Education where Lesley Dumbrell set her class the task of buying something from the local hardware shop with which to make a work of art; Balsaitis purchased an octagonal lead curtain weight and traced its outline to produce a series of geometric compositions which became his first series of paintings. Carolyn Barnes describes the artist’s intentions in her introduction to the artist’s retrospective exhibition at Monash University in 1994:
“While Tinguely had chosen the machine to represent the demise of easel painting at the command of wider social forces such as industrialisation, Balsaitis’s interest was in the proposition that electronic and computer-based image production would overtake not only art but all forms of representation… If the equipment had been available Balsaitis would have liked to generate the images [in his first series of paintings] electronically, but he had no access to computer technology which at that time was restricted to elite academic, corporate and military institutions. In place of access to such technology, Balsaitis used the systematized production of imagery based on the structure of the grid as a means of simulating computer processes in order to address the role of new technology in the contemporary world.” (1)

His next series of paintings had their origin in an article in Time Life magazine celebrating Western expertise and technology in dam construction and electrification in South East Asia, without acknowledging the war in Vietnam – a call up to which the artist was in the process of fighting. A collage made from the torn strips of this article eventuated in the three monumental Metron paintings exhibited at Pinacoteca in March 1972.

The next 5 years were dedicated to film making. Processed/Process (1972-75), inspired by the work of Nam June Paik, James Joyce and William Boroughs, is a montage of a broad range of found photographs and film to depict the material and capitalist drive of the West at the expense of the environment and traditional culture. Space Time Structures (1972-77) is a purely abstract animation of 48,000 photographs taken by the artist of two sets of drawings – one of perspectival line drawings, the other of simple central shapes in black and white – in a myriad of angles and combinations. The soundtrack was produced by the artist from a series of improvised recordings by fellow artists Asher Bilu, Mike Brown and John Matthews on a variety of real and invented instruments. In 1982 he produced Erratica from photographs taken on a trip through the Americas to Easter Island.

Returning to painting after the release of Space Time Structures, Balsaitis’s works broadly used stills from the film as starting points. Of the 1990 Imprint Image series, the artist explains:
“The Picture as an Image, was my thinking in terms of painting… The question philosophically is that the drawing was made as a tracing from a frame of my film [Space Time Structures] as this film was also drawn by me I see the whole story and find my hand in the machine.” (2)
Barnes describes the process of making works such as No Name (1978), which is included in this exhibition: “In paintings like No Name… Balsaitis approached the act of painting as a process of discovery, applying paint to the canvas then washing it off and using the thin traces of residual pigment which remained as the outline for subsequent forms. In this way the surface of the painting was slowly built up over time, Balsaitis revelling in the subtle nuances thrown up by the creative process, using them as the inspiration for subsequent formal decision making." (3)

In the 1980s the artist produced a series of etchings and screenprints at the Victorian Print Workshop which he exhibited at Pinacotheca in 1989, and a couple of which are included in this show. In 2007 he held an exhibition of works here at the Charles Nodrum Gallery dating from the 1980s to the 2000s which included: works from the Imprint Image series; a landscape-evoking painting (a more literal example in this exhibition being Hume, of the highway that heads north from Melbourne); as well as minimal, monochrome works – one titled Watercolour Painting that was a play with the medium of acrylic on canvas as if it were watercolour on paper. Charles Nodrum wrote of the exhibition:
“The surfaces are more painterly and at times almost seethe with activity: if they gave off sound you’d expect some of them to hum and others to crackle… in all cases he seems to be directly evoking a raw sensation unmediated by its visible manifestation - in other words, pure energy, pure scintillation, pure turbulence and, lately, pure tranquillity.” (4)
In this exhibition, while Horizon (1985) and Pixilated Area (1996) may appear monochrome line paintings at first glance, a closer look reveals a delicate play of yellow line amongst the red of the former, and a subtle field of white dots across the latter.

Whilst the Baker family are holding on to their 1968 pattern painting, the Metron paintings are all in closed collections (NGV, AGNSW, Kerry Stokes), and we don’t yet have plans to screen any of his films, we have in this small exhibition a neat survey of the artist’s post-film-making practice.

1. Carolyn Barnes, Jonas Balsaitis: Through the Surface - Paintings 1868-1992, Monash University Gallery, 1994, p. 4
2. Jonas Balsaitis, quoted in, Carolyn Barnes, Jonas Balsaitis: Through the Surface - Paintings 1868-1992, Monash University Gallery, 1994, p. 19
3. Carolyn Barnes, Jonas Balsaitis: Through the Surface - Paintings 1868-1992, Monash University Gallery, 1994, p. 17
4. Charles Nodrum, Jonas Balsaitis, Charles Nodrum Gallery, exhibition catalogue, 2007

Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 2023, [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Laycock Donaldview full entry
Reference: Donald Laycock: Musings
essay by Charles Nodrum
The 20th century saw an unprecedented extension of our knowledge of physics - specifically astro and nuclear. At both macro and micro ends we had to adjust to previously unimaginable numbers from nanometres to light years; atoms were shown to be made up of subatomic particles; vague shapes previously seen as patches of dust were shown to be galaxies comprised of tens of millions of stars; we were witnessing situations dating from the age of the dinosaurs. At the heart of all this was the telescope which had grown over the centuries from the hand-held tool of sea captains to the huge instruments of the astronomers. For three decades the Hubble telescope has been transmitting exceptionally detailed images which are of significance not just to professional astronomers but to a general public prepared to buy large format books lavishly illustrated with images we haven't seen before, accompanied by mind-bending explanatory notes. (1)

Don Laycock looks through these sorts of books with a fascinated eye. In art terminology the images range from minimalist (a few deftly sprinkled dots) to maximal (ranging from seething activity to gaunt, bold contrasting forms). Either way, they don't only tempt the eye (which they do) but they also tempt the mind to wonder how come this astonishing state of affairs came into being and how such an eerie beauty can emerge. Evocations ranging from the floral to the anthropomorphic can fairly quickly bring to mind the old saying "as above, so below". One can find astronomical images that relate to Laycock’s Lady Galaxy, 1971and as for his “fruit" paintings of 1970s works, their sexual readings are unavoidable, but they are also sufficiently abstracted to be suggestive rather than explicit. On this score we can see the fruit (bananas and plums) as symbolic of the two sexes, and hence of their generative role, but such a reading is similar to those dual interpretations we know from books on psychological perception: we see either two profile heads facing each other or a vase - but never both at once. Whilst the analogy is imperfect, it is always the case with ambiguous images that we are forced to admit that it is not a case of “either /or” but of "both / and". With that in mind it is difficult to deny the parallel interpretation of such images from outer space where galaxies, when viewed side-on, are clearly phallic and when, seen from the perpendicular, are circular. Not insignificantly, Oriental Dancers in an Underwater Garden,1964 (which predates the astro photography available to the public) bears a vague resemblance to the unnamed astral body illustrated in Leo Marriott’s The Universe. (1)

For the most part, such quasi-metaphysical musings are not seen as relevant, or useful, in the critical analysis of works of art but, like it or not, they can never be completely excised: the Rothko chapel - a suite of august, minimal monochromes, so prima facie the least likely to engender powerful responses - reputedly reduces virtually every visitor to an introspective silence, and some even to tears. Even if one acknowledges the notion that they may prefigure his later suicide and thus trigger a serious existential threat to those of a more fragile nature, such extreme responses only suggest the impossibility of any work of art being devoid of emotive content. How does this apply to Laycock since he does not evoke such reactions? Daniel Thomas, noting the connection between “fruit as erotica and, at the same time, as science fiction… [and having] extreme beauty and extreme absurdity” felt that it was the “hilarious quality that makes them act so effectively on the spectator.” (2) When asked by Geoffrey de Groen if his paintings “make one smile”, Laycock answered, “They make me smile” (3) and Janine Burke perceives a note of “gentle whimsey.” (4) If “hilarious” (OED “boisterously cheerful”) overstates, and if “whimsey” understates the case, maybe a middle ground may help. By his own admission, when his musings bring forth unexplained reactions, he neither laughs out loud nor groans with despair, he just smiles.

On a personal note, I clearly remember being deeply impressed by the first painting I saw of his in 1971 and in retrospect suspect it may have been for some of the issues above. Humans have been gazing at the night sky with awe for millennia, but it is only relatively recently that we have discovered that the reality is far more exotic. My early purchases were two early 60s paintings - Mount Olympus, c. 1962 a blocky landscape-based work, and the more calligraphic Mandala, 1962 which looked to the interest (at that time) of Oriental religions and philosophies. More recently I have been thinking about the gaze, that's to say, what we choose to look at. Landscape painters look at land and sky, marine painters look at ships and sea; some artists favour nocturnes. If landscape painters lift their eyes to the sky, they'll end up painting clouds; if you combine nocturnes with sky, you'll get stars and galaxies - and if you magnify them, you'll get Don Laycock's "nebulascapes”.

Critical response to Laycock’s work has varied widely over the decades. For the first 20 years it was active and, for the most part, positive. Patrick McCaughey - never easy to please - noted the "cosmic rhetoric to which the nude pictures fell easy prey" and in the same review praised his "greater rhythmic assurance" and saw Star Garden “explode with a vivacity of colour and an excitement of touch too long supressed by his weakness for the purple passage." (5) In an earlier review he described the fruit as "hovering in darkness...the experience of them is eerie, unsettling and comic" but "only in the most off-putting way"; and in the next paragraph that they "populate a silent, glistening universe with their warm and fecund presence." (6) Writing on the same show, Alan McCulloch was more visceral: he had "the curious feeling of actually existing in these waves of colour and the throbbing in and out of movement. Life, these pictures seem to say, is a crucible from which all form emerges and develops, and into which it finally melts, to be renewed later in a new cycle.” (7) McCaughey remained principally focussed on the paintings themselves, McCulloch took a brave effort to explain their nature and origin – he picked up on the then prominent interest in Oriental philosophy which tended towards a circular vision of the world rather than the more lineal notion in the Western theisms. Laycock himself said, "The major portion of my time is spent contemplating what we are all doing here". He is not alone there so it’s no surprise if he hasn’t succeeded in finding an answer. In my opinion, the dual readings of most of Laycock’s works seem to place them in that awkward but stimulating state of being in no single space and yet, paradoxically, no particular place – both at once.

1. Leo Marriott, The Universe, Chartwell, New Jersey, 2004, p 188
2. Daniel Thomas, Outlines of Australian Art, JosephBrown Collection, all editions, p 45
3. Geoffreyde Groen, Conversations with Australian Artists, Quartet, Melbourne, 1978, p151
4. Janine Burke, Donald Laycock, Art & Australia,Vol. 13, No. 2, Spring 1975, p 144-151
5. Patrick McCaughey, The Age, 10/10/1973
6. Patrick McCaughey, The Age, 25/9/1968
7. Alan McCulloch, The Herald, 25/9/1968

Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 2023, [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Wrobel Fred and Elinorview full entry
Reference: The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Ref: 145
Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collectionview full entry
Reference: see The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Hawkins Weaver cat 28 with short essayview full entry
Reference: see The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Rehfisch Alison cat 1 with short essayview full entry
Reference: see The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Black Dorrit c1950 cat 29 with short essayview full entry
Reference: see The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Heysen Nora self portrait 1936 cat 32 with short essayview full entry
Reference: see The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Thornhill Dorothy 1932 oil cat 11 view full entry
Reference: see The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection, Bonhams, Sydney, auction, 23 April 2023, 76 lots,

The Fred and Elinor Wrobel Collection
A Curated Salon
23 APRIL 2023 | STARTING AT 14:00 AEST

Remembering Elinor and Fred Wrobel
In the 1970s when I first visited Elinor and Fred Wrobel's Double Bay home I discovered a wonderland of art. Lively figurative works jostled for wall space with formal abstract paintings. Small gems by some of Australia's best-known artists were hung next to works by artists not even mentioned in standard art histories. Works by some of these artists were held in storage at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, but for the most part the paintings in the Wrobel collection were more interesting.
At that time, Nora Heysen was mainly mentioned as a footnote in discussions of her father, Hans. But the Wrobel collection held a 1936 self-portrait that showed the confidence of the young artist who, two years later, would become the first woman to win the Archibald Prize. The biggest surprise was an exquisite small fin-de-siecle study of three women by Portia Geach, an artist whose name I only knew from the prize that commemorates her name. Mary Edwards' Spring Time (1945), an exquisite oval floral arrangement, circling in on itself, looking for comfort and finding turbulence, is a reminder that the year before it was painted the artist was a plaintiff, and ultimately victim, of the ill-considered case against the Art Gallery Trustees when they awarded the Archibald to William Dobell.
The many paintings by women meant that in 1995 the Penrith Regional Art Gallery was able to hold a comprehensive exhibition, Australian Women Artists of the 20th Century, drawn entirely from the Wrobel collection. By then, the 20th anniversary of the first International Women's Year, public galleries were belatedly looking at women's art. Fred and Elinor didn't set out to buy work by women artists. Many of the works in their collection are by equally unfashionable men. The art market is a cruel place where five years of relative success can be followed by decades of obscurity.
As collectors, Fred and Elinor Wrobel actively befriended the artists whose work they bought, no matter how apparently obscure they may have been. This involved considerable research and Elinor's social and culinary skills. Artists were invited to see their work in its new home and over coffee and Black Forest cake, talk about art and life. Elinor was a superb cook, and enjoyed hosting dinner parties where she would connect long neglected older artists with younger people who appreciated art made many years before.
John Passmore, who had been a major figure and mentor to artists in the 1950s before fading into obscurity in the 1960s, became especially dependent on Elinor. He once threatened to destroy his unloved art, but after Elinor protested, he changed his will to leave her his entire remaining oeuvre, including the contents of his studio.
In 1983 Elinor and Fred opened Woolloomooloo Art Gallery as a "retirement project" where they showed work by younger artists as well as the textiles that Elinor loved. Some years after the gallery closed, they bought Woolloomooloo's Merryfield Hotel to be both their new home and the John Passmore Museum of Art.
Fred's passion for art was a consequence of his love for building boats. At first, he haunted the Friday auctions best known for selling "junk" and bought paintings associated with boats and marine life. Soon his taste expanded, so he would buy a work of art if it appealed to him, not caring about the name of the artist. Later both Fred and Elinor attended major art auctions but would never bid for major works by "important" artists, preferring to see what the auctioneers in their wisdom had deemed as unimportant. Over the years those in the art trade learnt to notice the art that interested the Wrobels.
There is a back story, another reason why art and the people who make it became a part of the Wrobels' large extended family. Fred, who owned Elizabeth Bay Marine Services, and loved Sydney Harbour so much that he always lived within sight of it, never travelled by train. He was sixteen when he and his family were herded into cattle trains to concentration camps. He never saw them again. His survival as slave labourer at the Czestochowa Ghetto was in part because he managed to get extra rations by making drawings for the guards. In Australia he found it easier to appreciate art made by others.
Fred died in 2015 and Elinor in March of this year. Their legacy is to remind us that works of art are personal both to the artist and their viewer, and connections between those who make art and those who appreciate beauty can be as meaningful as the work of art itself.
In addition, the ongoing value of their collection is a salutary reminder that the significance of an individual work of art does not depend on the current reputation of the artist. Art is indeed longer than life.
Joanna Mendelssohn
Publishing details: Bonhams, 2023, pb, 98pp
Scharf Theoview full entry
Reference: see Terry Ingram, ‘The boy wonder. Our Mozart of the etching plate plays it out again at Deutscher’s’, Financial review, Sydney, 30 July 1982.
Stephan Phillipview full entry
Reference: see Kiefer auction,Pforzheim, Germany, 24.5.23, lot 2505: in Australia (cover title). With 20 large format photographs, by Philipp Stephan Photo-Litho. and Typographic Process Company, Sidney circa 1888. ca. 43 x 53 cm. Starting with "Centennial International Exhibition, Melbourne 1888" (first sheet, therefore soiled), from plate 2 "Government House, Sydney" to plate 20 "Victoria Bridge, Melbourne" all sheets in good condition for age. - Very rare. - Photographer Samuel Phillip and lithographic-printer Adam Stephan invented the color-printed photo-lithographic process, combining photography and lithography. Their company was active between 1887 and approximately 1910 -


Cisz Hendersonview full entry
Reference: see William George auction, Edinburgh, 4.5.23, lot 70:
5552 - Original oil on canvas by Henderson Cisz of a Lady relaxing in an interior scene. Signed lower right. Winner: Artist of the Year 2007 & John Solomon Trophy Winner 2007. Born in Brazil in 1960, Henderson Cisz grew up in a small village near Maringa. His talent for painting was clear from an early age, but he never considered pursuing a career as an artist. Instead he entered the banking profession and continued to enjoy painting as a hobby. By the mid 1980s however, Henderson Cisz had become convinced that art meant more to him than banking! In 1986 he moved to London in order to study painting, and to make his passion his profession. He has never looked back and now paints full time in his London studio. A seasoned traveller, Henderson Cisz has spent time in Europe, Australia and of course his native South America. While he loves the ocean and has always found it a source of inspiration and joy, he is also a true city-dweller, and many of his most inspirational works feature scenes from the world's most beautiful cities. Painting in acrylic, oil or watercolour on canvas, Henderson Cisz's trademark palette utilises cool, soft tones to convey the atmosphere of his subject. His works are regularly displayed in London galleries and at international art fairs. "I love the effect that weather has on the urban landscape and must confess to a particular fondness for the rain! Not only does it cast interesting shadows and reflections on the slick sidewalks, but it also dictates the stance of the figures. Their slightly defensive postures and hunched shoulders lend a very specific, and to my mind curiously engaging, mood to the overall scene". H: 76cm W: 76cm D: 2cm
war artistsview full entry
Reference: see SMH war artists article 25.4.23, p17, ‘Artists recorded dramatic battles and complexity of soldiers lives’ by Helen Pitt.
Gittoes Georgeview full entry
Reference: see SMH war artists article 25.4.23, p17, ‘Artists recorded dramatic battles and complexity of soldiers lives’ by Helen Pitt.
Quilty Benview full entry
Reference: see SMH war artists article 25.4.23, p17, ‘Artists recorded dramatic battles and complexity of soldiers lives’ by Helen Pitt.
Albert Tonyview full entry
Reference: see SMH war artists article 25.4.23, p17, ‘Artists recorded dramatic battles and complexity of soldiers lives’ by Helen Pitt.
Dyson Willview full entry
Reference: see SMH war artists article 25.4.23, p17, ‘Artists recorded dramatic battles and complexity of soldiers lives’ by Helen Pitt.
Sharpe Wendyview full entry
Reference: see SMH war artists article 25.4.23, p17, ‘Artists recorded dramatic battles and complexity of soldiers lives’ by Helen Pitt.
Conrad Christina - mother of author Miro Bilbroughview full entry
Reference: see In The Time of the Manaroans by Miro Bilbrough (daughter of Christina Conrad), autobiography.
[’At fourteen Miro Bilbrough falls out with the communist grandmother who has raised her since she was seven, and is sent to live with her father and his rural-hippy friends. It is 1978, Canvastown, New Zealand, and the Floodhouse is a dwelling of pre-industrial gifts and deficiencies set on the banks of the Wakamarina River, which routinely invades its rooms.
Isolated in rural poverty, the lives of Miro and her father and sister are radically enhanced by the Manaroans—charismatic hippies who use their house as a crash pad on journeys to and from a commune in a remote corner of the Marlborough Sounds. Arriving by power of thumb, horseback and hooped canvas caravan, John of Saratoga, Eddie Fox, Jewels and company set about rearranging the lives and consciousness of the blasted family unit.
In the Time of the Manaroans brilliantly captures a largely unwritten historical culture, the Antipodean incarnation of the Back to the Land movement. Contrarian, idealistic, sexually opportunistic and self-mythologising too, this was a movement, as the narrator duly discovers, not conceived with adolescents in mind.
'This is no misery memoir. This is a very funny and closely observed romp. There are dazzling passages, signalled right from the start – the opening 20 or so pages are perfect, every sentence exactly right, the tone and shape and movement of her prose as closely fitted as a piece of music.' —Steve Braunias, Newsroom
‘A lost world of hippies and drifters breaks into gleaming life in these pages. Miro Bilbrough trains a poet’s tender, unsparing gaze on growing up female in the anything-goes 1970s. In the Time of the Manaroans lucidly portrays the visions and limits of the counter-culture, as well as all the fearful ecstasy of being young.’ —Michelle de Kretser
‘No comfortable, supine or conventional recollection, this is a quirky, zany and energetic piece of writing, confident in its method and enchanting in its prose style.’ —Gail Jones
‘It gives insight into a world and a soul few people will have encountered before; and does so with grace and acumen.’ —Martin Edmond
 
Miro Bilbrough is a writer and filmmaker who grew up in New Zealand and lives in Australia. Her poetry chapbook Small-time spectre was published by Kilmog in 2010, and she has a Creative Doctorate of Arts in screenwriting and screen studies from the Writing and Society Research Centre, Western Sydney University. Her critically acclaimed feature films are Being Venice (2012), which premiered at Sydney Film Festival, and Floodhouse (2004). Excerpts and trailers, as well as her six-minute ciné-poem Urn (1995), can be viewed at www.mirobilbrough.com’]
Publishing details: Victoria University Press, 2020, pb, 303pp
Swann Heather Bview full entry
Reference: Heather B. Swann - An Unmade Bed, exhibition catalogue at Station Gallery Sydney, 20 works, with thumbnail illustrations, and boiography
Publishing details: Station Gallery Sydney, 2023, 4pp
Ref: 145
Trusler Peter view full entry
Reference: Peter Trusler Watewrcolours by Peter Trusler from Birds of Australian Gardens.
"It is fair to say that Peter Trusler's paintings for the book Birds of Australian Gardens are revolutionary, and rank among the finest Australian natural history paintings ever done. The paintings were completed in 1978-1979. In his Artist's Note (page 11) Peter says; 'Where possible I prefer to work from life. A number of the paintings are portraits of individual birds and all of the backgrounds and plants have been painted from actual specimens ... The paintings for the plates were executed with transparent watercolour and gouache. While they were executed in a period of just over two years, the information needed has involved many more years of observation and study'*" Andrew Isles, 2022
 
I first met Peter Trusler nearly 40 years ago through his good friend Andrew Isles. Both had studied Zoology at Monash University. Andrew showed me Peter’s watercolours depicting the reconstruction of a Moa Bird, which I found remarkable. I soon became aware of Peter's extraordinary paintings illustrating the book Birds of the Australian Gardens, that were then in the National Bank collection. I have sold a few study sheets for these watercolours over the years but never dreamed that one day I would have the originals for sale.
 
We have joined forces with Andrew Isles Natural History Books in the promotion of these paintings which will be on view at our gallery and can also be seen at Andrew Isles book shop in Prahran by prior arrangement
Publishing details: Bridget McDonnell Gallery, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered}
Ref: 1000
kingston Peter
view full entry
Reference: article by Elizabeth Fortescue in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023, pages 12-17, illustrated
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Ref: 145
Ham Lizview full entry
Reference: see article on Contemporary photographers from the Librarty collection in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Teodoro Wendell Leviview full entry
Reference: see article on Contemporary photographers from the Librarty collection in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Janson-Moore Johnview full entry
Reference: see article on Contemporary photographers from the Librarty collection in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Wolf Fionaview full entry
Reference: see article on Contemporary photographers from the Librarty collection in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Lai Joyview full entry
Reference: see article on Contemporary photographers from the Librarty collection in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
photographyview full entry
Reference: see articles on Contemporary photographers from the Librarty collection, the mew photography gallry, in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Shaw Roderick and Francesview full entry
Reference: see article re Raderick Shaw’s designs for the ballet The Flying Pieman (story by his wifr and Frances) in Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023,
Publishing details: Open Book, magazine of the SLNSW, Autumn 2023
Tale of Two Artistsview full entry
Reference: Evelyn Syme and Iso Rae ‘A Tale of Two Artists’, , article in the NGV Magazine, Issue 39, Mar-April, 2023,
Publishing details: NGV Magazine, Issue 39, Mar-April, 2023,
Ref: 145
Syme Evelynview full entry
Reference: see Evelyn Syme and Iso Rae ‘A Tale of Two Artists’, , article in the NGV Magazine, Issue 39, Mar-April, 2023,
Publishing details: NGV Magazine, Issue 39, Mar-April, 2023,
Rae Isoview full entry
Reference: see Evelyn Syme and Iso Rae ‘A Tale of Two Artists’, , article in the NGV Magazine, Issue 39, Mar-April, 2023,
Publishing details: NGV Magazine, Issue 39, Mar-April, 2023,
Walsh Natashaview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, the artist’s choices in the Art Gallery of NSW, article p17-19
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
Gibson Jeffreyview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, article on the artist p50-54 by Laura Bannister
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
queer artistsview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, article ‘Queer Eye for the Cumbrae’ by Richard Perram, on queer or gay artists in Australian art history. p56-9
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
gay artistsview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, article ‘Queer Eye for the Cumbrae’ by Richard Perram, on queer or gay artists in Australian art history. p56-9
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
Queer Eye for the Cumbrae [Stewart]view full entry
Reference: in Look Magazine, article ‘Queer Eye for the Cumbrae’ by Richard Perram, on queer or gay artists in Australian art history. p56-9
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
Ref: 145
Stewart Cumbraeview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, article ‘Queer Eye for the Cumbrae’ by Richard Perram, on queer or gay artists in Australian art history. p56-9
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
Sutherland Janeview full entry
Reference: see Look Magazine, article on Jane Sutherland’s ‘After autumn rains’ c1893, by Wayne Tunnicliffe
Publishing details: AGNSW Society, Feb-March, 2023
Ref: 145
Heide Collection Theview full entry
Reference: The Heide Collection - Heide Museum of Modern Art. "Published on the occassion of the thirtieth anniversary of Heide Museum of Modern Art, November 2011"--verso title page.

Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2011 
163 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), ports
Ref: 1009
McGilchrist Ericaview full entry
Reference: Erica McGilchrist - For the record, edited by Linda Short. "This first account of her artistic output over five decades examines in depth her paintings, drawings and textile works as well as her high-profile commissions in the graphic and performing arts. Though remarkably diverse in style and subject, McGilchrist's work is defined by her strong humanist interests and the progressive social values she held close, reflecting her unswerving belief that 'you make art out of life as you live it'."--Back cover French flap. Essays by Linda Short, Dr Juliette Peers and Erica McGilchrist.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art in partnership with Lovel Chen, 2019,
139 pages : illustrations, portraits
Ref: 1009
Francis Alfred Dview full entry
Reference: see Bishop & Miller Auctioneers Ltd auction, UK, 7 May, 2023, lot 259: WW1 period sketch book, with some war related messages and sketches to include a landscape scene signed by 18230 Alfred D. Francis, Australian Engineers 23rd Nov. 1917, a dried leaf reading 10218 D. Burkett 3rd Section 10th field Royal Engineers ????, a coloured monogram illustration by Sapr. F.J. Hembery 1458 3/2nd Wessex R.E., and some unrelated sketches. messages and poems, housed in a leather bound album
Hembery F Jview full entry
Reference: see Bishop & Miller Auctioneers Ltd auction, UK, 7 May, 2023, lot 259: WW1 period sketch book, with some war related messages and sketches to include a landscape scene signed by 18230 Alfred D. Francis, Australian Engineers 23rd Nov. 1917, a dried leaf reading 10218 D. Burkett 3rd Section 10th field Royal Engineers ????, a coloured monogram illustration by Sapr. F.J. Hembery 1458 3/2nd Wessex R.E., and some unrelated sketches. messages and poems, housed in a leather bound album
Sherwood Barbaraview full entry
Reference: see The Barbara Sherwood Collection, Raffan Kelaher & Thomas, auction of 100 lots. 7 May, 2023.
Barbara Sherwood (1921-2021), was a Sydney artist working
mostly in the medium of printmaking and painting.
Barbara's work is figurative, exploring the different facets of
the media of drawing, painting and printmaking.
Themes of her work include the human form, still life, and
images drawn from her time in Papa New Guinea in the
1940s and 1950s, Sydney and the Blue Mountains.
RKT is proud to present this collection of Barbara's work in an
online auction.
ONLINE TIMED AUCTION
Bidding closes on Sunday 7th May, 7pm
VIEWING
Saturday 6th May, 9am - 12pm
50-54 John St. Leichhardt
Publishing details: Raffan Kelaher & Thomas, 2023
Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museumview full entry
Reference: Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Universirty of Sydney Chau Chak Wing Museumview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Chau Chak Wing Museumview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Nicholson William and familyview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Dobell William portrait of John Andersonview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Newland John William photographerview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Riji pearl shell ornament Kimberly region view full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
pearl shell ornament riji Kimberly region view full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Smith Grace Cossington Black Mountain XCanberra c1931view full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Power John Wardell view full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Fox Ethel Carrick North African sceneview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Smart Jeffrey The Stepsview full entry
Reference: see Director’s Choice - Chau Chak Wing Museum - The Universirty of Sydney, by David Ellis.
Publishing details: Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers ; Sydney : Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2020, 80 pages : illustrations (chiefly coloured), coloured portraits
Wrobel Elinorview full entry
Reference: see obituary in Sydney Morning Herald, 1.5.23
Passmore Johnview full entry
Reference: see obituary for Elinor Wrobel in Sydney Morning Herald, 1.5.23 (discusses Passmore will and Museum.)
Kaminski Dorisview full entry
Reference: see artist’s website: https://www.robertwilson.com.au/page4.html Doris Kaminski was born in New York City and spent her early years on Long Island.  She attended the University of South Carolina before coming to live permanently in Australia in l968. She spent ten years at Nowra on the lush South Coast, painting that wonderful landscape.
  
Early in her career she lived in England for two years, first in London and later in a thatched malt house in Kent.  It was during this period that she had an opportunity to travel and paint in Europe and she held an exhibition of her work in U. K.  She studied at the Morley College in London and at the Maidstone School of Art in Kent.

For many years Doris worked exclusively in oils, but after much experimenting she found herself to be more fluent in acrylic, pastel and gouache.  She enjoys the immediacy of the water-based media and the soft harmonies of pastel and often uses them in combination. Recently acrylics seem to have become the favoured medium.  Doris's work is charming and individual and she is able to transform every day situations into exquisite works of art.  

Doris's works are in many important private collections in this country and overseas. She travels annually to New York and visits the many wonderful galleries of that city to gain inspiration. Doris has completed an important commission of works for the Netherlands Merchant Bank ABN AMRO.  She exhibits her work in Sydney, Brisbane and in Victoria.

She is a Fellow of the Royal Art Society of New South Wales and was the winner of the Award of Distinction given by the Society.  In 2002 she won the North Sydney Art Prize for best work on paper and a major painting was selected to hang in the Mosman Prize.   

Recently, Doris was Artist in Residence at the Renaissance Sydney Hotel as well as on the Norwegian Star Cruise Ship. She conducts workshops, has been chosen to judge art exhibitions and teaches privately.  She has also tutored at the Combined Art Societies, Art in Action at Kurrajong. 

Doris lives in the seaside village of Bundeena, South of Sydney in the Royal National Park.  Studio:  58 Brighton St. Bundeena. PH 02 9527 1318

email:  robart42@optusnet.com.au  &  www.doriskaminski.com.au
Wilson Robert view full entry
Reference: see artist’s https://www.robertwilson.com.au/page4.html

Robert Wilson was born in 1942 and grew up in the beautiful Towac Valley, near Orange. He has lived in different areas of the central west and won the first of his many awards in 1964 at the Parkes show.
  Although Robert is self-taught, he studied under Arthur Murch and Henry Hanke at the Royal Art Society life classes.  He has spent many years painting and observing the landscape, learning from it and from his fellow artists. In recent years he has studied in the USA, England and France.
  Robert taught painting for twenty years at the Mitchell School of Creative Arts at Charles Sturt University in Bathurst. He now teaches at the Grafton Artsfest, which is held each year in September. He is  sought after as an art judge and for his stimulating demonstrations to art groups.
  Robert's work has been presented  at various regional galleries throughout N.S.W.
  Robert has held many successful exhibitions in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra and his works are represented  internationally  in the Westpac collection London, Commonwealth Bank collection  as well as  in many private collections throughoutthe U.S.A, Europe, Japan  and Korea.The  Prime Minister’sdepartment has regularly purchased paintings  for  presentation  to  foreign  dignitaries.    
Robert has been painting professionally since 1970 and in that time has held over forty one-man exhibitions throughout Australia. He has been Artist in residence five times at the Ayers Rock Yulara Resort and spent some time as Art Director onboard the cruise ship Norwegian Star. He spends most of his time travelling and painting in the Australian outback. Robert is a Fellow of the Royal Art Society.



Postle Bruceview full entry
Reference: Bruce Postle : the image maker.
The definitive collection of photography by one of Australia’s leading and most accomplished photo-journalists. Bruce Postle’s archive is held in the State Library of Victoria.
‘Bruce Postle is a multi-award winning photojournalist. He began his career at Queensland Country Life, moving on to Brisbane’s Courier Mail and then to The Age in 1969. In 2007 Bruce was awarded a Quill Lifetime Achievement Award by the Melbourne Press Club. In September 2014 he was made an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Institute for Professional Photography (AIPP) ‘for his outstanding contribution to the photographic industry’ and in October 2014 he was inducted as one of the foundation members of the Victorian Media Hall of Fame.’ – SLV website.


Publishing details: Elm Grove Press, 2011. Oblong folio, illustrated laminated boards in slipcase, light handling marks, pp. xxvi; 374, extensively illustrated. Limited to 1000 numbered copies signed by the photographer.
Ref: 1000
Skaw Alview full entry
Reference: see Theodore Bruce, Australian & International, May 15, 2023, lot 6192 Al Skaw 
Australia/Canada (b. 1951) 
Moroccan Journey 1996 
Oil on canvas 
Signed & dated lower right
150 x 135 cm

20/20 - shared visionsview full entry
Reference: 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Artbankview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Shared Visionsview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Ah Chee Myraview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Abdulla Ian Wview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Khadim Aliview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Bell Richardview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Bennett Gordonview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Campbell Robert Jrview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Cleveland Barbaraview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Crichton Richardview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Davies Isabelview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Dement Lindaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Ebatarinja Walterview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Ely Bonitaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Garromarra Sallyview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Inkamala Reinholdview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Ishak Raafatview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Ives Harleyview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Nyurpaya Kaika view full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Kantilla Kittyview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Kelly Deborahview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Kingpins Theview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Kozic Mariaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Marika Dhuwarrwarrview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Mawurndjul Johnview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
McDiarmid Davidview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Namatjira Lenieview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Nambayana Nellieview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Napangardi Maureen Poulsonview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Nasr Nasimview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Njiminjuma Jimmyview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Oliver Bronwynview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Pareroultja Ivyview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Pan Mary Katatjukaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Roberts Thomview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Rrap Julieview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Scardifield Kateview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Staunton Madonnaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Sylvester Darrenview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Thaiday Ken Snrview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Watson Jennyview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Tjampitjinpa Kaapa Mbitjanaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Whiskey Kayleneview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Wiggan Royview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Williams Kunmanara Mumu Mikeview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Goodwin Tuppy Ngintjaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Yore Paulview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
Yunupingu Nyapanyapaview full entry
Reference: see 20/20 - shared visions. A catalogue to accompany the Artbank exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions to mark the organisations 40th anniversay. First published 2020 - to mark the exhibition 20/20: Shared Visions in celebration of Artbank's 40th anniversary, November 2020 - March 2021.
Publishing details: Artbank, 2020, 129 pages : colour illustrations
view full entry
Reference:
Backhaus-Smith Rexview full entry
Reference: Into the Golden West. A selection of drawings by Queensland artist Rex Backhaus-Smith, featuring the old gold towns of New South Wales’
central golden West. By John Keeble Winn.
Publishing details: Boolarong Publications. 1979. Oblong 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. 44pp. b/w ills.
Ref: 1000
Please D Colbron view full entry
Reference: FORESTS AND FLOWERS OF MOUNT WELLINGTON, TASMANIA. Illustrated by D.Colbron Please.
Publishing details: Tasmanian Museum & Art Gallery. n.d. (c.1960s) Ill.wrapps. 22pp
Ref: 1000
Cohn Olaview full entry
Reference: FERSON, Mark J. & COHN, Shelley. THE BOOKPLATES OF OLA COHN.
Publishing details: Syd. New Australian Bookplate Soc. 2023 Or.ill. wrapps. 28pp. b/w ills. Fine. 1st ed. Edition of 150 copies of which 80 are reserved for members. Society Newsletter Supplement No.5.
Ref: 1000
Gamble Allan view full entry
Reference: ST MARY’S BASILICA, SYDNEY. Part of a nation’s heritage. With introduction by A.E.Cahill. Pen drawings.


Publishing details: Syd. St.Mary’s Cathedral. 1982. Oblong 4to. Or.bds. Dustjacket. unpag. (ca.62pp.) col.front.
& b/w ills. Fine. 1st ed.
Ref: 1000
Gill STview full entry
Reference: see GILL, S.T. & CHEVALIER, N. VICTORIA ILLUSTRATED, 1857 & 1862. Engravings from the original edition. Facsimile ed. Notes by W.H.Newnham.
Publishing details: Lansdowne Press 1971, Small Quarto, hc, dw, 129 pages.
Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: see GILL, S.T. & CHEVALIER, N. VICTORIA ILLUSTRATED, 1857 & 1862. Engravings from the original edition. Facsimile ed. Notes by W.H.Newnham.
Publishing details: Lansdowne Press 1971, Small Quarto, hc, dw, 129 pages.
humourview full entry
Reference: see Illustrated Treasury of Australian Humour
Michael Sharkey. Numerous illustrations by Australian cartoonists and illustrators. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Oxford University Press Australia, Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 1988. Hard Cover. dust , 310pp
cartoonistsview full entry
Reference: see Illustrated Treasury of Australian Humour
Michael Sharkey. Numerous illustrations by Australian cartoonists and illustrators. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Oxford University Press Australia, Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 1988. Hard Cover. dust , 310pp
illustratorsview full entry
Reference: see Illustrated Treasury of Australian Humour
Michael Sharkey. Numerous illustrations by Australian cartoonists and illustrators. [to be indexed]
Publishing details: Oxford University Press Australia, Melbourne, VIC, Australia, 1988. Hard Cover. dust , 310pp
Parkinson Sydneyview full entry
Reference: SOTHEBY’S. THE FLORILEGIUM. Cook - Banks - Parkinson, 1768-1771. When Joseph Banks was appointed to join the Royal Navy on a ‘scientific expedition’ to the south Pacific Ocean, he funded 8 other artists to join him, one of these was Sydney Parkinson. Auction cat.
Publishing details: Melb. Sotheby’s. 1988. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 200pp. Slight wear to corners. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white.
Ref: 1000
Woolston George view full entry
Reference: see Antiquariat & Auktionshaus Schramm, auction, Kiel, GermanySaturday 03 June, 2023, lot 533 - Woolston, George and Barratt, Walter (Australia, 19th-20th century). Captain's painting of the sailing ship 'Marie'. Oil on canvas. Circa 1905. signed lower left 'Woolston + Barratt, Newcastle, N.S.W.'. 50 x 76 cm. Framed and with mounted curved name plate. In Newcastle, Australia, the painter Barratt and the photographer Woolston worked together for several years and created, among other things, captain's pictures.- White three-master under full sail and the national flag of the German Reich on choppy seas. Probably the smooth deck corvette SMS Marie of the Imperial Navy, built in Hamburg in 1880.





Barratt Walterview full entry
Reference: see Antiquariat & Auktionshaus Schramm, auction, Kiel, GermanySaturday 03 June, 2023, lot 533 - Woolston, George and Barratt, Walter (Australia, 19th-20th century). Captain's painting of the sailing ship 'Marie'. Oil on canvas. Circa 1905. signed lower left 'Woolston + Barratt, Newcastle, N.S.W.'. 50 x 76 cm. Framed and with mounted curved name plate. In Newcastle, Australia, the painter Barratt and the photographer Woolston worked together for several years and created, among other things, captain's pictures.- White three-master under full sail and the national flag of the German Reich on choppy seas. Probably the smooth deck corvette SMS Marie of the Imperial Navy, built in Hamburg in 1880.





Hanrahan Barbaraview full entry
Reference: Iris in her garden, by Barabara Hanrahan
23 relief etchings by the author.
Publishing details: Canberra, Officina Brindabella [Brindabella Press], 1991. Edition limited to 250 numbered and signed copies, of which nos. 1-30 were casebound , nos. 31-250 being in wrappers (this is number 64). Octavo, limp cards in dustjacket, cover illustration and title label to spine, 64 pp,
Ref: 1000
Minyintiri Dickie (1915-2014view full entry
Reference: Minyintiri : life in layered time : 25 March-8 May 2021. Catalogue of an exhibition of works by Ernabella artist Dickie Minyintiri (1915-2014) held from 25 March-8 May 2021 at D’Lan Contemporary, Melbourne.
Publishing details: Armadale, VIC : D’Lan Contemporary, 2021. Quarto (280 x 215 mm), pictorial stiff wrappers, 44 pp., illustrated in colour;
Ref: 1000
Tjanpi view full entry
Reference: Tjanpi by McGREGOR, Ken and TRIMBLE, Judith - on the Tjanpi Desert Weavers.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Macmillan Art Publishing, 2011.  Series: Macmillan mini-art series number 19. Small square octavo, pictorial boards in dust jacket, 144 pp extensively illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Del Mace Gillview full entry
Reference: Gill Del-Mace “Embody” Images of nudes and the female form by the Melbourne realist painter.
Publishing details: Melbourne : Delshan Art Gallery, circa [2004]. Quarto, illustrated self wrappers, [pp. 8], illustrations, text.
Ref: 1000
Del Mace Gillview full entry
Reference: Magic Realism : A Collection of Works by Jill Del’MaceCatalogue of Jill Del’Mace’s haunting realist images with full page colour plates and accompaning prose.
Publishing details:
n.l. : Export Australia, 1989. Quarto, pictorial wrappers.
Rubbo Ellenview full entry
Reference: see Travels with my Art by Michael Rubbo. [’I've spent my life as a filmmaker. But through my 40 years making both documentaries and features, I've had to get out of the dark, out of the cutting room and be in nature.

My family has a history of doing this via painting. Both my grandfather, Antonio Dattilo Rubbo, and my mother, Ellen Rubbo, painted plein air. So It was natural that my way of getting outside, has been to set up an easel, let the wind buffet my canvas, let the bugs land in the sticky oils, and people stop to be curious and comment. Be an impressionist.

This book is about the results of all that painting in Canada, in Finland, and in Australia. In some cases, it's been so intense that as well as making the movies, I've become the village painter, the teller of the local story. I argue in the book that, taking ownership of a scene by painting it, is a wonderful way to soak up the restless energy we all have, energy which can see us carving up the countryside before we know it . I tell that by painting, you leave your mark but make no mark, and that's a very good strategy. It's also a story to cherish and art I think, is 50% story. Because selling was never the object, I have virtually all the oils I've ever done. Those I don't have I've recently repainted for the book . That being so, it's been quite easy to put them all together into this book to record a lifetime of art on the side.

I have also more recently started art which is activist. I've been using my art to draw attention to beautiful places and buildings which are under threat from development. I've done this in our village of Avoca Beach, north of Sydney, opposing the redevelopment of the charming single screen, Avoca Theatre.

Most recently, I've also become through drawing, linocuts and solar prints, a passionate advocate for the sort of stately cycling that they do in Europe. That way of riding a bike, sitting up straight not head down and hell-bent, not helmeted and blazoned and vis gear, practising a lovely way to ride that we've mostly missed out on in Australia. Travels with my Art thus ends with my bicycle art and the general thought, what does this all add up to? What value does it have?

As a painter I'm an impressionist. The original Impressionists had to fight the Paris art establishment and a bitter fight it was, both depressing and energising. Energising because they knew they were seeing the world in a way that was new and important. But now, there's nothing new about being an impressionist, so nobody has much cared about what I've done except family and fellow villagers, and so I've enjoyed a sort of lonely happiness, rounded by this book.

Mike Rubbo, August 2017’]
Publishing details: self-published, 2017, hc. dw, 133pp
Dattilo Rubbo Anthony view full entry
Reference: see Travels with my Art by Michael Rubbo. [’I've spent my life as a filmmaker. But through my 40 years making both documentaries and features, I've had to get out of the dark, out of the cutting room and be in nature.

My family has a history of doing this via painting. Both my grandfather, Antonio Dattilo Rubbo, and my mother, Ellen Rubbo, painted plein air. So It was natural that my way of getting outside, has been to set up an easel, let the wind buffet my canvas, let the bugs land in the sticky oils, and people stop to be curious and comment. Be an impressionist.

This book is about the results of all that painting in Canada, in Finland, and in Australia. In some cases, it's been so intense that as well as making the movies, I've become the village painter, the teller of the local story. I argue in the book that, taking ownership of a scene by painting it, is a wonderful way to soak up the restless energy we all have, energy which can see us carving up the countryside before we know it . I tell that by painting, you leave your mark but make no mark, and that's a very good strategy. It's also a story to cherish and art I think, is 50% story. Because selling was never the object, I have virtually all the oils I've ever done. Those I don't have I've recently repainted for the book . That being so, it's been quite easy to put them all together into this book to record a lifetime of art on the side.

I have also more recently started art which is activist. I've been using my art to draw attention to beautiful places and buildings which are under threat from development. I've done this in our village of Avoca Beach, north of Sydney, opposing the redevelopment of the charming single screen, Avoca Theatre.

Most recently, I've also become through drawing, linocuts and solar prints, a passionate advocate for the sort of stately cycling that they do in Europe. That way of riding a bike, sitting up straight not head down and hell-bent, not helmeted and blazoned and vis gear, practising a lovely way to ride that we've mostly missed out on in Australia. Travels with my Art thus ends with my bicycle art and the general thought, what does this all add up to? What value does it have?

As a painter I'm an impressionist. The original Impressionists had to fight the Paris art establishment and a bitter fight it was, both depressing and energising. Energising because they knew they were seeing the world in a way that was new and important. But now, there's nothing new about being an impressionist, so nobody has much cared about what I've done except family and fellow villagers, and so I've enjoyed a sort of lonely happiness, rounded by this book.

Mike Rubbo, August 2017’]
Publishing details: self-published, 2017, hc. dw, 133pp
Rubbo Anthony Dattilo see Dattilo-Rubbo Anthontview full entry
Reference:
Rowan Ellisview full entry
Reference: see article on Rowan’s painted screen, in the NGV Magazine, issue 40, May-June 2023, p 84-6, by Sophie Gerard, illustrated.
Publishing details: [a copy in ‘In Search of Beauty: Hilda Rix Nicholas' Sketchbook Art’, by Karen Johnson, in Scheding Library]
Dobell Williamview full entry
Reference: The Prize by Kim E. Anderson [fiction]
‘When two artists enter the 1943 Archibald Prize, a scandal erupts that grips not only the art world, but the nation. A poignant love story with shattering consequences, inspired by real-life events. 'Is that what you want to do? Peer into my soul and capture my flaws, for all to see?' As World War II draws to a close, Australian society is still deeply conservative. Homosexuality is illegal and the scourge of Modernism is infecting Australian art. When William Dobell paints a portrait of lover and fellow artist Joshua Smith, he is awarded Australia's most prestigious art prize. However, Dobell's celebration is cut short after a protest is lodged by his competitors, who claim the painting is a caricature. Both artist and sitter soon find themselves in the glare of the spotlight when a court case to determine the matter turns into a public spectacle. Bill and Joshua's relationship is put under pressure and at risk of being exposed as they are caught in a world where they must choose between love and art: between acceptance and exile. 'An absorbing and intriguing story that will appeal to art and history lovers alike.' Belinda Alexandra 'Anderson's gripping, meticulously researched narrative dissects careers and relationships destroyed by boundless ambition and entitlement, by the shockingly conservative 1940s art scene in Sydney, in which a trial is held to determine the very meaning of a work of art. The Prize is an urgent and fascinating read for anybody who has ever been interested in the turbulent art world of 20th century Australia.' Melissa Ashley.’
Publishing details: Pantera Press, 2023, 320pp, pb.
Ref: 1009
Barnard Simonview full entry
Reference: see A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen’s Land, written and illustrated by Simon Barnard. Includes bibliographical references and index. For secondary school age. Children's Book Council of Australia Awards, Eve Pownall Award for Information Books, winner, 2015. [’Seventy-three thousand convicts were transported to the British penal colony of Van Diemen's Land in the first half of the nineteenth century. They played a vital role in the building of the settlements, as well as the running of the newly established colony. Simon Barnard's A - Z of Convicts in Van Diemen's Land is a rich and compelling account of the lives of the men, women and children who were transported to Tasmania for crimes ranging from stealing bread to poisoning family members. Their sentences, punishments, achievements and suffering make for fascinating reading. And the spectacular illustrations, each one carefully drawn in meticulous detail from contemporary records, bring this extraordinary history to life.’]
Publishing details: Text Publishing Company, 2014, 87 pages : colour illustrations, colour maps. Hardcover.Large format
Petty Bruceview full entry
Reference: see The Monthly, May 2023,
Bruce Petty’s joke in the machine
By Don Watson. ‘In memory of the political cartoonist who stood against capitalism, exploitation, groupthink and bullshit’
Hall Norman (1910-1978 publiasher and photographer ? view full entry
Reference: see Millon auction, Paris, 23.5.23, Hall is listed as provenace for numerous photographic lots with boigraphical note, eg at lot 133:

Provenance: Collection of Norman Hall (1910-1978), a pioneering and influential figure in post-war publishing and press photography. Born in Australia, he trained as a journalist in the family business that owned the Narrogin Observer. After the war, he moved to London, where he edited the "Photography magazine and yearbook" and "The British Journal of Photography". In 1962, he was appointed picture editor of the "Times".
Endowed with a fine "visual intelligence", he uses the power of the image and generously encourages the talent of young photoreporters. He advises them and gives them commissions. In particular, he promoted the work of Bill Brandt and accompanied Henri Cartier-Bresson's exhibition in London in 1957.
Avant-garde in his treatment and use of the image, Norman Hall's contribution to having built a bridge between press photography, known as "disposable", and "recognized" photography, can be seen today as major. Some press prints can pass from a status of "glossy paper" of magazines to valued and respectable prints to collect.

Bibliography:
- "Remembering Norman Hall, Picture Editor, The Times," Dave Hendley, 2014.
- "The photo detective," interview with Lisa Coleman by Peter Trute, "Uniken spring 2011" magazine, p. 20.



Nolan Sidneyview full entry
Reference: Joels auction, 28 May, 2023, 228 lots.
This collection of original works from the Estate of Lady Mary Nolan offers the largest single auction of Sidney Nolan artworks ever presented to market, with works spanning from the 1950s onwards. With the majority of artworks buyable at under $5,000, this is a rare opportunity to acquire an original Nolan for an affordable price. 

"Myths, Legends, Lansdcapes" addresses the key themes in the works in this collection, but there are also special examples from his Kelly, Gallipoli, and Antarctica series on offer. 
Publishing details: Leonard Joel, 2023, pb, 87pp
view full entry
Reference:
Dwyer Mikala view full entry
Reference: Mikala Dwyer : an Australian artist's project
• Preface / Paula Savage
• Mikala Dwyer / Amanda Rowell
• Das up 2001 / Martin Poppelwell.
 
Notes Published on the occasion of an exhibition by Mikala Dwyer held at the City Gallery Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand, from 23 February-19 May 2002.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 31-[32]).
Publishing details: City Gallery Wellington, 2002] 
31 p. : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
Dwyer Mikala view full entry
Reference: Mikala Dwyer : Goldene Bend'er / Mikala Dwyer. Exhibition held at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Southbank Vic. from 25 May - 28 July 2013.
Essays by: Justin Clemens, Dr Edward Colless, Pamela Hansford, Declan Long, Hannah Mathews, Linda Michael, Dr Toni Ross.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 92-93)
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 2013 
95 pages : illustrations (some colour) ;
Ref: 1000
Dwyer Mikala view full entry
Reference: Mikala Dwyer - The Garden of Half-Life.
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2014
Ref: 1000
Tiwi Textilesview full entry
Reference: Tiwi textiles : design, making, process / Diana Wood Conroy with Bede Tungutalum.
Tiwi Textiles: Design, Making, Process tells the story of the innovative Tiwi Design centre on Bathurst Island in northern Australia, which pioneered the production of hand-printed fabrics with Tiwi patterns from the 1970s to today. Written by former art coordinator Diana Wood Conroy with oral testimony from senior Tiwi artist Bede Tungutalum, who established Tiwi Design in 1969 with fellow designer Giovanni Tipungwuti, the book traces the beginnings of all-over fabric designs and their close connection to older art forms and ceremony in the Tiwi community.
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publishing details: Sydney University Press, 2022,
xxiv, 343 pages : colour illustrations, colour map
Ref: 1000
Textilesview full entry
Reference: see Tiwi textiles : design, making, process / Diana Wood Conroy with Bede Tungutalum.
Tiwi Textiles: Design, Making, Process tells the story of the innovative Tiwi Design centre on Bathurst Island in northern Australia, which pioneered the production of hand-printed fabrics with Tiwi patterns from the 1970s to today. Written by former art coordinator Diana Wood Conroy with oral testimony from senior Tiwi artist Bede Tungutalum, who established Tiwi Design in 1969 with fellow designer Giovanni Tipungwuti, the book traces the beginnings of all-over fabric designs and their close connection to older art forms and ceremony in the Tiwi community.
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publishing details: Sydney University Press, 2022,
xxiv, 343 pages : colour illustrations, colour map
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Tiwi textiles : design, making, process / Diana Wood Conroy with Bede Tungutalum.
Tiwi Textiles: Design, Making, Process tells the story of the innovative Tiwi Design centre on Bathurst Island in northern Australia, which pioneered the production of hand-printed fabrics with Tiwi patterns from the 1970s to today. Written by former art coordinator Diana Wood Conroy with oral testimony from senior Tiwi artist Bede Tungutalum, who established Tiwi Design in 1969 with fellow designer Giovanni Tipungwuti, the book traces the beginnings of all-over fabric designs and their close connection to older art forms and ceremony in the Tiwi community.
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index.
Publishing details: Sydney University Press, 2022,
xxiv, 343 pages : colour illustrations, colour map
Women in Powerview full entry
Reference: Women in Power
Women in Power is a free University Art Gallery show based on the bequest of J W Power.

The exhibition also highlights the difficulties women have faced being accepted into significant art collections.
Women in Power is a free University Art Gallery exhibition based on the bequest of J W Power. Among the international and Australian artists featured are Martha Boto, Bridget Riley and a group of Yolngu women from Arnhem Land.
The works have been chosen by women from the arts and art philanthropy, law and business. They include High Court Justice Virginia Bell, University of Sydney Chancellor Belinda Hutchinson, and arts benefactors Gene Sherman, Penelope Seidler and Naomi Milgrom.
Each selector has discussed their choice of artwork in the exhibition’s catalogue. In doing so, they draw on personal connections, political views, deeply held convictions and affinities with works.
“My selection…was inspired by my interest in women in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, and our need to create more opportunities for women in these fields,” writes Belinda Hutchinson. 


Virginia Bell relates her choices of Ramingining collecting bags to nine mortuary poles – also created by the Yolngu people – which stand in the foyer of the High Court. The latter was a gift from the descendants of Yolngu man Dhakiyarr, whose murder trial was acquitted in 1934 because it was believed sensational publicity around the case made it impossible for him to receive a fair trial.
Curator Ann Stephen from the University Art Gallery says 13.6 percent (fewer than 230) of works collected for the Power Collection are by women, a statistic she calls “dismal”. The Power Collection was acquired between 1967 and 1989, a time that Stephen says was marked by the second wave of feminism when women gained traction in the art world, though they still have a way to go.
“This exhibition nonetheless entails a theme of empowerment, offering a thumbnail sketch of the crucial era when, for the first time, women artists became a major presence in contemporary art.
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 2015
Ref: 1000
Kahler Carl view full entry
Reference: see Wilnitsky Auctions
Vienna, Austria, Animals in Fine Art
Jun 05, 2023, lot 15:
Carl Kahler (1855-after 1926) "White Angora Kitten", oil on panel

Carl Kahler was born in 1855 in Linz, Austria. He studied at the Munich Academy, as well as in Paris. During the 1880's he was very well known in Germany and Austria.
As an itinerant artist, in 1886 Kahler sailed to Australia, where his works were very well received and in demand. While there, he was awarded the commission for four paintings of the Melbourne Cup (racing event) and others in New Zealand. Upon initially moving to New York (1890), and, briefly after, to San Francisco (1891), Kahler opened a studio, where he specialized in figure painting. The local press called him "an erratic genius" who asked enormous prices for his works, and would often destroy a painting if he was unhappy with it, or if he thought it would sell for less than he felt it was worth.

Kahler was a member of the Society of Independent Artists. He exhibited in Berlin (1880), Dresden, Munich, Vienna, San Francisco (1892-1902), at the World's Columbian Expo (Chicago, 1893), etc.

His works are rare. It is known that Kahler lived in 1921-26 in New York; his track is then lost.

Our additional images show several other cat paintings of this artist.

Provenance: Private collection, New York.

Condition: good; in original frame

Creation Year: early 20th Century

Measurements: UNFRAMED: 30.4cm x 34.9cm / 12.0” x13.7‘‘ inches
FRAMED: 50.7cm x 55.2cm x 6.5cm / 20.0” x 21.7‘‘ inches

Object Type: Framed oil painting

Technique: oil on panel

Inscription: signed: Carl Kahler

Baudin in Australian Watersview full entry
Reference: see Baudin - Baudin in Australian Waters: The Art Work of the French Voyage of Discovering to the Southern Lands, 1800-1804. With a complete descriptive catalogue of drawings and paintings of Australian subjects by C. -A. Lesueur and N. -M. Petit from the Lesueur Collection at the Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, Le Havre, France. Many excellent illustrations.
Publishing details: Oxford University Press, 1988
Mission Time in Warburtonview full entry
Reference: Mission Time in Warburton: an Exhibition Exploring Aspects of the Warburton Mission History 1933-1973

Publishing details: Tjulyuru Regional Arts Gallery
Warburton: Tjulyuru Regional Arts Gallery, 2002. 88 pages, illustrations, many in colour. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Warburton Mission artview full entry
Reference: see Mission Time in Warburton: an Exhibition Exploring Aspects of the Warburton Mission History 1933-1973

Publishing details: Tjulyuru Regional Arts Gallery
Warburton: Tjulyuru Regional Arts Gallery, 2002. 88 pages, illustrations, many in colour. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Aboriginal art? - Warburton Mission artview full entry
Reference: see Mission Time in Warburton: an Exhibition Exploring Aspects of the Warburton Mission History 1933-1973

Publishing details: Tjulyuru Regional Arts Gallery
Warburton: Tjulyuru Regional Arts Gallery, 2002. 88 pages, illustrations, many in colour. Illustrated french fold wrappers.
Cosmic Love Wonder Lustview full entry
Reference: Cosmic Love Wonder Lust: The Imperial Slacks Project, by Nicholas Tsoutas
Accompanying book to exhibition by artist run collective Imperial Slacks held across the Campbelltown Arts Centre and Sydney College of the Arts Galleries in 2015. Imperial Slacks challenged the traditional model of artist run spaces, using their collective to test alternative attitudes towards curating.
Publishing details: Sydney: Campbelltown Arts, 2018,. 152 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Shillam-O’Neill Connectionview full entry
Reference: The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists. Essay by Dawn Oelrich.

Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 45
Colquhoun Alexander A Spring Morning 1899view full entry
Reference: see GFL Fine Art catalogue, with short essay, Autumn 2023, Art Auction, 23.5.2023, lot 45
Ref: 146
Longstaff John portrai 0f Eve grey 1922view full entry
Reference: see GFL Fine Art catalogue, with short essay, Autumn 2023, Art Auction, 23.5.2023, lot 30
Publishing details: [copy inserted in Debonair Jack by Prue Joske in Scheding Library]
Jago Lionel Rising Mist c1935view full entry
Reference: see GFL Fine Art catalogue, with short essay, Autumn 2023, Art Auction, 23.5.2023, lot 53
Ref: 146
Bennett Portia oil streetscape 1984view full entry
Reference: see GFL Fine Art catalogue, with short essay, Autumn 2023, Art Auction, 23.5.2023, lot 24
Ref: 146
Roberts Tom Across the Yarra Vally 1889view full entry
Reference: see GFL Fine Art catalogue, with short essay, Autumn 2023, Art Auction, 23.5.2023, lot 14
Publishing details: [copy inserted in Tom Roberts, a Catalogue Raisonne, by Helen Topliss , in Scheding Library]
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: Charles Blackman : schoolgirls / curated and edited by Kendrah Morgan ; Chris Wallace Crabbe, Geoffrey Smith (contributors) CHARLES BLACKMANS COMPELLING SCHOOLGIRLS SERIES, PRODUCED BETWEEN 1952 AND 1955, MARKED A TURNING POINT IN THE ARTISTS CAREER, ESTABLISHING HIS REPUTATION AS A SIGNIFICANT PAINTER OF MODERN LIFE IN THE POSTWAR ERA. THROUGH HIS EVOCATIVE DEPICTIONS OF UNIFORMED, OFTEN SOLITARY SCHOOLGIRLS IN URBAN SETTINGS PERVADED BY MENACING UNDERTONES, BLACKMAN EXPLORED THE THEMES OF ALIENATION, VULNERABILITY AND INNOCENCE UNDER THREAT. HE DERIVED INSPIRATION FROM A RANGE OF SOURCES, INCLUDING THE NOTORIOUS MURDER OF A YOUNG GIRL IN MELBOURNE, MODERN LITERATURE ON THE THEME OF ADOLESCENCE, THE LYRICAL POETRY OF JOHN SHAW NEILSON, AND DIRECT OBSERVATIONS OF CHILDREN INTERACTING IN THE CITY STREETS. PAINTED IN TEMPERA, ENAMEL AND OIL ON BOARD THE SCHOOLGIRL IMAGES ARE RICH IN PSYCHOLOGICAL POWER. AFTER THEY WERE FIRST EXHIBITED AT PETER BRAY GALLERY, MELBOURNE IN MAY 1953, HEIDE FOUNDERS JOHN AND SUNDAY ACQUIRED SEVERAL EXAMPLES, REINFORCING THEIR POSITION AS THE FIRST MAJOR COLLECTORS OF BLACKMANS WORK.
ESSAY CONTRIBUTIONS BY KENDRAH MORGAN AND CHRIS WALLACE-CRABBE

Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2017,
80 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour) ;
Boyd Robinview full entry
Reference: Robin Boyd : design legend / editor: Kendrah Morgan]. An illustrated overview and commentary on the life, aspirations, writings and work of Robin Boyd, one of Australia's most significant and influential architects and public commentators. The publication is a still version of a 15 minute animated slide show screened in Heide Museum of Modern Art's exhibition Robin Boyd: Design Legend (3 August - 27 October 2019). It includes Boyd's own words and ideas, contributions from those who knew him in the 1950s and 60s, and observations from contemporary architects influenced by his thinking. Demonstrating the continuing relevance of Boyd's design philosophy and principles, the narrative presents surprising facts and playful elements as well as chronicling Boyd's extraordinary vision and achievements.
Notes "This publication records the dynamic animation screened as part of the exhibition "Robin Boyd: Design Legend", Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, Australia; 03 August to 27 October 2019".
"The exhibition Robin Boyd: design legend [was] curated by Kendrah Morgan"
Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2019 
1 volume (unpaged) : illustrations (some colour), portraits
Ref: 1000
Fowell J Cview full entry
Reference: see Eby listing 22.5.l23:
Antique Watercolour Australian Artist & Architect J.C. Fowell
Villa and Gardens
The painting is signed and dated 1917 and is in the original frame and mount
The painting was originally retailed by W. M. Whitely & Co. London, England
Overall dimensions are :- 53.5 cm X 48.5cm 

Shillam Kathleen biog and 6 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Redcliff City Collectionview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Redcliff Art Galleryview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Rojahn Beryl p32view full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
O’Neill Doreen biog and 6 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Shillam Leonard biog and 5 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
O’Neill Doreen biog and 6 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
O’Neill Eileen biog and 3 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
O’Neill Harry biog and 7 worksview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Sandgate Queensland art scene by Eileen O’Neillview full entry
Reference: see The Shillam-O’Neill Connection, by Kathleen Shillam. biographical sketches, color plates. ‘Story of a clan of Australian artists’. Includes works from the redcliff City Collection. Includes biogreaphical information on artists.
Publishing details: Brisbane: CopyRight Publishing Co., (Kathleen Shillam), 2001, 32 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Bauer Ferdinand view full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
Westall William view full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
Lesueur Charles-Alexandre view full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
Petit Nicolas-Martin view full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
Flinders Matthew art of voyageview full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
Baudin expedition artview full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
natural history artview full entry
Reference: see The Encounter, 1802 : art of the Flinders and Baudin voyages / [compiled by] Sarah Thomas. Published to accompany and exhibition of the same title, 15th February-21 April 2002. Exhibition curator, Sarah Thomas.
Features works by Ferdinand Bauer, William Westall, Charles-Alexandre Lesueur and Nicolas-Martin Petit.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-226
Appendix 1. Legacy of the Encounter : British and French place names on the South Australian coast / Anthony J. Brown & Christine Cornell
Appendix 2. The known coast : Aboriginal place names on the South Australian coast / Philip Jones
Appendix 3. Britain, France and the unknown coast : key events / Barbara Fargher & Anthony J. Brown
 
Publishing details: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2002 
228 p. : col. ill., col. maps,
Vick Charlotteview full entry
Reference: see Leski Auction 27-9 May, 2023, lot 1178, CHARLOTTE VICK,
Harvesting in the Adelaide Hills,
oil on canvas,
signed and dated 1907 at lower left,
76 x 56cm; in original frame with label "Lear & Smith (late K. Cameron), Leigh St., Adelaide" verso, overall 95 x 75cm.
Painted in 1907, the year Charlotte's father died. The painting depicts the Vick family, who had emigrated from Prussia in 1839, harvesting hay on the family farm in the Adelaide Hills. The workers depicted are grandfather, George, and his four sons, one of whom was Charlotte's father, James. They are wearing traditional Mennonite clothing, in styles and colours still being worn today by the Amish in the United States. 
Metro Maniaview full entry
Reference: Metro Mania: Catalogue of the 1989 Australia and Regions Artists’ Exchange. Exhibition and conference catalogue held in Perth, Western Australia.

Publishing details: Australia and Regions Artists' Exchange
Perth: The Exchange, 1989.
44 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Safe Space: Contemporary Sculptureview full entry
Reference: Safe Space: Contemporary Sculpture, by Christine Morrow

Publishing details: Brisbane: Museums & Galleries Queensland, 2018.
44 pages, colour illustrations. Lettered wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Sculpture Contemporary view full entry
Reference: Safe Space: Contemporary Sculpture, by Christine Morrow

Publishing details: Brisbane: Museums & Galleries Queensland, 2018.
44 pages, colour illustrations. Lettered wrappers.
Temple of Floraview full entry
Reference: Temple of Flora, by Jim Logan
Catalogue for an exhibition of works by Fiona Hall, Fiona MacDonald, Tim Maguire, and Paul Saint.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Waverley City Gallery, 1992.
[20] pages, illustrations, some colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Hall Fiona view full entry
Reference: see Temple of Flora, by Jim Logan
Catalogue for an exhibition of works by Fiona Hall, Fiona MacDonald, Tim Maguire, and Paul Saint.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Waverley City Gallery, 1992.
[20] pages, illustrations, some colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

MacDonald Fiona view full entry
Reference: see Temple of Flora, by Jim Logan
Catalogue for an exhibition of works by Fiona Hall, Fiona MacDonald, Tim Maguire, and Paul Saint.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Waverley City Gallery, 1992.
[20] pages, illustrations, some colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

Maguire Tim view full entry
Reference: see Temple of Flora, by Jim Logan
Catalogue for an exhibition of works by Fiona Hall, Fiona MacDonald, Tim Maguire, and Paul Saint.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Waverley City Gallery, 1992.
[20] pages, illustrations, some colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

Saint Paul view full entry
Reference: see Temple of Flora, by Jim Logan
Catalogue for an exhibition of works by Fiona Hall, Fiona MacDonald, Tim Maguire, and Paul Saint.
Publishing details: Melbourne: Waverley City Gallery, 1992.
[20] pages, illustrations, some colour. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.

So Fine: Contemporary Women Artists Make Australian Historyview full entry
Reference: So Fine: Contemporary Women Artists Make Australian History, by Christine Clark, Sarah Engledow
Accompanying book to exhibition held at National Portrait Gallery, Canberra, 2018.
Publishing details: Canberra: National Portrait Gallery, 2018, 300 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated matte papered boards.


Ref: 1009
Serico Vincentview full entry
Reference: Vincent Serico : Some People are Stories



Publishing details: Michael Eather, Vincent Serico
Brisbane: Fire-Works Gallery, 2007.
First Edition.

21cm x 21cm. [26] pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated saddle-stapled wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Neo Goth: Back in Blackview full entry
Reference: Neo Goth: Back in Black, by Alison Kubler, Nick Mitzevich
Exhibition catalogue for Neo Goth: Back in Black, held at UQ Art Museum, 2008. Includes Shaun Gladwell temporary tattoos laid in
Publishing details: Brisbane: UQ Art Museum, 2008.
. 88 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Gladwell Shaunview full entry
Reference: see Neo Goth: Back in Black, by Alison Kubler, Nick Mitzevich
Exhibition catalogue for Neo Goth: Back in Black, held at UQ Art Museum, 2008. Includes Shaun Gladwell temporary tattoos laid in
Publishing details: Brisbane: UQ Art Museum, 2008.
. 88 pages, colour illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.

Cranstone Lefevre Jamesview full entry
Reference: see lot 1062, Daniel Meyer - Antiquitäten & Auktionen, Germany, 2.6.23:

Cranstone, Lefevre James, 1822, Hemel Hempstead, United Kingdom
Deceased: 1893, Brisbane, Australia: Portrait of Mrs. Messenger in August 1854.
Oil on academy board, back. inscribed and signed "L.J Cranstone stud bab 45 in the Royal Academy of London", 31x27cm, original stucco frame of the time (min. dam. Z2). Lived and worked in America and Australia as a landscape painter and watercolourist.
Clune Thelmaview full entry
Reference: see Wikipedia: Thelma Cecily Clune AO (11 March 1900 – 6 September 1992) was an Australian sculptor, painter, patron of the arts and gallery owner.
Early life
Thelma Cecily Smith was born in Kings Cross[1] in 1900[2] and she later moved with her family to Yarramalong.[1] Clune attended school at St Mary's and studied shorthand and typing.[1]
Career
Clune studied sculpture under Lyndon Dadswell at East Sydney Technical College.[1] She produced sculptural works in stone and metal. Clune began painting in the 1940s, working in oils,[3] and later produced collages on paper.[4] She held her first solo exhibition, "Collages and Sculptures", in 1979 at the Hogarth Galleries in Paddington.[3]
Clune appeared in her husband Frank Clune's newspaper columns as the character "Brown Eyes".[5]
In the 1940s, Thelma and Frank Clune opened an art gallery in Kings Cross. It housed works by many of Australia's best known painters, including Russell Drysdale, John Passmore and John Olsen.[6]
In the 1950s and 1960s, with their younger son Terry Clune, they ran the Terry Clune Art Gallery on Macleay Street in Potts Point. This gallery supported many of Sydney's young expressionist and experimental painters, including John Olsen, Stan Rapotec, Robert Klippel, Robert Hughes, Carl Plate, Margo Lewers, Elwyn Lynn, John Rigby, Desiderius Orban and Robert Dickerson.[7] The Clunes also provided accommodation to artists in a building adjacent to the gallery, and in their home. The Macleay Street building later became the home of artist Martin Sharp and became known as the Sydney landmark the "Yellow House".[6]
Thelma and Frank Clune were patrons and friends of many significant Australian artists, including William Dobell. Dobell's 1946 portrait of Thelma Clune is held by the Art Gallery of New South Wales.[8][9] Susan Rothwell's bronze sculpture of Thelma Clune was a finalist in the 1984 Archibald Prize.[10][11]
Interviews of Clune by Hazel de Berg[1] and Geoffrey Dutton[12] are part of the National Library of Australia collection.
Awards
In 1988 Thelma Clune was appointed Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for service to the visual arts.[13] She was later appointed Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for distinguished service to the arts.[14]
Personal life
On 9 May 1923 Thelma Cecily Smith married Frank Clune, the Australian author and popular historian. They had two sons, Anthony Patrick (1930–2002) and Terry Michael (born 1932).
Moon Miltonview full entry
Reference: see The Conversation, May 29, 2023, article by Catherine Speck
Emerita Professor, Art History and Curatorship, University of Adelaide, ‘Milton Moon: the Australian artist who brought a Zen Buddhist, modernist and painterly sensibility to pottery’
Moon Miltonview full entry
Reference: Milton Moon - exhibition curated by Rebecca Evans at the Art Gallery of South Australia. Milton Moon: Crafting modernism explores the life and career of Milton Moon am (1926–2019), one of the most important Australian potters of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. A pioneer of the modernist approach to ceramics in the postwar period, Moon had an enormous impact on Australian art and craft throughout his career as both an artist and educator.
Moon was primarily concerned with making pots that drew from his own environment rather than being influenced by international trends. An avid diver and bushwalker, his work in ceramics explored the elemental and textural nature of the Australian environment.

For the first time, Milton Moon: Crafting modernism contextualises Moon’s sixty-year practice in ceramics within the wider story of Australian art. This exhibition celebrates his highly original and painterly approach to ceramics and examines the influence of Australian modernism and Japanese art on his work, as well as introducing his lesser-known work in painting and drawing.
Author: Rebecca Evans, with essays from Russell Kelty, Tracey Lock, Dr Damon Moon, Dr Claire Roberts 
Publishing details: AGSA, 2023, 136pp, 132 full-colour illustrations, 21 archival photographs
Ref: 1000
von Somogy Harvey Oscar Nino architectview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of New South Wales, Winter, 2023, article ‘When Sydney came to town’, by Anna Dearnley, p66-71
Publishing details: SLNSW, Winter, 2023, 94pp
Dumont Adeleview full entry
Reference: see Open Book, magazine of the State Library of New South Wales, Winter, 2023, article ‘Breaking Line’, pages 60-65
Publishing details: SLNSW, Winter, 2023, 94pp
Lovell Nadeenview full entry
Reference: Journey to the Bungle Bungle - Nadeen Lovell
Queensland born artist Nadeen Lovell’s paintings and travels of the Bungle Bungle Ranges in Western Australia.

Publishing details: Kununurra: Diversion Gallery, 2001. iv, 102 pages, colour illustrations. Sprialbound in wrappers.

Ref: 1000
Many Hands - Australian Tapestry Workshopview full entry
Reference: Many Hands. The First 40 Years of the Australian Tapestry Workshop. Mark Butler (Editor).

Publishing details: The Tapestry Foundation of Australia, 2016.
4to, 140pp. Colour illustrations, hc.
Ref: 1009
Melrose Art Potteryview full entry
Reference: Melrose Art Pottery, by Gregory Hill
Publishing details: Bundoora Homestead Centre, 2011.
4to, 86pp. Colour illustrations.
Ref: 1000
Menpes Mortimerview full entry
Reference: China, by Mortimer Menpes
Publishing details: London : Adam and Charles Black, 1909. Quarto, gilt-lettered cloth, frontispiece, pp. viii; 139, 16 colour plates and 64 black and white vignette illustrations,
Ref: 1000
Talking tapaview full entry
Reference: Talking tapa : Pasifika bark cloth in Queensland. Curated by Joan G. Winter. catalogue for an exhibition held at BEMAC (Brisbane Multicultural Arts Centre). Scholarly contributions from Koleta Galumalemana, Jimaima Taoi Le Grand, Savali Harvey, Luisa Tuicolo, Dr Max Quanchi, Dr Graham Baines and Dr Greg Poulgrain.

Publishing details: Keeaira Press, 2009. Quarto (260 x 200mm), pictorial wrappers, 87 pp., illustrated in colour; includes bibliography;
Ref: 1000
tapaview full entry
Reference: Talking tapa : Pasifika bark cloth in Queensland. Curated by Joan G. Winter. catalogue for an exhibition held at BEMAC (Brisbane Multicultural Arts Centre). Scholarly contributions from Koleta Galumalemana, Jimaima Taoi Le Grand, Savali Harvey, Luisa Tuicolo, Dr Max Quanchi, Dr Graham Baines and Dr Greg Poulgrain.

Publishing details: Keeaira Press, 2009. Quarto (260 x 200mm), pictorial wrappers, 87 pp., illustrated in colour; includes bibliography;
Peron Francois view full entry
Reference: François Péron : an impetuous life : naturalist and voyager. By Edward Duyker. ‘Presents a balanced assessment of the difficult relationship between Péron and Baudin, and analyses the conduct of science during some of the most turbulent years in French history.’ (NLA)

Publishing details: Carlton, Vic. : The Miegunyah Press, 2006. Series: Miegunyah Press series. Series 2 ; Number 75. Octavo (240 x 160 mm), publisher’s cloth over boards in pictorial dust jacket, xxiii, 349 pp., plus 16 unnumbered pages of plates; maps;
Ref: 1000
Blackman Charlesview full entry
Reference: Blackman Paintings. November 2 to 13, 1954. Exhibition catalogue from one of Charles Blackman’s first one-man exhibitions, held at Mirka Mora’s studio attached to Mirka’s Cafe in Collins Street.
Publishing details: [Mirka’s Gallery], 1954. Octavo, folded sheet, catalogue of 30 paintings with titles and prices in guineas
Ref: 1000
empire of grass Theview full entry
Reference: The empire of grass by Gary Catalano (poetry)

Publishing details: Brisbane : University of Queensland Press, 1991. Octavo, illustrated wrappers (by Rick Amor), pp. 60.
Ref: 1000
Catalano Garyview full entry
Reference: see The empire of grass by Gary Catalano

Publishing details: Brisbane : University of Queensland Press, 1991. Octavo, illustrated wrappers (by Rick Amor), pp. 60.
Flinders Matthewview full entry
Reference: ‘Gratefull to Providence’. The Diary and Accounts of Matthew Flinders, Surgeon, Apothecary, and Man-Midwife, 1775-1802. Volume II: 1785-1802. A detailed biography of the father of the explorer Matthew Flinders.
Publishing details: Martlesham : Lincoln Record Society, 2007 – 2009. Two volumes, octavo, pp. xxviii; 166; xii; 305, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Aboriginal artview full entry
Reference: see Spinifex : people of the sun and shadow, curators : Ross Chadwick, John Cruthers, Carly Lane. Well-illustrated catalogue was produced to accompany an exhibition of art by the Spinifex People of the Great Victoria Desert region of Western Australia, held at John Curtin Gallery, Curtin University, 24 August-12 October 2012.

Publishing details: Bentley, W.A. : John Curtin Gallery, 2012. Quarto (275 x 230 mm), pictorial card covers with French flaps, photographic endpapers, 70 pp., colour illustrations;
Being Boringview full entry
Reference: Being Boring - More Dead Gay Artists. Being Boring: More Dead Gay Artists is an exhibition zine for a show curated by Robert Lake, who returns to presenting work by his friends who are no longer with us: Phillip Jacobs, Philip Juster, David McDiarmid, Bill Morley and a single work by Jasper Havoc.
Publishing details: Darren Knight Gallery, 2023
Ref: 1000
Jacobs Phillip view full entry
Reference: see Being Boring - More Dead Gay Artists. Being Boring: More Dead Gay Artists is an exhibition zine for a show curated by Robert Lake, who returns to presenting work by his friends who are no longer with us: Phillip Jacobs, Philip Juster, David McDiarmid, Bill Morley and a single work by Jasper Havoc.
Publishing details: Darren Knight Gallery, 2023
Juster Philip view full entry
Reference: see Being Boring - More Dead Gay Artists. Being Boring: More Dead Gay Artists is an exhibition zine for a show curated by Robert Lake, who returns to presenting work by his friends who are no longer with us: Phillip Jacobs, Philip Juster, David McDiarmid, Bill Morley and a single work by Jasper Havoc.
Publishing details: Darren Knight Gallery, 2023
McDiarmid David view full entry
Reference: see Being Boring - More Dead Gay Artists. Being Boring: More Dead Gay Artists is an exhibition zine for a show curated by Robert Lake, who returns to presenting work by his friends who are no longer with us: Phillip Jacobs, Philip Juster, David McDiarmid, Bill Morley and a single work by Jasper Havoc.
Publishing details: Darren Knight Gallery, 2023
Morley Bill view full entry
Reference: see Being Boring - More Dead Gay Artists. Being Boring: More Dead Gay Artists is an exhibition zine for a show curated by Robert Lake, who returns to presenting work by his friends who are no longer with us: Phillip Jacobs, Philip Juster, David McDiarmid, Bill Morley and a single work by Jasper Havoc.
Publishing details: Darren Knight Gallery, 2023
Havoc Jasper a single workview full entry
Reference: see Being Boring - More Dead Gay Artists. Being Boring: More Dead Gay Artists is an exhibition zine for a show curated by Robert Lake, who returns to presenting work by his friends who are no longer with us: Phillip Jacobs, Philip Juster, David McDiarmid, Bill Morley and a single work by Jasper Havoc.
Publishing details: Darren Knight Gallery, 2023
Baker Warwickview full entry
Reference: Belanglo / Warwick Baker ; text by Dan Rule
Publishing details: Melbourne Perimeter Editions, 2015 
©2015 
120 pages : photographs
Ref: 1000
Leake Charles view full entry
Reference: The inscription on the freverse of a John Glover reads: ‘Painted with a new White, Red and Yellow & Amber Made by Mr Leak,’ whiuch is almost certainly a reference to oil paint made by Charles Leake [1899-1889] of Rosedale, Campbell Town, an amateur painter. [Information provided to Stephen Scheding by John McPhee, 2023]
Michael O'Connell with biographyview full entry
Reference: see Tennants auction, UK, 17.6.23, lot 126:
Michael O'Connell (1898-1976)
"Leprechauns"
Signed, hessian wall hanging with hand embellishment circa 1967, 125cm by 175cm

Sold together with a copy of Michael O'Connell "The Lost Modernist" by Harriet Edquist



Michael O'Connell (1898–1976) was born to Irish parents, initially living in Dalton followed by Lancashire and Cumbria. In his early years he was sent as a lay boy to Ushaw College, a Roman Catholic seminary in County Durham. In 1920 he emigrated to Australia where his artistic career began, firstly creating watercolours, concrete pots and ornaments. He gained great acclaim in this field and became an active member of the Arts and Crafts Society of Victoria. After a visit home to England O’Connell started creating textile designs with Australian inspiration. Using a combination of techniques and ideas the works featured vibrant primitive designs in bright colours.
O’Connell returned to England in 1937. Here he purchased land at Perry Green and built The Chase House and Studio. He established links with many decorative textile companies including Heals and Harrods of London which sold much of his work. Although production halted during WW2, O’Connell used this time to develop techniques, moving into freehand drawing and resist pastes. When the war ended Christopher Heal was instrumental in obtaining supplies of fabric to enable work to begin again. The newly developed techniques were those used to create the Festival of Britain Wall hangings.
After the Festival of Britain, the popularity of Michael's work increased and he received commissions to create murals for public buildings, restaurants, factory canteens and showrooms. In the 1960s, he began to travel widely and to teach his techniques in art schools. He also worked with architects, producing murals for universities and churches. Collections of his work are held in the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Museum of English Rural Life, the National Museums Scotland, the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra and the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne.
Balfour James Lawsonview full entry
Reference: see Potter & Potter Auctions auction, Chicago, IL, United States, 29.6.23, lot 499, BALFOUR, James Lawson (Australian, 1870-1966) Walking Past the Pond. ca.1950. Oil on canvas: 8 ¼ x 10”. Frame: :16 ½ x 18 ½ ”. Signed lower right. Balfour grew up in an artistic and musical environment. His father and uncle had their own studios and his ancestors had made damask designs for the linen trade. Balfour began his professional career in Ireland as a painter of horses, dogs and babies. He moved to Sydney in 1912. Light surface dirt. Canvas lightly rippled. Comes with a COA from Merill Chase Galleries. Unknown accretion upper left quadrant. Good condition.


cartoonsview full entry
Reference: 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].of the cartoons in Melbourne.Swain, a former Bulletin journalist was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria. Includes many b/w ills. of cartoons from various publications over the years.
Publishing details: Syd. Collins Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill.wrapps. 193pp.
Aboriginal people in artview full entry
Reference: 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill.wrapps. 193pp.
Brown Leonardview full entry
Reference: Leonard Brown - Field of Gold
Exhibition Catalogue
‘Art and life are inextricably interwoven for me. Therefore, Zographos (a Greek word that translates as ‘life writer’), is philosophically the most accurate term to describe my activities as a painter.

For as long as I can remember, I have painted and drawn. In 1962, I began formal Saturday morning classes with Mrs. Brian at the Art School of Central Technical College, Brisbane. Mrs. Brian entered the room carrying a large basket of bottles on one of these Saturdays saying, ‘Georgio Morandi painted bottles all his life, this morning we’re going to paint bottles.’ Graduating from my first year, Mrs. Brian graciously handed me over to recently returned Brisbane expatriate Miss Cameron (the legendary Betty Churcher), saying, ‘you’ll do well with Miss Cameron laddie, she’s just returned from London’s Royal College’. Betty never patronized her students, imparting oil painting skills and a sensibility that became the building blocks for all that was to follow.

I’m not sure if precocious is the right word; there was a necessity. In 1965, I commenced full-time Art School at the tender age of 14½. Circumstances as they were, the school’s principal bent the rules, and I was admitted—completing the 4-year full-time course in 1968. My first solo show was held early in 1968, at the beginning of my final year of Art School. A novelty, it would seem, for a student to show in a commercial gallery.

Reflecting on the vicissitudes of past years, and now holding my 51st solo show, I muse on my beginnings. While the first exhibition was a success, I backed away - whether out of self-preservation or some other veiled reason, I am not sure. For the next 4 years of my life, I embarked on my next quadrennium of study- committed to Theology. The dual dimensions of art and theology were to set the tone for all of my future enterprises.

I kept my powder well and truly dry - until my next solo exhibition, in 1984, which was a long time in coming. Despite living in Brisbane, I wheeled my barrow to Sydney for a second solo show at the Painters Gallery and, in quick succession, a third solo show, in Melbourne, at Niagara Galleries. In Sydney I subsequently changed horses, showing with the Garry Anderson Galley until the owner’s untimely death in 1991. This was followed by shows with Mori Gallery, one of which was a 10-year survey exhibition. In what became a pattern, I alternated exhibitions between Sydney and Melbourne for several years, before finally breaking my hometown ice, in 1995. The exhibition ‘Brisbane Painting—Leonard Brown’, hosted by Brisbane City Gallery, was another 10-year survey. In the wake of this, I began exhibiting with Bellas Gallery Brisbane in 1996. The start of a new millennium saw a change in my Brisbane ‘horse’ to that of Andrew Baker Art Dealer. This began a 21-year commitment that found its conclusion only with Andrew’s retirement. Running in parallel during this time, I enjoyed an ongoing relationship with Melbourne, through my representative there, Charles Nodrum Gallery. Along the way, there were also shows with Michael Reid Art Merchant in Sydney.

At a Sydney solo show in 1986, Australian sculptor Robert Klippel held me to account by asking, ‘coming from Brisbane, who gave you permission to draw like that?’ Flummoxed I made a lame reply to this backhanded compliment. In reality, my answer should have been, ‘British painter Roger Hilton’, as my free-ranging appetite (from an early age) absorbed contemporary British as well as post-war American painting - I had my favourites. Concurrent with all of this, and working undercover, I pursued my ongoing practice of Byzantine art and study of theology.

Over my five-decade career, the directors and staff of a long list of commercial galleries have punctuated the years, as have the generous mentors and collectors with whom I have enjoyed many fruitful relationships. I have been fortunate to receive significant institutional affirmation by Australian state, regional, and educational galleries. In particular, I must acknowledge the National Gallery of Australia for including my work (as one of the youngest) in the Gallery’s Bicentennial survey of 200 years of Australian Art - the first ever international exhibition mounted by the NGA: L’été australien à Montpellier:100 chefs-d’oevre de la peinture australienne, held at Musée Fabre, Montpelier, France, in 1988.

Sustained dialogue in friendship with fellow artists has been invaluable and nationally I have carried the tag, more than once, of being a ‘painter’s painter’. My life and work have been elevated by the mentorships of Bishop Konstantine (Orthodox bishop of Brisbane), a spiritual father and teacher of iconography; sculptor Mary Creedy (née Fraser), who believed I had it in me; Arthur Creedy, who imparted a love of literature and poetry; Sam Fullbrook, who gave me friendship as well as a studio practice; and Ian Still, a regular ‘first audience’ for new work and an in-depth collector of my work. The phenomenon of serial art collectors - a somewhat surprising, yet now familiar experience - has held a particular joy for me. Mine know who they are and, to them, I say a special thank you.

Waterfall, Great Minnewaska National Park, NY, 2016, oil on linen, 120 × 120 cm
A debt also needs to be expressed to those who have offered an apologia for what I do and why I do it. In particular, I have enjoyed significant support from esteemed art historian Emeritus Professor Sasha Grishin AM, FAHA. While being an eminently qualified Byzantinist, Sasha has illuminated my work using his unique perspective as a writer of monographs on contemporary Australian art and scholarship of Byzantine theology. Insights such as those of the Professor, I previously thought were outside the realm of possibility. Yet, there it was - offering an interpretation of the hope I hold within me.

How does one assess the originality in an ikon? On one hand, one can form some sort of evaluation on a purely formal level, as one can with any painting, in respect to its use of line, colour and form, the beauty of its execution, its surface qualities and resolution of the composition. On the other hand, remembering that an ikon is not a decorative ornament, no matter how beautiful, but it is a functional liturgical object used in devotion, the truest test of an ikon is the extent to which it facilitates prayer. Do the formal arrangements of masses on an ikon help you in elucidating the iconography and assist you in prayer ‘through’ the image and enable you to contemplate on the spiritual experience of the divine prototype?

Having spent time with the ikons of Leonard Brown, for me the answer is yes. His ikons are magnificent prayer images and profoundly beautiful works of art.

Leonard Brown has been exhibiting in Australia for over forty years and has attained a high profile among fellow artists and curators, especially in Brisbane, where he has also taught for many years and where he has been widely regarded as an artist’s artist. In 2010 he was awarded the Blake Prize for Religious Art for a magnificently and deeply moving painting, If you put your ear close, you’ll hear it breathing, which thrust his art practice into national prominence. The mystical theology that may underlie his art is unlikely to be either known or accessible to many in his art audience. However this is, in fact, of little importance; the paintings have to work as paintings—as a visual experience—and not as an illustration of some esoteric mystical theory.

The sense of complete pictorial and spiritual unity is one of the most precious qualities in his art. Although the surface is very personal, the artist hides behind his creations, there is no dominant pedagogical voice or clearly stated ideological agenda. On prolonged viewing, suddenly the vastness of the painting becomes apparent, like a sea of mystery, and it opens itself up for years of contemplation. - Professor Sasha Grishin

It was not until my 30-year survey exhibition at QUT Art Museum in 2011, that the full complexity of my activity was revealed publicly. For the first time my contemporary paintings were shown alongside my activities as a Byzantine ikon painter. As the Professor would say, ‘opposite sides of the same coin’. This statement alludes to the cross-fertilization of one with the other. Working as an ikon painter within the conventions of abstract formalism, the ever-present sensibilities of colour, as well as the profundity of a theological view of the cosmos, have inevitably informed my life and art.

The Art Gallery of South Australia currently has on display from its collection, the 12-panel ikon ensemble ‘Desis tier’ by my hand. Beneath it, an array of heroic works by ‘Australian Moderns’ (predominately by women from the 1930s and’40s) are hung. To my mind, this shows that AGSA curators have seen the relationship between the two. In so doing, they have acknowledged the modernists’ translations of early 20th century Russian Constructivism - the antecedent of which is the Orthodox ikon - into an Australian context. Similarly, the ikons by my hand have had a knock-on effect on my contemporary painting. Cross-fertilization, a fact of life for me over these many decades of wearing ‘two hats’, wasn’t sufficient. In recent years I’ve added a third hat - that of portraiture, being fortunate to win the inaugural Brisbane Portrait Prize in 2019. The latter practice and achievement are possibly a testament to my academic training all those years ago at art school.

Leonard Brown
On the feast, Holy Martyrs Christopher of Lycia and with him Callinca and Aquilina May 9 old style / 22 new style, 2023’

Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 24 June - 15 July, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Klose Simonview full entry
Reference: Simon Klose
In the office
24 June - 15 July, 2023
Exhibition Catalogue
A FEW WORDS...
Simon Klose, 2023

All of these works began as test pieces ­– and the studio became a little laboratory. Often I'm not sure where to begin, or end... many times there are changes and alterations. It’s not necessarily quick to make smaller works at all. Quite a lot don't make it.

These works are patterned, many with contrasting or complimentary colours. The patterns are often not consistent through the work. They can change abruptly, flick from left to right or make other moves. Sometimes the surface seems very busy, at other times – in the same work – it can be calm and meditative. These binary compositions have meaning for me and, without attempting to explain pictures, just looking at them provides the meaning which is closest to intent. It's how they were made.

Here in the Charles Nodrum Gallery office is a friendly and I think lively place. The people, the artworks on the wall, the books in the shelves all rub together and often the conversations are personable but well informed and stimulating.

For over thirty-five years I have been studying Aboriginal, Oceanic and some PNG cultures and cultural expression, and collecting related art and artifacts. My interest in tapa began when I saw Bruce Pollard's collection, gathered in the field, which was stunning to encounter. Large, sonorous and possibly minimal aesthetically but powerful in new ways to me, and different to minimal paintings of western art. Bruce chose well, I feel. Then, my being a professional gallery director and curator for five different art museums in three different states brought me to a lot of Australian art and sculpture, and to artworks from other cultures as well. Through this, my interest and response to Oceanic work stayed – and stays – alive and lively today.

Finding this double image of tapa on the internet, I chased the original and found more information at the Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.

My work is totally constructed. The images of the original are not to scale. I could not estimate their size from these images so I addressed their compositional structure and created a scale that I felt allowed them to be most aesthetically effective – at least for me. The labels on the works are mine and have a standard content.

The term "detail" in the label means the work is not complete in the image. The image I used does not allow me to understand the texture of the work, or the way the work might hang if it were not flat – so the pattern in each canvas and the difference in their patterns is the centre of the work. One side is vigorous and distorted – without pattern. The other side is ordered and dignified. They have together formed a combination which is complimentary as well as contrasting. They also have a great presence and energy. It is not certain exactly or generally where they were made or by whom, but they are definitely Oceanic/Pacific in origin, and they both offer ways of understanding and seeing light, space, structure and many other elements from our region.

The small diptych on the right-hand side of the work is also part of the discussion this work has created for me. It comes from, or through, the work itself, and sits alongside it. The discussion is ongoing for me, and other images from other sources have and will continue to prompt responses or images as questions.

I am aware of arguments and particular protocol positions that may be brought to a work such as this. I suppose there is always a risk of upsetting people who have strong and firm feelings about cultures and their peoples. My intent is to bring forward the extraordinary to elicit an increased understanding and appreciation of these cultures.

One of the ways an artist can do this is to paint images...

Simon Klose, 2023

Publishing details: Charles Nodrum Gallery, 24 June - 15 July, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Grier Louisview full entry
Reference: see Roseberys London auction 6.6.23, lot 39, Richard Hayley Lever,  Australian/American 1876-1958 -  Sunset;  oil on canvas, with studio stamp on the reverse of the stretcher 'Richard Hayley Lever W. H. Lane & Son 26th March 1992', 26.5 x 33.3 cm  Provenance:  W. H. Lane & Sons, Studio Sale, 26th March 1992;  Louise Kosman, Edinburgh;  private collection  Note:  the W. H. Lane & Sons sale followed the discovery of a large collection of the artist's works in a studio in St. Ives. As such, this painting is possibly a depiction of St. Ives, as Lever settled there from his native Australia, from 1900-1911 contributing to the artists colony, which was introduced to him by fellow Australian Louis Grier and Julius Olsson who opened a school for Landscape and Marine Painting in St Ives.  He made his debut at the Royal Academy of Arts in 1904. After some time, he met Canadian/American artist Ernest Lawson who persuaded him to move to New York where he would continue to paint marine landscapes.  Lever's works are included in museum collections throughout the United States, Europe, and Australia, including the Metropolitan Museum, New York, the Phillips Memorial Gallery, Washington, DC, and the Sydney Art Gallery. 
Beckett Clarice view full entry
Reference: Clarice Beckett - Atmosphere, Geelong Art Gallery exhibition. Essays written by Geelong Gallery Director and CEO Jason Smith, Geelong Gallery Senior Curator Lisa Sullivan, Dr Rosalind Hollinrake and Senior Curator of Australian Art at Art Gallery of New South Wales Denise Mimmocchi. ⁠
Geelong Gallery presents an exclusive in-focus, thematic survey of the work of Australian artist Clarice Beckett (1887–1935). This much anticipated exhibition presents key works from across Beckett’s oeuvre ranging from 1919 to the early 1930s, providing a critical representation of this enduringly enigmatic modernist artist’s atmospheric depictions of light, climate, and bayside Melbourne. Beckett’s beautiful paintings are revered for the ways in which they captured the essence of Beaumaris streetscapes and Melbourne cityscapes in varying light and weather conditions, as well as atmospheric vistas towards the waters of Port Phillip Bay.
Publishing details: Geelong Art Gallery, 2023, 84 pages.
Ref: 1009
Tennent Madgeview full entry
Reference: ‘In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.’ See article HAWAII SHAKES REGIONAL ART WORLD. From Terry Ingram in Honolulu. Australian Financial Review, Saleroom column, Mar 12, 1992.
Volcanoes are beginning to erupt in Hawaii again.
This is not a meteorological forecast. It is a saleroom notice.
Hawaii's answer to Australia's Heidelberg School and Canada's Group of Seven - its first plein air painters - are receiving their fullest definition in an exhibition that marks a watershed in the appreciation of one of the hottest commodities on world art markets - regional art.
The exhibition, Encounters with Paradise, Views of Hawaii and Its People 1778-1941, is drawing record crowds to Honolulu's Academy of Arts where it is showing until March 22.
Paintings by the school of artists which flourished in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s form one of the major sections of the exhibition and are searing the retinas of visitors from far and asunder.
The artists have been bunched together under the convenient and colourful -if not entirely descriptive - title they have enjoyed for some years, The Volcano School.

Surely only Hawaii's traditionally relaxed attitude to its past can now prevent volcanoes from firing at topographical painting sales.
Like bushfires, volcanoes are an unlikely subject for collector sympathies
Included in this exhibition is Volcano School artist Furneaux' view of Mr John Hall's House on June 9, 1881 and a subsequent view on July 21, 1881. The second picture shows the house consumed by lava.
However, like a slumbering volcano, Hawaii is waking up to its past.
The exhibition has cost about $475,000 to mount.
Not only has it attracted an unusually strong combination of sponsors including Continental Airlines, Bank of Hawaii and Outrigger Hotels, but the Hawaiiana "seismics" began to register last year when the State Archives purchased a collection of printed and manuscript Hawaiiana from a San Francisco collector for $US2.47 million.
"Outsiders", however - both collectors and dealers - still have the edge in Hawaii. This is probably because the local market does not appear to be big enough to support specialist dealers. The San Francisco collection was appraised by Sydney rare bookseller Hordern House, which outbid London's Quaritch for the privilege.
Honolulu/San Francisco-based David Forbes who guest-curated Encounters, was retained four years ago by Hordern House to catalogue the Carlsmith book collection.
This was acquired by Hordern House from Don Carlsmith, who lives on the"Big Island" of Hawaii, and sold to collectors in many ports of the world.
Particularly in its coverage of the early period, Encounters with Paradise underlines the important role Australia and New Zealand have played in preserving Hawaii's heritage, and the special interest the exhibition should have Down Under.
International travellers will despair that the exhibition, which opened on January 23, runs for such a short time. However, it is enjoying a long run by Academy standards.
Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.
There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.
New Zealand-born William Twigg-Smith (1883-1950), who is represented by two works in the exhibition, an oil painting Hilo Sampans and a charcoal, Kilauea Volcano, emerges as a powerful but overlooked artist.
A satellite exhibition at the Academy devoted to Hawaiian printmaking includes a work by the Australian artist Ambrose Patterson, who is described on the picture label as American. The US, admittedly, is where he spent most of his artistic career.
Mr Ron Wright, a director of Continental Airlines' sales marketing for Hawaii, said the airline had become involved in the exhibition "when the director of the Academy, Mr George Ellis, came to us, and said, 'We have this enormous task. We have all these pictures coming from all over and have to get them here.'
"The approach, made last October, obviously involved expertise in which we specialised. But we were so impressed by the project that we would have assisted in cash as well as in kind if the need had arisen," Mr Wright said.
However, Continental's participation was also the result of company philosophy to be seen as a good citizen in all the cities in which it operates. Honolulu is Continental's hub for the Pacific.
With an attendance of 35,000 three weeks before the exhibition was due to close, Mr Wright said the feedback had been very positive.
Attendances may pale compared with Australian block-busters, but the Hawaiian islands have a permanent population of only one million.
Outrigger Hotels, the largest hotel chain in Hawaii, with a romantic history of foundation by a bus-depot worker, was also a useful and logical sponsor, in that the exhibition attracts a different breed of visitor.
Australian institutions, both corporate and cultural, might learn from the low-keyed sponsorship of Encounters with Paradise. Sponsors are simply honoured with a board saying who they are at the beginning of the exhibition. No "overt" accommodation was requested or given.
There were, for instance, no "toy" metal aeroplanes sporting the sponsoring carrier's colours or any other promotional corporate bric-a-brac in the gallery, as has happened in Australia.
The Academy, which has a manageable collection of fine, lesser works of Asian and European art, strung together a package of 13 corporate, government, private and foundation sponsors to support the exhibition and has staged the show without charging an admission fee.
Pictures have been loaned for the exhibition from Russia, Stockholm, Denmark and, of course, Australasia.
The National Library in Canberra has loaned two Webbers. The large oil on canvas, A Chief of the Sandwich Islands Leading his Party to Battle, is among them.
The others include a pen-and-ink wash drawing, View in the Island of Atooi, from the collection of New Zealander Rex Nan Kivell. The Dixson Library has lent four Webber watercolours, A View of Kealakekua Bay, Kalaniopuu, King of Owyhee Bringing Presents to Captain Cook, An Inland View in Atooi and A Morai(temple) in Atooi.
It is clearly not just because of the crowding of visitors at the beginning of an exhibition that spectators congregate around the Webbers. He was the first Western artist to record and observe Hawaii, and Canberra's A Chief of the Sandwich Islands is a large and powerful classicist study.
There are also such Webber curiosities as the earliest known representation of hula dancing and a sketch of masked canoe rowers.
Otherwise, the interest in the early pieces is despite guest curator Forbes' apparent decision not to "play to the gallery". His selections otherwise tend to be subtle rather than dramatic works, the choice perhaps of a book cataloguer rather than an impresario.
Visitors to the exhibition therefore still have to go to the Bishop Museum to see - and then on request - the celebrated, if worn, Webber drawing of a boxing match which the museum assures Saleroom it would have been most happy to lend.
The exhibition does not answer some of the pressing questions about Webber- like the attribution of the "Bligh" portrait about to be offered at auction
But with all the Webbers on show, his fellow traveller William Ellis curiously goes up in estimation. Both Webber and Ellis drew a portrait of the same native and the version by Ellis, the amateur artist, appears to much more natural.
Because of its past inaccessibility, the loan of work by Mikhail Tikhanov who was on the Russian expedition to the Pacific of 1819, was considered a coup.
The drawings come from the Scientific Research Bureau in St Petersburg and capture more of the vibrant colour of the islands than other early works. It must seem odd, in an English-speaking country, that it is now easier to borrow from a Russian institution than British institutions, which are conspicuously absent from this show as lenders.
It is almost churlish to question omissions and selections in a show that has broken so much new ground and resulted in the publication of a catalogue which will be the basis of all further research on the art of Hawaii up to Pearl Harbour.
The only like exhibition of any note was a much smaller and more specific one, Hilo 1825-1925, A Century of Paintings and Drawings. It was held at Lyman House Memorial Museum at Hilo on the island of Hawaii in 1983-84.
Cutting back the exhibition to a manageable 160 works must have been a major challenge.
However, there is only one native Hawaiian artist represented in the exhibition, a skilfully posed naive work, Hilo from Coconut Island, 1868, by Joseph Nawahi. This omission is rationalised on cultural grounds. Native Hawaiians carved and danced, but did not, it seems, draw and paint.
This is an area that appears to call for further research as missionaries taught engraving, and prominent Hawaiians sent their children overseas for an education which almost certainly would have included painting and drawing.
Taito Co Ltd of Tokyo declined to send Joseph Strong's Japanese Labourers on Spreckelsville Plantation of 1885, after it had been illustrated in the catalogue.
The gallery did not substitute any other substantial work by this important artist of Hawaii, yet it added, almost as an after-thought, a presumably overlooked work by the already well represented Tavernier from its own collection. This work is not in the catalogue.
The location of the Strong, however, is an indication of how far notable pieces of Hawaiian art have travelled, even when not the work of official voyages. It is quite possible that views of old Hawaii, like the celebrated portrait by Harnett found in a Tasmanian attic, might have made their way here with old sea captains.
There was also a complaint that the "same old Madge Tennent" picture is on show.
Like Australian art, Hawaii's is an art of land and sea-scape. A watercolour interior of the Volcano House (which was the traveller's rest) by Tavernier included in the Hilo exhibition is shown again, but then it is a rare interior.
Until Georgia O'Keefe and Lloyd Sexton, the flora of Hawaii appears to have been mostly ignored by artists who when they turned to still-lifes, appeared to have preferred dead fish.
As in Australia, Modernism came late to Hawaii. However, it came in a burst of colour.
The most arresting image - it was one of two chosen for reproduction on the exhibition T-shirt - is easily Men in an Outrigger Canoe by the Armenian born US soldier, Arman T. Manookian who poisoned himself in 1931 at the age of 27.
As a local reviewer wrote in 1927: "(Manookian) feels the pagan joyousness of Hawaii's riotous colour and captures it with his brushes for our pleasure.
On the basis of its sheer seduction, the art of postdiscovery Hawaii should be among the most financially esteemed of any of the regional art schools. But it is not - yet.

Sawkins James Gay (1806-1878)view full entry
Reference: ‘Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.’ See article HAWAII SHAKES REGIONAL ART WORLD. From Terry Ingram in Honolulu. Australian Financial Review, Saleroom column, Mar 12, 1992.
Volcanoes are beginning to erupt in Hawaii again.
This is not a meteorological forecast. It is a saleroom notice.
Hawaii's answer to Australia's Heidelberg School and Canada's Group of Seven - its first plein air painters - are receiving their fullest definition in an exhibition that marks a watershed in the appreciation of one of the hottest commodities on world art markets - regional art.
The exhibition, Encounters with Paradise, Views of Hawaii and Its People 1778-1941, is drawing record crowds to Honolulu's Academy of Arts where it is showing until March 22.
Paintings by the school of artists which flourished in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s form one of the major sections of the exhibition and are searing the retinas of visitors from far and asunder.
The artists have been bunched together under the convenient and colourful -if not entirely descriptive - title they have enjoyed for some years, The Volcano School.

Surely only Hawaii's traditionally relaxed attitude to its past can now prevent volcanoes from firing at topographical painting sales.
Like bushfires, volcanoes are an unlikely subject for collector sympathies
Included in this exhibition is Volcano School artist Furneaux' view of Mr John Hall's House on June 9, 1881 and a subsequent view on July 21, 1881. The second picture shows the house consumed by lava.
However, like a slumbering volcano, Hawaii is waking up to its past.
The exhibition has cost about $475,000 to mount.
Not only has it attracted an unusually strong combination of sponsors including Continental Airlines, Bank of Hawaii and Outrigger Hotels, but the Hawaiiana "seismics" began to register last year when the State Archives purchased a collection of printed and manuscript Hawaiiana from a San Francisco collector for $US2.47 million.
"Outsiders", however - both collectors and dealers - still have the edge in Hawaii. This is probably because the local market does not appear to be big enough to support specialist dealers. The San Francisco collection was appraised by Sydney rare bookseller Hordern House, which outbid London's Quaritch for the privilege.
Honolulu/San Francisco-based David Forbes who guest-curated Encounters, was retained four years ago by Hordern House to catalogue the Carlsmith book collection.
This was acquired by Hordern House from Don Carlsmith, who lives on the"Big Island" of Hawaii, and sold to collectors in many ports of the world.
Particularly in its coverage of the early period, Encounters with Paradise underlines the important role Australia and New Zealand have played in preserving Hawaii's heritage, and the special interest the exhibition should have Down Under.
International travellers will despair that the exhibition, which opened on January 23, runs for such a short time. However, it is enjoying a long run by Academy standards.
Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.
There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.
New Zealand-born William Twigg-Smith (1883-1950), who is represented by two works in the exhibition, an oil painting Hilo Sampans and a charcoal, Kilauea Volcano, emerges as a powerful but overlooked artist.
A satellite exhibition at the Academy devoted to Hawaiian printmaking includes a work by the Australian artist Ambrose Patterson, who is described on the picture label as American. The US, admittedly, is where he spent most of his artistic career.
Mr Ron Wright, a director of Continental Airlines' sales marketing for Hawaii, said the airline had become involved in the exhibition "when the director of the Academy, Mr George Ellis, came to us, and said, 'We have this enormous task. We have all these pictures coming from all over and have to get them here.'
"The approach, made last October, obviously involved expertise in which we specialised. But we were so impressed by the project that we would have assisted in cash as well as in kind if the need had arisen," Mr Wright said.
However, Continental's participation was also the result of company philosophy to be seen as a good citizen in all the cities in which it operates. Honolulu is Continental's hub for the Pacific.
With an attendance of 35,000 three weeks before the exhibition was due to close, Mr Wright said the feedback had been very positive.
Attendances may pale compared with Australian block-busters, but the Hawaiian islands have a permanent population of only one million.
Outrigger Hotels, the largest hotel chain in Hawaii, with a romantic history of foundation by a bus-depot worker, was also a useful and logical sponsor, in that the exhibition attracts a different breed of visitor.
Australian institutions, both corporate and cultural, might learn from the low-keyed sponsorship of Encounters with Paradise. Sponsors are simply honoured with a board saying who they are at the beginning of the exhibition. No "overt" accommodation was requested or given.
There were, for instance, no "toy" metal aeroplanes sporting the sponsoring carrier's colours or any other promotional corporate bric-a-brac in the gallery, as has happened in Australia.
The Academy, which has a manageable collection of fine, lesser works of Asian and European art, strung together a package of 13 corporate, government, private and foundation sponsors to support the exhibition and has staged the show without charging an admission fee.
Pictures have been loaned for the exhibition from Russia, Stockholm, Denmark and, of course, Australasia.
The National Library in Canberra has loaned two Webbers. The large oil on canvas, A Chief of the Sandwich Islands Leading his Party to Battle, is among them.
The others include a pen-and-ink wash drawing, View in the Island of Atooi, from the collection of New Zealander Rex Nan Kivell. The Dixson Library has lent four Webber watercolours, A View of Kealakekua Bay, Kalaniopuu, King of Owyhee Bringing Presents to Captain Cook, An Inland View in Atooi and A Morai(temple) in Atooi.
It is clearly not just because of the crowding of visitors at the beginning of an exhibition that spectators congregate around the Webbers. He was the first Western artist to record and observe Hawaii, and Canberra's A Chief of the Sandwich Islands is a large and powerful classicist study.
There are also such Webber curiosities as the earliest known representation of hula dancing and a sketch of masked canoe rowers.
Otherwise, the interest in the early pieces is despite guest curator Forbes' apparent decision not to "play to the gallery". His selections otherwise tend to be subtle rather than dramatic works, the choice perhaps of a book cataloguer rather than an impresario.
Visitors to the exhibition therefore still have to go to the Bishop Museum to see - and then on request - the celebrated, if worn, Webber drawing of a boxing match which the museum assures Saleroom it would have been most happy to lend.
The exhibition does not answer some of the pressing questions about Webber- like the attribution of the "Bligh" portrait about to be offered at auction
But with all the Webbers on show, his fellow traveller William Ellis curiously goes up in estimation. Both Webber and Ellis drew a portrait of the same native and the version by Ellis, the amateur artist, appears to much more natural.
Because of its past inaccessibility, the loan of work by Mikhail Tikhanov who was on the Russian expedition to the Pacific of 1819, was considered a coup.
The drawings come from the Scientific Research Bureau in St Petersburg and capture more of the vibrant colour of the islands than other early works. It must seem odd, in an English-speaking country, that it is now easier to borrow from a Russian institution than British institutions, which are conspicuously absent from this show as lenders.
It is almost churlish to question omissions and selections in a show that has broken so much new ground and resulted in the publication of a catalogue which will be the basis of all further research on the art of Hawaii up to Pearl Harbour.
The only like exhibition of any note was a much smaller and more specific one, Hilo 1825-1925, A Century of Paintings and Drawings. It was held at Lyman House Memorial Museum at Hilo on the island of Hawaii in 1983-84.
Cutting back the exhibition to a manageable 160 works must have been a major challenge.
However, there is only one native Hawaiian artist represented in the exhibition, a skilfully posed naive work, Hilo from Coconut Island, 1868, by Joseph Nawahi. This omission is rationalised on cultural grounds. Native Hawaiians carved and danced, but did not, it seems, draw and paint.
This is an area that appears to call for further research as missionaries taught engraving, and prominent Hawaiians sent their children overseas for an education which almost certainly would have included painting and drawing.
Taito Co Ltd of Tokyo declined to send Joseph Strong's Japanese Labourers on Spreckelsville Plantation of 1885, after it had been illustrated in the catalogue.
The gallery did not substitute any other substantial work by this important artist of Hawaii, yet it added, almost as an after-thought, a presumably overlooked work by the already well represented Tavernier from its own collection. This work is not in the catalogue.
The location of the Strong, however, is an indication of how far notable pieces of Hawaiian art have travelled, even when not the work of official voyages. It is quite possible that views of old Hawaii, like the celebrated portrait by Harnett found in a Tasmanian attic, might have made their way here with old sea captains.
There was also a complaint that the "same old Madge Tennent" picture is on show.
Like Australian art, Hawaii's is an art of land and sea-scape. A watercolour interior of the Volcano House (which was the traveller's rest) by Tavernier included in the Hilo exhibition is shown again, but then it is a rare interior.
Until Georgia O'Keefe and Lloyd Sexton, the flora of Hawaii appears to have been mostly ignored by artists who when they turned to still-lifes, appeared to have preferred dead fish.
As in Australia, Modernism came late to Hawaii. However, it came in a burst of colour.
The most arresting image - it was one of two chosen for reproduction on the exhibition T-shirt - is easily Men in an Outrigger Canoe by the Armenian born US soldier, Arman T. Manookian who poisoned himself in 1931 at the age of 27.
As a local reviewer wrote in 1927: "(Manookian) feels the pagan joyousness of Hawaii's riotous colour and captures it with his brushes for our pleasure.
On the basis of its sheer seduction, the art of postdiscovery Hawaii should be among the most financially esteemed of any of the regional art schools. But it is not - yet.

Chevalier Nicholasview full entry
Reference: ‘There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
‘. See article HAWAII SHAKES REGIONAL ART WORLD. From Terry Ingram in Honolulu. Australian Financial Review, Saleroom column, Mar 12, 1992.
Volcanoes are beginning to erupt in Hawaii again.
This is not a meteorological forecast. It is a saleroom notice.
Hawaii's answer to Australia's Heidelberg School and Canada's Group of Seven - its first plein air painters - are receiving their fullest definition in an exhibition that marks a watershed in the appreciation of one of the hottest commodities on world art markets - regional art.
The exhibition, Encounters with Paradise, Views of Hawaii and Its People 1778-1941, is drawing record crowds to Honolulu's Academy of Arts where it is showing until March 22.
Paintings by the school of artists which flourished in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s form one of the major sections of the exhibition and are searing the retinas of visitors from far and asunder.
The artists have been bunched together under the convenient and colourful -if not entirely descriptive - title they have enjoyed for some years, The Volcano School.

Surely only Hawaii's traditionally relaxed attitude to its past can now prevent volcanoes from firing at topographical painting sales.
Like bushfires, volcanoes are an unlikely subject for collector sympathies
Included in this exhibition is Volcano School artist Furneaux' view of Mr John Hall's House on June 9, 1881 and a subsequent view on July 21, 1881. The second picture shows the house consumed by lava.
However, like a slumbering volcano, Hawaii is waking up to its past.
The exhibition has cost about $475,000 to mount.
Not only has it attracted an unusually strong combination of sponsors including Continental Airlines, Bank of Hawaii and Outrigger Hotels, but the Hawaiiana "seismics" began to register last year when the State Archives purchased a collection of printed and manuscript Hawaiiana from a San Francisco collector for $US2.47 million.
"Outsiders", however - both collectors and dealers - still have the edge in Hawaii. This is probably because the local market does not appear to be big enough to support specialist dealers. The San Francisco collection was appraised by Sydney rare bookseller Hordern House, which outbid London's Quaritch for the privilege.
Honolulu/San Francisco-based David Forbes who guest-curated Encounters, was retained four years ago by Hordern House to catalogue the Carlsmith book collection.
This was acquired by Hordern House from Don Carlsmith, who lives on the"Big Island" of Hawaii, and sold to collectors in many ports of the world.
Particularly in its coverage of the early period, Encounters with Paradise underlines the important role Australia and New Zealand have played in preserving Hawaii's heritage, and the special interest the exhibition should have Down Under.
International travellers will despair that the exhibition, which opened on January 23, runs for such a short time. However, it is enjoying a long run by Academy standards.
Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.
There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.
New Zealand-born William Twigg-Smith (1883-1950), who is represented by two works in the exhibition, an oil painting Hilo Sampans and a charcoal, Kilauea Volcano, emerges as a powerful but overlooked artist.
A satellite exhibition at the Academy devoted to Hawaiian printmaking includes a work by the Australian artist Ambrose Patterson, who is described on the picture label as American. The US, admittedly, is where he spent most of his artistic career.
Mr Ron Wright, a director of Continental Airlines' sales marketing for Hawaii, said the airline had become involved in the exhibition "when the director of the Academy, Mr George Ellis, came to us, and said, 'We have this enormous task. We have all these pictures coming from all over and have to get them here.'
"The approach, made last October, obviously involved expertise in which we specialised. But we were so impressed by the project that we would have assisted in cash as well as in kind if the need had arisen," Mr Wright said.
However, Continental's participation was also the result of company philosophy to be seen as a good citizen in all the cities in which it operates. Honolulu is Continental's hub for the Pacific.
With an attendance of 35,000 three weeks before the exhibition was due to close, Mr Wright said the feedback had been very positive.
Attendances may pale compared with Australian block-busters, but the Hawaiian islands have a permanent population of only one million.
Outrigger Hotels, the largest hotel chain in Hawaii, with a romantic history of foundation by a bus-depot worker, was also a useful and logical sponsor, in that the exhibition attracts a different breed of visitor.
Australian institutions, both corporate and cultural, might learn from the low-keyed sponsorship of Encounters with Paradise. Sponsors are simply honoured with a board saying who they are at the beginning of the exhibition. No "overt" accommodation was requested or given.
There were, for instance, no "toy" metal aeroplanes sporting the sponsoring carrier's colours or any other promotional corporate bric-a-brac in the gallery, as has happened in Australia.
The Academy, which has a manageable collection of fine, lesser works of Asian and European art, strung together a package of 13 corporate, government, private and foundation sponsors to support the exhibition and has staged the show without charging an admission fee.
Pictures have been loaned for the exhibition from Russia, Stockholm, Denmark and, of course, Australasia.
The National Library in Canberra has loaned two Webbers. The large oil on canvas, A Chief of the Sandwich Islands Leading his Party to Battle, is among them.
The others include a pen-and-ink wash drawing, View in the Island of Atooi, from the collection of New Zealander Rex Nan Kivell. The Dixson Library has lent four Webber watercolours, A View of Kealakekua Bay, Kalaniopuu, King of Owyhee Bringing Presents to Captain Cook, An Inland View in Atooi and A Morai(temple) in Atooi.
It is clearly not just because of the crowding of visitors at the beginning of an exhibition that spectators congregate around the Webbers. He was the first Western artist to record and observe Hawaii, and Canberra's A Chief of the Sandwich Islands is a large and powerful classicist study.
There are also such Webber curiosities as the earliest known representation of hula dancing and a sketch of masked canoe rowers.
Otherwise, the interest in the early pieces is despite guest curator Forbes' apparent decision not to "play to the gallery". His selections otherwise tend to be subtle rather than dramatic works, the choice perhaps of a book cataloguer rather than an impresario.
Visitors to the exhibition therefore still have to go to the Bishop Museum to see - and then on request - the celebrated, if worn, Webber drawing of a boxing match which the museum assures Saleroom it would have been most happy to lend.
The exhibition does not answer some of the pressing questions about Webber- like the attribution of the "Bligh" portrait about to be offered at auction
But with all the Webbers on show, his fellow traveller William Ellis curiously goes up in estimation. Both Webber and Ellis drew a portrait of the same native and the version by Ellis, the amateur artist, appears to much more natural.
Because of its past inaccessibility, the loan of work by Mikhail Tikhanov who was on the Russian expedition to the Pacific of 1819, was considered a coup.
The drawings come from the Scientific Research Bureau in St Petersburg and capture more of the vibrant colour of the islands than other early works. It must seem odd, in an English-speaking country, that it is now easier to borrow from a Russian institution than British institutions, which are conspicuously absent from this show as lenders.
It is almost churlish to question omissions and selections in a show that has broken so much new ground and resulted in the publication of a catalogue which will be the basis of all further research on the art of Hawaii up to Pearl Harbour.
The only like exhibition of any note was a much smaller and more specific one, Hilo 1825-1925, A Century of Paintings and Drawings. It was held at Lyman House Memorial Museum at Hilo on the island of Hawaii in 1983-84.
Cutting back the exhibition to a manageable 160 works must have been a major challenge.
However, there is only one native Hawaiian artist represented in the exhibition, a skilfully posed naive work, Hilo from Coconut Island, 1868, by Joseph Nawahi. This omission is rationalised on cultural grounds. Native Hawaiians carved and danced, but did not, it seems, draw and paint.
This is an area that appears to call for further research as missionaries taught engraving, and prominent Hawaiians sent their children overseas for an education which almost certainly would have included painting and drawing.
Taito Co Ltd of Tokyo declined to send Joseph Strong's Japanese Labourers on Spreckelsville Plantation of 1885, after it had been illustrated in the catalogue.
The gallery did not substitute any other substantial work by this important artist of Hawaii, yet it added, almost as an after-thought, a presumably overlooked work by the already well represented Tavernier from its own collection. This work is not in the catalogue.
The location of the Strong, however, is an indication of how far notable pieces of Hawaiian art have travelled, even when not the work of official voyages. It is quite possible that views of old Hawaii, like the celebrated portrait by Harnett found in a Tasmanian attic, might have made their way here with old sea captains.
There was also a complaint that the "same old Madge Tennent" picture is on show.
Like Australian art, Hawaii's is an art of land and sea-scape. A watercolour interior of the Volcano House (which was the traveller's rest) by Tavernier included in the Hilo exhibition is shown again, but then it is a rare interior.
Until Georgia O'Keefe and Lloyd Sexton, the flora of Hawaii appears to have been mostly ignored by artists who when they turned to still-lifes, appeared to have preferred dead fish.
As in Australia, Modernism came late to Hawaii. However, it came in a burst of colour.
The most arresting image - it was one of two chosen for reproduction on the exhibition T-shirt - is easily Men in an Outrigger Canoe by the Armenian born US soldier, Arman T. Manookian who poisoned himself in 1931 at the age of 27.
As a local reviewer wrote in 1927: "(Manookian) feels the pagan joyousness of Hawaii's riotous colour and captures it with his brushes for our pleasure.
On the basis of its sheer seduction, the art of postdiscovery Hawaii should be among the most financially esteemed of any of the regional art schools. But it is not - yet.

Twigg-Smith William (1883-1950)view full entry
Reference: see article HAWAII SHAKES REGIONAL ART WORLD. From Terry Ingram in Honolulu. Australian Financial Review, Saleroom column, Mar 12, 1992.
Volcanoes are beginning to erupt in Hawaii again.
This is not a meteorological forecast. It is a saleroom notice.
Hawaii's answer to Australia's Heidelberg School and Canada's Group of Seven - its first plein air painters - are receiving their fullest definition in an exhibition that marks a watershed in the appreciation of one of the hottest commodities on world art markets - regional art.
The exhibition, Encounters with Paradise, Views of Hawaii and Its People 1778-1941, is drawing record crowds to Honolulu's Academy of Arts where it is showing until March 22.
Paintings by the school of artists which flourished in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s form one of the major sections of the exhibition and are searing the retinas of visitors from far and asunder.
The artists have been bunched together under the convenient and colourful -if not entirely descriptive - title they have enjoyed for some years, The Volcano School.

Surely only Hawaii's traditionally relaxed attitude to its past can now prevent volcanoes from firing at topographical painting sales.
Like bushfires, volcanoes are an unlikely subject for collector sympathies
Included in this exhibition is Volcano School artist Furneaux' view of Mr John Hall's House on June 9, 1881 and a subsequent view on July 21, 1881. The second picture shows the house consumed by lava.
However, like a slumbering volcano, Hawaii is waking up to its past.
The exhibition has cost about $475,000 to mount.
Not only has it attracted an unusually strong combination of sponsors including Continental Airlines, Bank of Hawaii and Outrigger Hotels, but the Hawaiiana "seismics" began to register last year when the State Archives purchased a collection of printed and manuscript Hawaiiana from a San Francisco collector for $US2.47 million.
"Outsiders", however - both collectors and dealers - still have the edge in Hawaii. This is probably because the local market does not appear to be big enough to support specialist dealers. The San Francisco collection was appraised by Sydney rare bookseller Hordern House, which outbid London's Quaritch for the privilege.
Honolulu/San Francisco-based David Forbes who guest-curated Encounters, was retained four years ago by Hordern House to catalogue the Carlsmith book collection.
This was acquired by Hordern House from Don Carlsmith, who lives on the"Big Island" of Hawaii, and sold to collectors in many ports of the world.
Particularly in its coverage of the early period, Encounters with Paradise underlines the important role Australia and New Zealand have played in preserving Hawaii's heritage, and the special interest the exhibition should have Down Under.
International travellers will despair that the exhibition, which opened on January 23, runs for such a short time. However, it is enjoying a long run by Academy standards.
Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.
There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.
New Zealand-born William Twigg-Smith (1883-1950), who is represented by two works in the exhibition, an oil painting Hilo Sampans and a charcoal, Kilauea Volcano, emerges as a powerful but overlooked artist.
A satellite exhibition at the Academy devoted to Hawaiian printmaking includes a work by the Australian artist Ambrose Patterson, who is described on the picture label as American. The US, admittedly, is where he spent most of his artistic career.
Mr Ron Wright, a director of Continental Airlines' sales marketing for Hawaii, said the airline had become involved in the exhibition "when the director of the Academy, Mr George Ellis, came to us, and said, 'We have this enormous task. We have all these pictures coming from all over and have to get them here.'
"The approach, made last October, obviously involved expertise in which we specialised. But we were so impressed by the project that we would have assisted in cash as well as in kind if the need had arisen," Mr Wright said.
However, Continental's participation was also the result of company philosophy to be seen as a good citizen in all the cities in which it operates. Honolulu is Continental's hub for the Pacific.
With an attendance of 35,000 three weeks before the exhibition was due to close, Mr Wright said the feedback had been very positive.
Attendances may pale compared with Australian block-busters, but the Hawaiian islands have a permanent population of only one million.
Outrigger Hotels, the largest hotel chain in Hawaii, with a romantic history of foundation by a bus-depot worker, was also a useful and logical sponsor, in that the exhibition attracts a different breed of visitor.
Australian institutions, both corporate and cultural, might learn from the low-keyed sponsorship of Encounters with Paradise. Sponsors are simply honoured with a board saying who they are at the beginning of the exhibition. No "overt" accommodation was requested or given.
There were, for instance, no "toy" metal aeroplanes sporting the sponsoring carrier's colours or any other promotional corporate bric-a-brac in the gallery, as has happened in Australia.
The Academy, which has a manageable collection of fine, lesser works of Asian and European art, strung together a package of 13 corporate, government, private and foundation sponsors to support the exhibition and has staged the show without charging an admission fee.
Pictures have been loaned for the exhibition from Russia, Stockholm, Denmark and, of course, Australasia.
The National Library in Canberra has loaned two Webbers. The large oil on canvas, A Chief of the Sandwich Islands Leading his Party to Battle, is among them.
The others include a pen-and-ink wash drawing, View in the Island of Atooi, from the collection of New Zealander Rex Nan Kivell. The Dixson Library has lent four Webber watercolours, A View of Kealakekua Bay, Kalaniopuu, King of Owyhee Bringing Presents to Captain Cook, An Inland View in Atooi and A Morai(temple) in Atooi.
It is clearly not just because of the crowding of visitors at the beginning of an exhibition that spectators congregate around the Webbers. He was the first Western artist to record and observe Hawaii, and Canberra's A Chief of the Sandwich Islands is a large and powerful classicist study.
There are also such Webber curiosities as the earliest known representation of hula dancing and a sketch of masked canoe rowers.
Otherwise, the interest in the early pieces is despite guest curator Forbes' apparent decision not to "play to the gallery". His selections otherwise tend to be subtle rather than dramatic works, the choice perhaps of a book cataloguer rather than an impresario.
Visitors to the exhibition therefore still have to go to the Bishop Museum to see - and then on request - the celebrated, if worn, Webber drawing of a boxing match which the museum assures Saleroom it would have been most happy to lend.
The exhibition does not answer some of the pressing questions about Webber- like the attribution of the "Bligh" portrait about to be offered at auction
But with all the Webbers on show, his fellow traveller William Ellis curiously goes up in estimation. Both Webber and Ellis drew a portrait of the same native and the version by Ellis, the amateur artist, appears to much more natural.
Because of its past inaccessibility, the loan of work by Mikhail Tikhanov who was on the Russian expedition to the Pacific of 1819, was considered a coup.
The drawings come from the Scientific Research Bureau in St Petersburg and capture more of the vibrant colour of the islands than other early works. It must seem odd, in an English-speaking country, that it is now easier to borrow from a Russian institution than British institutions, which are conspicuously absent from this show as lenders.
It is almost churlish to question omissions and selections in a show that has broken so much new ground and resulted in the publication of a catalogue which will be the basis of all further research on the art of Hawaii up to Pearl Harbour.
The only like exhibition of any note was a much smaller and more specific one, Hilo 1825-1925, A Century of Paintings and Drawings. It was held at Lyman House Memorial Museum at Hilo on the island of Hawaii in 1983-84.
Cutting back the exhibition to a manageable 160 works must have been a major challenge.
However, there is only one native Hawaiian artist represented in the exhibition, a skilfully posed naive work, Hilo from Coconut Island, 1868, by Joseph Nawahi. This omission is rationalised on cultural grounds. Native Hawaiians carved and danced, but did not, it seems, draw and paint.
This is an area that appears to call for further research as missionaries taught engraving, and prominent Hawaiians sent their children overseas for an education which almost certainly would have included painting and drawing.
Taito Co Ltd of Tokyo declined to send Joseph Strong's Japanese Labourers on Spreckelsville Plantation of 1885, after it had been illustrated in the catalogue.
The gallery did not substitute any other substantial work by this important artist of Hawaii, yet it added, almost as an after-thought, a presumably overlooked work by the already well represented Tavernier from its own collection. This work is not in the catalogue.
The location of the Strong, however, is an indication of how far notable pieces of Hawaiian art have travelled, even when not the work of official voyages. It is quite possible that views of old Hawaii, like the celebrated portrait by Harnett found in a Tasmanian attic, might have made their way here with old sea captains.
There was also a complaint that the "same old Madge Tennent" picture is on show.
Like Australian art, Hawaii's is an art of land and sea-scape. A watercolour interior of the Volcano House (which was the traveller's rest) by Tavernier included in the Hilo exhibition is shown again, but then it is a rare interior.
Until Georgia O'Keefe and Lloyd Sexton, the flora of Hawaii appears to have been mostly ignored by artists who when they turned to still-lifes, appeared to have preferred dead fish.
As in Australia, Modernism came late to Hawaii. However, it came in a burst of colour.
The most arresting image - it was one of two chosen for reproduction on the exhibition T-shirt - is easily Men in an Outrigger Canoe by the Armenian born US soldier, Arman T. Manookian who poisoned himself in 1931 at the age of 27.
As a local reviewer wrote in 1927: "(Manookian) feels the pagan joyousness of Hawaii's riotous colour and captures it with his brushes for our pleasure.
On the basis of its sheer seduction, the art of postdiscovery Hawaii should be among the most financially esteemed of any of the regional art schools. But it is not - yet.

Webber Johnview full entry
Reference: see article HAWAII SHAKES REGIONAL ART WORLD. From Terry Ingram in Honolulu. Australian Financial Review, Saleroom column, Mar 12, 1992.
Volcanoes are beginning to erupt in Hawaii again.
This is not a meteorological forecast. It is a saleroom notice.
Hawaii's answer to Australia's Heidelberg School and Canada's Group of Seven - its first plein air painters - are receiving their fullest definition in an exhibition that marks a watershed in the appreciation of one of the hottest commodities on world art markets - regional art.
The exhibition, Encounters with Paradise, Views of Hawaii and Its People 1778-1941, is drawing record crowds to Honolulu's Academy of Arts where it is showing until March 22.
Paintings by the school of artists which flourished in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s form one of the major sections of the exhibition and are searing the retinas of visitors from far and asunder.
The artists have been bunched together under the convenient and colourful -if not entirely descriptive - title they have enjoyed for some years, The Volcano School.

Surely only Hawaii's traditionally relaxed attitude to its past can now prevent volcanoes from firing at topographical painting sales.
Like bushfires, volcanoes are an unlikely subject for collector sympathies
Included in this exhibition is Volcano School artist Furneaux' view of Mr John Hall's House on June 9, 1881 and a subsequent view on July 21, 1881. The second picture shows the house consumed by lava.
However, like a slumbering volcano, Hawaii is waking up to its past.
The exhibition has cost about $475,000 to mount.
Not only has it attracted an unusually strong combination of sponsors including Continental Airlines, Bank of Hawaii and Outrigger Hotels, but the Hawaiiana "seismics" began to register last year when the State Archives purchased a collection of printed and manuscript Hawaiiana from a San Francisco collector for $US2.47 million.
"Outsiders", however - both collectors and dealers - still have the edge in Hawaii. This is probably because the local market does not appear to be big enough to support specialist dealers. The San Francisco collection was appraised by Sydney rare bookseller Hordern House, which outbid London's Quaritch for the privilege.
Honolulu/San Francisco-based David Forbes who guest-curated Encounters, was retained four years ago by Hordern House to catalogue the Carlsmith book collection.
This was acquired by Hordern House from Don Carlsmith, who lives on the"Big Island" of Hawaii, and sold to collectors in many ports of the world.
Particularly in its coverage of the early period, Encounters with Paradise underlines the important role Australia and New Zealand have played in preserving Hawaii's heritage, and the special interest the exhibition should have Down Under.
International travellers will despair that the exhibition, which opened on January 23, runs for such a short time. However, it is enjoying a long run by Academy standards.
Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.
There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.
New Zealand-born William Twigg-Smith (1883-1950), who is represented by two works in the exhibition, an oil painting Hilo Sampans and a charcoal, Kilauea Volcano, emerges as a powerful but overlooked artist.
A satellite exhibition at the Academy devoted to Hawaiian printmaking includes a work by the Australian artist Ambrose Patterson, who is described on the picture label as American. The US, admittedly, is where he spent most of his artistic career.
Mr Ron Wright, a director of Continental Airlines' sales marketing for Hawaii, said the airline had become involved in the exhibition "when the director of the Academy, Mr George Ellis, came to us, and said, 'We have this enormous task. We have all these pictures coming from all over and have to get them here.'
"The approach, made last October, obviously involved expertise in which we specialised. But we were so impressed by the project that we would have assisted in cash as well as in kind if the need had arisen," Mr Wright said.
However, Continental's participation was also the result of company philosophy to be seen as a good citizen in all the cities in which it operates. Honolulu is Continental's hub for the Pacific.
With an attendance of 35,000 three weeks before the exhibition was due to close, Mr Wright said the feedback had been very positive.
Attendances may pale compared with Australian block-busters, but the Hawaiian islands have a permanent population of only one million.
Outrigger Hotels, the largest hotel chain in Hawaii, with a romantic history of foundation by a bus-depot worker, was also a useful and logical sponsor, in that the exhibition attracts a different breed of visitor.
Australian institutions, both corporate and cultural, might learn from the low-keyed sponsorship of Encounters with Paradise. Sponsors are simply honoured with a board saying who they are at the beginning of the exhibition. No "overt" accommodation was requested or given.
There were, for instance, no "toy" metal aeroplanes sporting the sponsoring carrier's colours or any other promotional corporate bric-a-brac in the gallery, as has happened in Australia.
The Academy, which has a manageable collection of fine, lesser works of Asian and European art, strung together a package of 13 corporate, government, private and foundation sponsors to support the exhibition and has staged the show without charging an admission fee.
Pictures have been loaned for the exhibition from Russia, Stockholm, Denmark and, of course, Australasia.
The National Library in Canberra has loaned two Webbers. The large oil on canvas, A Chief of the Sandwich Islands Leading his Party to Battle, is among them.
The others include a pen-and-ink wash drawing, View in the Island of Atooi, from the collection of New Zealander Rex Nan Kivell. The Dixson Library has lent four Webber watercolours, A View of Kealakekua Bay, Kalaniopuu, King of Owyhee Bringing Presents to Captain Cook, An Inland View in Atooi and A Morai(temple) in Atooi.
It is clearly not just because of the crowding of visitors at the beginning of an exhibition that spectators congregate around the Webbers. He was the first Western artist to record and observe Hawaii, and Canberra's A Chief of the Sandwich Islands is a large and powerful classicist study.
There are also such Webber curiosities as the earliest known representation of hula dancing and a sketch of masked canoe rowers.
Otherwise, the interest in the early pieces is despite guest curator Forbes' apparent decision not to "play to the gallery". His selections otherwise tend to be subtle rather than dramatic works, the choice perhaps of a book cataloguer rather than an impresario.
Visitors to the exhibition therefore still have to go to the Bishop Museum to see - and then on request - the celebrated, if worn, Webber drawing of a boxing match which the museum assures Saleroom it would have been most happy to lend.
The exhibition does not answer some of the pressing questions about Webber- like the attribution of the "Bligh" portrait about to be offered at auction
But with all the Webbers on show, his fellow traveller William Ellis curiously goes up in estimation. Both Webber and Ellis drew a portrait of the same native and the version by Ellis, the amateur artist, appears to much more natural.
Because of its past inaccessibility, the loan of work by Mikhail Tikhanov who was on the Russian expedition to the Pacific of 1819, was considered a coup.
The drawings come from the Scientific Research Bureau in St Petersburg and capture more of the vibrant colour of the islands than other early works. It must seem odd, in an English-speaking country, that it is now easier to borrow from a Russian institution than British institutions, which are conspicuously absent from this show as lenders.
It is almost churlish to question omissions and selections in a show that has broken so much new ground and resulted in the publication of a catalogue which will be the basis of all further research on the art of Hawaii up to Pearl Harbour.
The only like exhibition of any note was a much smaller and more specific one, Hilo 1825-1925, A Century of Paintings and Drawings. It was held at Lyman House Memorial Museum at Hilo on the island of Hawaii in 1983-84.
Cutting back the exhibition to a manageable 160 works must have been a major challenge.
However, there is only one native Hawaiian artist represented in the exhibition, a skilfully posed naive work, Hilo from Coconut Island, 1868, by Joseph Nawahi. This omission is rationalised on cultural grounds. Native Hawaiians carved and danced, but did not, it seems, draw and paint.
This is an area that appears to call for further research as missionaries taught engraving, and prominent Hawaiians sent their children overseas for an education which almost certainly would have included painting and drawing.
Taito Co Ltd of Tokyo declined to send Joseph Strong's Japanese Labourers on Spreckelsville Plantation of 1885, after it had been illustrated in the catalogue.
The gallery did not substitute any other substantial work by this important artist of Hawaii, yet it added, almost as an after-thought, a presumably overlooked work by the already well represented Tavernier from its own collection. This work is not in the catalogue.
The location of the Strong, however, is an indication of how far notable pieces of Hawaiian art have travelled, even when not the work of official voyages. It is quite possible that views of old Hawaii, like the celebrated portrait by Harnett found in a Tasmanian attic, might have made their way here with old sea captains.
There was also a complaint that the "same old Madge Tennent" picture is on show.
Like Australian art, Hawaii's is an art of land and sea-scape. A watercolour interior of the Volcano House (which was the traveller's rest) by Tavernier included in the Hilo exhibition is shown again, but then it is a rare interior.
Until Georgia O'Keefe and Lloyd Sexton, the flora of Hawaii appears to have been mostly ignored by artists who when they turned to still-lifes, appeared to have preferred dead fish.
As in Australia, Modernism came late to Hawaii. However, it came in a burst of colour.
The most arresting image - it was one of two chosen for reproduction on the exhibition T-shirt - is easily Men in an Outrigger Canoe by the Armenian born US soldier, Arman T. Manookian who poisoned himself in 1931 at the age of 27.
As a local reviewer wrote in 1927: "(Manookian) feels the pagan joyousness of Hawaii's riotous colour and captures it with his brushes for our pleasure.
On the basis of its sheer seduction, the art of postdiscovery Hawaii should be among the most financially esteemed of any of the regional art schools. But it is not - yet.

Ellis Williamview full entry
Reference: see article HAWAII SHAKES REGIONAL ART WORLD. From Terry Ingram in Honolulu. Australian Financial Review, Saleroom column, Mar 12, 1992.
Volcanoes are beginning to erupt in Hawaii again.
This is not a meteorological forecast. It is a saleroom notice.
Hawaii's answer to Australia's Heidelberg School and Canada's Group of Seven - its first plein air painters - are receiving their fullest definition in an exhibition that marks a watershed in the appreciation of one of the hottest commodities on world art markets - regional art.
The exhibition, Encounters with Paradise, Views of Hawaii and Its People 1778-1941, is drawing record crowds to Honolulu's Academy of Arts where it is showing until March 22.
Paintings by the school of artists which flourished in Hawaii in the 1880s and 1890s form one of the major sections of the exhibition and are searing the retinas of visitors from far and asunder.
The artists have been bunched together under the convenient and colourful -if not entirely descriptive - title they have enjoyed for some years, The Volcano School.

Surely only Hawaii's traditionally relaxed attitude to its past can now prevent volcanoes from firing at topographical painting sales.
Like bushfires, volcanoes are an unlikely subject for collector sympathies
Included in this exhibition is Volcano School artist Furneaux' view of Mr John Hall's House on June 9, 1881 and a subsequent view on July 21, 1881. The second picture shows the house consumed by lava.
However, like a slumbering volcano, Hawaii is waking up to its past.
The exhibition has cost about $475,000 to mount.
Not only has it attracted an unusually strong combination of sponsors including Continental Airlines, Bank of Hawaii and Outrigger Hotels, but the Hawaiiana "seismics" began to register last year when the State Archives purchased a collection of printed and manuscript Hawaiiana from a San Francisco collector for $US2.47 million.
"Outsiders", however - both collectors and dealers - still have the edge in Hawaii. This is probably because the local market does not appear to be big enough to support specialist dealers. The San Francisco collection was appraised by Sydney rare bookseller Hordern House, which outbid London's Quaritch for the privilege.
Honolulu/San Francisco-based David Forbes who guest-curated Encounters, was retained four years ago by Hordern House to catalogue the Carlsmith book collection.
This was acquired by Hordern House from Don Carlsmith, who lives on the"Big Island" of Hawaii, and sold to collectors in many ports of the world.
Particularly in its coverage of the early period, Encounters with Paradise underlines the important role Australia and New Zealand have played in preserving Hawaii's heritage, and the special interest the exhibition should have Down Under.
International travellers will despair that the exhibition, which opened on January 23, runs for such a short time. However, it is enjoying a long run by Academy standards.
Australia shared more than the early voyager artists with Hawaii. James Gay Sawkins (1806-1878) went on to become an artist on the Australian goldfields. Loans by the National Library in Canberra include Hawaiian views by Sawkins.
There is a small watercolour of Hawaii by Nicholas Chevalier, who is one of the most expensive Australian colonial artists. The Pali (a divide) 20 by 14cm, from the Academy's collection, was painted in 1869 when the artist accompanied the Duke of Edinburgh on a tour to Australia.
In the later period, Madge Tennent is represented. She studied at the Julian Ashton Art School and moved around so much in her lifetime that she can be claimed as New Zealand, South African, French and American school.
New Zealand-born William Twigg-Smith (1883-1950), who is represented by two works in the exhibition, an oil painting Hilo Sampans and a charcoal, Kilauea Volcano, emerges as a powerful but overlooked artist.
A satellite exhibition at the Academy devoted to Hawaiian printmaking includes a work by the Australian artist Ambrose Patterson, who is described on the picture label as American. The US, admittedly, is where he spent most of his artistic career.
Mr Ron Wright, a director of Continental Airlines' sales marketing for Hawaii, said the airline had become involved in the exhibition "when the director of the Academy, Mr George Ellis, came to us, and said, 'We have this enormous task. We have all these pictures coming from all over and have to get them here.'
"The approach, made last October, obviously involved expertise in which we specialised. But we were so impressed by the project that we would have assisted in cash as well as in kind if the need had arisen," Mr Wright said.
However, Continental's participation was also the result of company philosophy to be seen as a good citizen in all the cities in which it operates. Honolulu is Continental's hub for the Pacific.
With an attendance of 35,000 three weeks before the exhibition was due to close, Mr Wright said the feedback had been very positive.
Attendances may pale compared with Australian block-busters, but the Hawaiian islands have a permanent population of only one million.
Outrigger Hotels, the largest hotel chain in Hawaii, with a romantic history of foundation by a bus-depot worker, was also a useful and logical sponsor, in that the exhibition attracts a different breed of visitor.
Australian institutions, both corporate and cultural, might learn from the low-keyed sponsorship of Encounters with Paradise. Sponsors are simply honoured with a board saying who they are at the beginning of the exhibition. No "overt" accommodation was requested or given.
There were, for instance, no "toy" metal aeroplanes sporting the sponsoring carrier's colours or any other promotional corporate bric-a-brac in the gallery, as has happened in Australia.
The Academy, which has a manageable collection of fine, lesser works of Asian and European art, strung together a package of 13 corporate, government, private and foundation sponsors to support the exhibition and has staged the show without charging an admission fee.
Pictures have been loaned for the exhibition from Russia, Stockholm, Denmark and, of course, Australasia.
The National Library in Canberra has loaned two Webbers. The large oil on canvas, A Chief of the Sandwich Islands Leading his Party to Battle, is among them.
The others include a pen-and-ink wash drawing, View in the Island of Atooi, from the collection of New Zealander Rex Nan Kivell. The Dixson Library has lent four Webber watercolours, A View of Kealakekua Bay, Kalaniopuu, King of Owyhee Bringing Presents to Captain Cook, An Inland View in Atooi and A Morai(temple) in Atooi.
It is clearly not just because of the crowding of visitors at the beginning of an exhibition that spectators congregate around the Webbers. He was the first Western artist to record and observe Hawaii, and Canberra's A Chief of the Sandwich Islands is a large and powerful classicist study.
There are also such Webber curiosities as the earliest known representation of hula dancing and a sketch of masked canoe rowers.
Otherwise, the interest in the early pieces is despite guest curator Forbes' apparent decision not to "play to the gallery". His selections otherwise tend to be subtle rather than dramatic works, the choice perhaps of a book cataloguer rather than an impresario.
Visitors to the exhibition therefore still have to go to the Bishop Museum to see - and then on request - the celebrated, if worn, Webber drawing of a boxing match which the museum assures Saleroom it would have been most happy to lend.
The exhibition does not answer some of the pressing questions about Webber- like the attribution of the "Bligh" portrait about to be offered at auction
But with all the Webbers on show, his fellow traveller William Ellis curiously goes up in estimation. Both Webber and Ellis drew a portrait of the same native and the version by Ellis, the amateur artist, appears to much more natural.
Because of its past inaccessibility, the loan of work by Mikhail Tikhanov who was on the Russian expedition to the Pacific of 1819, was considered a coup.
The drawings come from the Scientific Research Bureau in St Petersburg and capture more of the vibrant colour of the islands than other early works. It must seem odd, in an English-speaking country, that it is now easier to borrow from a Russian institution than British institutions, which are conspicuously absent from this show as lenders.
It is almost churlish to question omissions and selections in a show that has broken so much new ground and resulted in the publication of a catalogue which will be the basis of all further research on the art of Hawaii up to Pearl Harbour.
The only like exhibition of any note was a much smaller and more specific one, Hilo 1825-1925, A Century of Paintings and Drawings. It was held at Lyman House Memorial Museum at Hilo on the island of Hawaii in 1983-84.
Cutting back the exhibition to a manageable 160 works must have been a major challenge.
However, there is only one native Hawaiian artist represented in the exhibition, a skilfully posed naive work, Hilo from Coconut Island, 1868, by Joseph Nawahi. This omission is rationalised on cultural grounds. Native Hawaiians carved and danced, but did not, it seems, draw and paint.
This is an area that appears to call for further research as missionaries taught engraving, and prominent Hawaiians sent their children overseas for an education which almost certainly would have included painting and drawing.
Taito Co Ltd of Tokyo declined to send Joseph Strong's Japanese Labourers on Spreckelsville Plantation of 1885, after it had been illustrated in the catalogue.
The gallery did not substitute any other substantial work by this important artist of Hawaii, yet it added, almost as an after-thought, a presumably overlooked work by the already well represented Tavernier from its own collection. This work is not in the catalogue.
The location of the Strong, however, is an indication of how far notable pieces of Hawaiian art have travelled, even when not the work of official voyages. It is quite possible that views of old Hawaii, like the celebrated portrait by Harnett found in a Tasmanian attic, might have made their way here with old sea captains.
There was also a complaint that the "same old Madge Tennent" picture is on show.
Like Australian art, Hawaii's is an art of land and sea-scape. A watercolour interior of the Volcano House (which was the traveller's rest) by Tavernier included in the Hilo exhibition is shown again, but then it is a rare interior.
Until Georgia O'Keefe and Lloyd Sexton, the flora of Hawaii appears to have been mostly ignored by artists who when they turned to still-lifes, appeared to have preferred dead fish.
As in Australia, Modernism came late to Hawaii. However, it came in a burst of colour.
The most arresting image - it was one of two chosen for reproduction on the exhibition T-shirt - is easily Men in an Outrigger Canoe by the Armenian born US soldier, Arman T. Manookian who poisoned himself in 1931 at the age of 27.
As a local reviewer wrote in 1927: "(Manookian) feels the pagan joyousness of Hawaii's riotous colour and captures it with his brushes for our pleasure.
On the basis of its sheer seduction, the art of postdiscovery Hawaii should be among the most financially esteemed of any of the regional art schools. But it is not - yet.

photographyview full entry
Reference: see MA thesis ‘Refracted Vision - Nineteenth-Century Photography in the Pacific’ (by Geoffrey Baker). ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NINETEENTH CENTURY P ACIFIC PHOTOGRAPHERS AND COLLECTIONS

Publishing details: Sydney Universiity, 2010.
Brown George photographic archiveview full entry
Reference: see MA thesis ‘Refracted Vision - Nineteenth-Century Photography in the Pacific’ (by Geoffrey Baker). Includes ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NINETEENTH CENTURY P ACIFIC PHOTOGRAPHERS AND COLLECTIONS

Publishing details: Sydney Universiity, 2010.
Thake Peterview full entry
Reference: see The Paintings of Flightv Officer EricThake, Official War Artist, PHD Thesis by Peter Pinson, 1987,
Publishing details: University of Woolongong, 1987.
Inner Worlds: view full entry
Reference: Inner Worlds: Portraits & Psychology by Christopher Chapman. Exhibition catalogue. Explores key moments of connection between portraiture and psychology in Australia since the early twentieth century.

Publishing details: Canberra: National Portrait Gallery, 2011.[iv], 218 pages, colour illustrations. Green cloth, black and white lettering, french fold jacket, slipcase. [Some markings and annotations on pages]

materials in artview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850view full entry
Reference: Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199 [a copy in The Articulate Surface edited by Sue-Anne Wallace, in Scheding Library]
paint use of in Australian artview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
art materials in Australian artview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Read Richard Snrview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Lewin John Williamview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Watling Thomas refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Earle Augustus refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Hood Robin Vaughanview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Wood James in Hobartview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Boyes G T W B refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Glover John refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Gould William Buelow refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Martens Conrad refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Bock Thomas refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Duterrau ref refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Duterrau Benjamin refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Duterrau Benjamin refview full entry
Reference: see Supplying artists' materials to Australia 1788-1850, by Erica Burgess & Paula Dredge
Publishing details: Studies in Conservation, 43:sup1, 199-204, DOI: 10.1179/sic.1998.43.Supplement-1.199
Deix Guntherview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 24:
2 Handmade books by Guther Deix. Sticks Parts 1 and 2 Discovery of the Heart. Mittagong: Heart Press, 1990 and 1992. Signed Limited edition. Part 1 is number 2 of 8 copies. and Part 2 is number 2 of 23 copies. Both of course are signed and numbered by the author. They are housed in a custom made cloth box. The production comes with more than 30 coloured etchings and aquatints. These are unique and are halfway between a book and a work of art or maybe both
Hartt Cecil Lawrence view full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 26:
17 original pieces of art by Cecil Lawrence Hartt. Pen and ink. A few are political but most are military. Hartt moved from his birth place of Melbourne in his mid 20s and became a Bulletin artist. When WW1 started he joined the 18th Battalion. He was severely wounded on Gallipoli and spent some of the war years recovering in London. All this time drawing cartoons. His book Humorosities (1916) sold over 60,000 copies. He arrived back in Australia in 1919 He was the first President of the Black And White Artists Club (1924 till his death in 1930) but sadly due to his battle with alcohol, he suicided in 1930. Stan Cross succeeded him as President. Hartt's son was killed in WW2. The largest work here measures 64 x 28 cm - this is folded with a tear and is a little dirty and has a couple of holes. The next is 63 x 20 cm and is folded, a little dusty and has a tear. The others are much smaller measuring 18 x 20 and similar sizes. This is a rare archive from an important WW1 Australian military cartoonist. This collection comes from the estate of the Late James Kemsley who was himself a famous Australian cartoonist and for some years drew the comic strip Ginger Meggs
Grear Lornaview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 446:
Nude Study (1998) painting by Lorna Grear. Gouache on paper 30x42 cm. Grear is a Sydney based artist and teacher represented by Flinders Street Gallery. Her work has previously been selected for notable art prizes such as The Adelaide Drawing Prize, Fishers Ghose Art Award and the Liverpool Art Prize. A colourful painting by an established local artist.

Ricardo Geoffrey (1964-).view full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 436:
'The Galvanised Sea' (1996) etching 4/40 by Geoffrey Ricardo (1964-). 44 x 60 cm printed on archival paper. Ricardo is an established visual artist from Victoria, with his work held in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia and across the major state galleries. Considered a figurative expressionist, Ricardo conveys his observations of the human condition through a 'dream realism' in his printmaking work. He is currently represented by Australian Galleries in Melbourne and Sydney. A very fine large scale limited printing by a notable Australian artist.
Martin Andrea Nungarrayi view full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 442 - Ngarlu Jukurrpa (2000) screen print 14/40 by Andrea Nungarrayi Martin (1965-). 29.5 x 67.5cm on archival paper 56 x 76 cm. Andrea Nungarrayi Martin is an Indigenous Warlpiri visual artist from Yuendumu, a remote Aboriginal community in the Central Australian desert. Martin was a key figure in the Warlukurlangu Artists Aboriginal Association, one of Australia's most revered Aboriginal-owned art centres, and represented across major Australian and international collections such the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the South Australian Museum and the Musée du Quai Branly, France. Martin's works are renderings of her Jukurrpa, Dream Time stories of the land, passed down from generation to generation. This is a fine limited screen print of the tragic love of Jungarrayi man Lintipilinti and a Napangardi woman. The story of their forbidden union transforms them into the landscape of Ngarlu (Red Rock), east of Yuendumu. A fine large scale work signed by the artist.
Lancaster Julie view full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 443 Innercity 4b (1999) Digital print 11/35 by Julie Lancaster (1954-). 10.5x18 cm printed on archival paper 38.5x33.5 cm. Lancaster is an Australian visual artist and printmaker, her work is held in the National Gallery. A fine print from an Australian artist.
Kellett Adrian view full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 444 Garden Study (2001) etching 31/40 by Adrian Kellett (1974-). 48x29 cm on printed on archival paper 76x57cm. Adrian Kellett is an Australian visual artist and print maker based in Melbourne, Kellett's work is held in the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the State Library of Victoria. Adrian is the Printmaking workshop coordinator at the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, and runs the print studio Sunshine Editions. A fine large scale print of a Melbourne master.
Holmes Colin view full entry
Reference: see Sydney Rare Book auction, June 23, 2023, lot 447 Print Off Glass (1987) vitreograph 1/2 by Colin Holmes. 50 x 50cm print on paper 59.5 x 59.5cm. Vitreography is a fine art printmaking technique that uses glass plates to transfer impressions. A very limited printing, has light creasing and staining on the bottom edge, readily covered when framed.
Cazneaux Haroldview full entry
Reference: The Bridge Book, by Harold Cazneaux
Publishing details: Art in Australia, 1930.
Ref: 1000
200 In the shadeview full entry
Reference: 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Swain Davidview full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cross Stan p1-2 27 36 52 67 71 72 74 79 81 84-6 89-90 93-102 with essay 105 107-8 127-9 131 141 144 147view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Jolliffe Eric p2 essay on controversy p49-52 66 146view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Gregory c1850 p7view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Hunt in the Bulletin 1.7.1882 p11view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Glover in the Bulletin 1927 Tom? p13view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Vincent Alf in the Bulletin 1901 p12 p26view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Sharp Martin p14view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cobb Ron p15 US artist vititing Australia 1972view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
McCrae in the Bulletin 1987 p16view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Moir Alan various images inc Sydney Morning Herald 1987 p159-60 179 186view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Martin Matthew p19view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Pryor in Canberra Times p18view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Minns B E p23 60 65 68 69 73 82 88 91 125 129 139 143view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
McGregor in Smith’s Weekly 26.1.1940view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
MacLean in the Bulletin and SWith’s Weekly 28.8.29 p76 80 145view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Hopkins Livingston in the Bulletin 1902 p25 48 137 164view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
May Phil p28 41 58view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Lindsay Norman p29 46 59 142view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cherry Wal? in Aussie 15.7.1922 p30view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Hallett in Smith’s Weekly 10.9.21 p 31 p35 40 view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Sass Alec in Smith’s Weekly 24.7.1929 p32 115view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Molnar George in Daily Telegraph 1946 p33 178view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Koch in the Bulletin 1.2.1933 p61view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Finey George in Smith’s Weekly 29.3.30 p 35 38 133view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Hartt Cec in Smith’s Weekly 5.3.21 p37 123 124view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Carringtom in Melbourne Punch 1875 p22view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Tanner Les in the Age p29 ref p42 161 181view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Pickering p6 p43 44 51 114 171view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Townshend in Aussie 15.8.1922 p45view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Neil in Sun News Pictorial 1985view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Gill S T p56view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Lambert Geoerge in the Bulletin p57view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Lambert George in the Bulletin p57view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Spence Percy in the Bulletin 24.2.1894 p63view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Mercier Emile in Aussie 1924 p70view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cox in Aussie 15.7.24 p75view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Such Les in the Bulletin 11.1.56 p77view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Morrison in Smith’s Weekly 6.1.1940 p78view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Litchfield in the Bulletin 1929 p83view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Horner in the Age 1985 p87view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
White Unk in the Bulletin 1950 p104view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Jonsson A in Smith’s Weekly 1930 p106view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Dixon in Sun Herald 1962 p109 111view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Wedd Monty in Sunday Mirror 1977 p110view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Gurney Alf in Bluey and Curly p113view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Gurney Alf in Bluey and Curly p113view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Black in the Bulletin 1951 p116view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Heatherington in the Bulletin 1956 p117view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Leason Percy in the Bulletin 1929 p118view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Dibdin in the Bulletin 25.8.1900 p120view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Durkin Tom in the Bulletin 18.5.1895 p122 132view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Moffitt in Smith’s Weekly 1924 p126view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Paul Mick in Aussie 1926 p130view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cook Noel in Aussie 1924 p 140view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Middy in the Bulletin 1961 p148view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Nicholson Peter in the Age p149view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Jeff in the Melbourne Sun p150 169 174view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Lynch M in the Bulletin 1985 p151view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Martin Mathew in the Sydney Morning Herald 1984 p152view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Atchison in Adelaide Observor 1978 p153view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Lofo - Heimann in Access 1985 p154-5 180view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Heimann - Lofo - in Access 1985 p154-5 180view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Lennon in Brisbane Daily Sun 1985 p156view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cook Patrick in National TRimes 1978 p 157-8view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Horner in The Age 1985 p165view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Dickie Peter in Tribune 1973 p 166view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Mariusz in West Australian 1983 p167view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Petty Bruce in RThe Age 1985 p168 172-3view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Leahy in Courier Mail 1984 p170view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Benier in Daily Mirror 1971 p175view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Fitzjames Michael p176-7view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Curtis (Neil?) p182view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Zanetti in Daily Telegraph 1985 p183view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Coopes Jenny in Sun Herald 1987 p184view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Langoulant in Pert Daily News 1987 p 186view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cooke Kas ref p187view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Cooke Kas ref p187view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
McCrae Tommy p188view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Onus Lin p189view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Thomas Ray 1988 p 190view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Leslie Donna 1988 p191view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Dingo Ernie 1988 p 192view full entry
Reference: see 200 In the shade - An historical collection of cartoons about Aborigines, by David Swain. Some brief biographical information included. Published following an exhibition of the cartoons in Melbourne. [Swain, a Bulletin journalist, was commissioned in 1988 to organise an exhibition for the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. The exhibition was presented at the State Library of Victoria].
Publishing details: Syd. Collins
Australia. 1988. Sm.Oblong 4to. Ill wrapps.
193pp. Many b/w ills. of cartoons from
various publications over the years.
Striong Josephview full entry
Reference: Information from Sydney researcher Allan Deakin: Joseph Strong became very ill on long pacific voyage with Robert Louis Stevenson and Fanny and on their arrival in Samoa on 7 Dec 1889 he was almost immediately put on a ship to Sydney. His wife Belle had been in Sydney since July. Joe recovered well enough in Sydney. He and Belle left Sydney arriving in Apia 24 May 1891. So Joe was in Sydney from Dec 1889 until May 1891. And selling paintings. Daplyn would have introduced him to artists. He may also have made paintings from photos of Samoa that he took a few years before when he traveled to Samoa from Honolulu on the crazy King’s ‘embassy’ as official artist and photographer.
Cavaliere Katthyview full entry
Reference: from Website https://katthycavaliere.com.au:
Born 11 November 1972
Sarteano, Tuscany, Italy

Died 23 January 2012
Sydney, Australia

Born in Sarteano, Tuscany in 1972, Katthy Cavaliere migrated from Italy to Australia with her family when she was four years old. She attended University of NSW Art and Design (then known as College of Fine Arts) in Sydney and was a recipient of the Helen Lempriere Travelling Art Scholarship in 2000, enabling her studies in Italy at the Accademia di Belle Arti, Brera, Milano. During this time in Italy she studied under Marina Abramović. Upon returning to Australia in 2004, Cavaliere staged a survey exhibition called Suspended Moment, which toured to regional galleries in NSW.
Cavaliere’s 2008 video performance, Loved, was included in The 54th Venice Biennale, 2011.
Following her death in January 2012, the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona) presented her retrospective  Loved in 2015-16. Curated by Daniel Mudie Cunningham, it toured to Carriageworks in 2016 and was accompanied by a major monograph.
It was Cavaliere’s desire to bring to light what she did not remember of her early years in Sarteano that motivated her lifelong project of packing, storing and transporting the wreckage of her personal possessions, and transforming it into performance installation works that have been exhibited in solo and group shows internationally.
Cavaliere’s work is held in the collections of Art Gallery of NSW, Art Gallery of South Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Heide Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Old and New Art, Artbank, University of Queensland Art Museum, Monash Gallery of Art and numerous regional galleries.
Katthy Cavaliere’s archive is held in the National Art Archive at the Art Gallery of NSW.
In 2018, a major fellowship was established in her name, Suspended Moment: The Katthy Cavaliere Fellowship which was adapted into an exhibition that is touring to eight venues through Museums and Galleries NSW in 2022-2024
She was included in the National Gallery of Australia’s Know My Name exhibition.
Resonancesview full entry
Reference: Resonances / curators, Hervé Mikaeloff, Georges Petitjean, Ingrid Pux ; authors, Jean-Hubert Martin, Herve Mikaeloff, Georges Petitjean, Bérengère Primat, Garance Primat, Ingrid Pux.
Following on from the success of the exhibition 'Before Time Began', Fondation Opale is taking on a new challenge with a show that juxtaposes contemporary Aboriginal art with prominent examples of contemporary art created in a Western and Asian tradition. This beautifully illustrated catalogue includes more than eighty works by over 54 artists from two separate collections, both of which are outstanding in their own right: the collection of Aboriginal art belonging to Berengere Primat and the contemporary art collection amassed by Garance Primat. The works play off each other with powerful effect. Insightful pairings suggest an underlying unity, a merging of mankind, heaven, earth, and the whole cosmos. The Aboriginal artists represented include: Rover Thomas, Gulumbu Yunupingu, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, Judy Watson, Sally Gabori, Emily Kame Kngwarrey, Paddy Bedford, Nonggirrnga Marawili, Ronnie Tjampitjinpa, and John Mawurndjul. The artists working in the Western and Oriental traditions include: Jean Dubuffet, Kiki Smith, Anselm Kiefer, Sol Lewitt, Yayoi Kusama, Giuseppe Penone, and Anish Kapoor.
Notes Exhibition: Fondation Opale, Lens / Crans-Montana (Switzerland) from June 14th, 2020 to April 4th, 2021.
Publishing details: Milan, Italy : 5 Continents : Fondation Opale, 2020, 179 pages : colour illustrations
Ref: 1000
Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award 1984-2008view full entry
Reference: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award 1984-2008 : celebrating 25 years / Museum and Art Gallery Northern Territory.
"Established in 1984, the Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award is the nation's longest running award dedicated to Indigenous art and artists." "This publication formally acknowledges the extensive body of artwork produced over the first twenty-five years of the award." -- Back cover.
• Banduk Marika
• Bardayal Lofty Nadjamerrek AO
• Bill Yidumduma Harney
• David Malangi Daymirringu
• Dennis Nona
• Dorothy Djukulul
• Dorothy Napangardi
• Emily Kame Kngwarreye
• Gertie Huddleston
• Ginger Riley Munduwalawala
• Gulumbu Yunupingu
• Ian W. Abdulla
• Jimmy Pike
• John Mawurndjul
• Judy Watson
• Julie Dowling
• Kathleen Kweyetwemp Petyarre
• Ken Thaiday Snr.
• Kitty Kantilla Kutuwulumi Purawarrumpatu
• Lin Onus AM
• Michael Nelson Tjakamarra AO
• Nyukana (Daisy) Baker
• Paddy Fordham Wainburranga
• Pantjiti Mary McLean
• Queenie McKenzie
• Richard Bell
• Rover Thomas
• Uta Uta Tjangala
• Wenten Rubuntja AM
• Willie Gudabi.
Publishing details: Charles Darwin University Press, 2011 
250 p. : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
Gott Robert cartoonistview full entry
Reference: Robert Gott was born in the Queensland town of Maryborough in 1957, and lives in Melbourne. He has published many books for children, and is also the creator of the newspaper cartoon The Adventures of Naked Man. He is the author of the William Power series of crime-caper novels set in 1940s Australia, comprising Good Murder, A Thing of Blood, Amongst the Dead, and The Serpent’s Sting, and of the Murders series, comprising The Holiday Murders, The Port Fairy Murders, The Autumn Murders, and The Orchard Murders.
Stoddard Mrsview full entry
Reference: see The Sydney Morning Herald Thu 5 Jun 1890, Page 4:
His Excellency the Governor and Lady Carrington will leave town to-day for their country residence at Moss Vale, where they will remain until
Saturday, and then return to Sydney. The next reception at Government House is announced to take place on Thursday, 12th instant, at half-past 3
o'clock Lady Carrington escorted by the Hon. Rupert Carington, yesterday visited Mrs. Stoddard's studio to see her picture of the Lorelei, which was exhibited
at the last exhibition of the Art Society.
Callan Henry & Sonview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Du Faur F on Selection Committeeview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Austin Henry on Selection Committeeview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Montefiore E C on Selection Committeeview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Piguenit W C various worksview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Rivers Godfrey various worksview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Steffani A works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Daplyn A J works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Rowan Ellis works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Crook J G F works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Davis G F works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Spence Percy works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
Cowen Lionel works exhibitedview full entry
Reference: see Sydney Morning Herald April 10,1890, article ‘Art Exhibition in Sydney - Messrs Callan’s Collection’
conservationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
restorationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
surface of paintings including coatingsview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
analysis of paintingsview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
analysis of paintingsview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
painting techniquesview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
techniques of artistsview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
techniques of artistsview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Masonite chapter 10view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Watling Thomas chapter 13view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Duterrau Benjamin chapter 14view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
McCubbin Frederick chapter 17view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Russell John chapter 18view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Miller Godfrey chapter 19view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Fairweather Ian chapter 20view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Friend Donald in chapter 21view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Nolan Sidney in chapter 21view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Herman Sali in chapter 21view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Lambert George in chapter 21view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Dobell William in chapter 21view full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Dawson Janet illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Haydon Mrs The Fern Gatherer illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Ramsay Hugh illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Watson Jenny illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Lycett Joseph illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Power John illustrationsview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Salt John illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Martens Conrad illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Fowles Joseph illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Johnson George illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Blake W S 1802 illustrationview full entry
Reference: see The articulate surface : dialogues on paintings between conservators, curators and art historians / edited by Sue-Ann Wallace with Jacqueline MacNaughtan and Jodi Parvey. Includes papers from the conference, The Articulate Surface, held in Canberra from 1 to 3 May 1992.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Australian National University Canberra, ACT, Australia 1996, 333p
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: see The portraits and watercolours of Augustus Earle, by Jocelyn Hackforth Jones [manuscript], Thesis (B.A.Hons)--University of Sydney, 1974.
Original held by Power Institute, University of Sydney.
Publishing details: University of Sydney, 1974 
98 leaves ;
Bark Paintings of North East Arnhem Land Tneview full entry
Reference: The Bark Paintings of North East Arnhem Land, Dr John Rudder.
Publishing details: Restoration House 1999. 44pp
Ref: 1000
Camera on the Somme
view full entry
Reference: A Camera on the Somme, by Corrine
Perkin, (exhibition curator).
Exhibition catalogue of photos taken by two Victorian brothers, John 'Jack' Grinton and Albert "Bert' Grinton, who served with the Australian army, 38 Battalion. Includes three introductory/background essays by exhibition curator, Corrine Perkin, Les Carlyon, and Colin Harding, the photographic technology curator of the National Media Museum UK.
Seller Inventory # 170787
Publishing details: Bendigo Art Gallery, 2009, Quarto card cover with flaps, 64pp, b&w photos
Ref: 1009
Grinton John 'Jack' view full entry
Reference: see A Camera on the Somme, by Corrine
Perkin, (exhibition curator).
Exhibition catalogue of photos taken by two Victorian brothers, John 'Jack' Grinton and Albert "Bert' Grinton, who served with the Australian army, 38 Battalion. Includes three introductory/background essays by exhibition curator, Corrine Perkin, Les Carlyon, and Colin Harding, the photographic technology curator of the National Media Museum UK.
Seller Inventory # 170787
Publishing details: Bendigo Art Gallery, 2009, Quarto card cover with flaps, 64pp, b&w photos
Grinton Albert ‘Bert' view full entry
Reference: see A Camera on the Somme, by Corrine
Perkin, (exhibition curator).
Exhibition catalogue of photos taken by two Victorian brothers, John 'Jack' Grinton and Albert "Bert' Grinton, who served with the Australian army, 38 Battalion. Includes three introductory/background essays by exhibition curator, Corrine Perkin, Les Carlyon, and Colin Harding, the photographic technology curator of the National Media Museum UK.
Seller Inventory # 170787
Publishing details: Bendigo Art Gallery, 2009, Quarto card cover with flaps, 64pp, b&w photos
Parkin Rayview full entry
Reference: Ray Parkin's Odyssey, by Pattie Wright, In 1939, Ray Parkin was serving on the Australian light cruiser HMAS Perth. At first glance he looked every inch the archetypal petty officer that he was - tough, practical and a model of naval discipline. Yet Ray was no ordinary sailor. Despite a lack of formal education, he had the soul of an artist and a philosopher's enquiring mind. As HMAS Perth was embroiled in war - in the Mediterranean and then in South-East Asia - Ray became both a witness and a chronicler of the conflict through his meticulous diaries and his minutely observed watercolours and sketches. When Perth was sunk off the coast of Java, Ray was one of the survivors. After a valiant attempt to sail back to Australia in a lifeboat, he surrendered and spent the rest of the war as a prisoner of the Japanese, first building the Thai-Burma Railway and then working as a slave labourer in a Japanese coalmine. The horrors and privations of those years saw some of his most memorable artwork - documenting both the beauty of the natural world and the savageries and humiliations of the POW ordeal. They were also years that saw the founding of lifelong friendships with fellow prisoners Edward 'Weary' Dunlop and Laurens van der Post. Ray's experiences gave him the material for the three seminal books he would publish after the war: Out of the Smoke, Into the Smother and The Sword and the Blossom.Ray died in 2005, acclaimed not only for his art and his wartime trilogy, but also for his prize-winning masterpiece H.M. Bark Endeavour, an extraordinary evocation of Captain Cook's ship and its voyage up the east coast of Australia in 1770.This biography, illustrated by 100 paintings and sketches, is the first full and comprehensive account of Ray's life and wartime experiences. Using extensive interviews with Ray himself, as well as his letters, diaries and unpublished memoirs, Pattie Wright has written a book that is powerful, moving and compelling.

Publishing details: Pan MacMillan Australia 2012. Hard cover dust wrapper, 654pp, b&w photos and illustrated by 100 colour paintings and sketches.
Ref: 1009
Norval Markview full entry
Reference: Mark Norval Kimberley Artist
by Mark Norval, (and Schiel, Marty - editor)
Publishing details: Moonrise Media Victoria, 2008, Hard cover laminated pictorial boards, dust wrapper, landscaped quarto, 126pp, colour art reproductions colour and b&w photos, line sketch on reverse of front fep
Ref: 1000
Framingsview full entry
Reference: Framings A Forecourt for a Parliament. Catalogue for an exhibition held at Parliament House. It brought together for the first time the ten commissioned works by five Western Desert artists, that were used as the basis for the design of the mosaic on the Parliament House Forecourt.
Publishing details: Parliament House Art Collection, Joint House Dept, Canberra, 1997, Stapled card covers, quarto, 20pp, colour illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Stavros Michaelview full entry
Reference: see The Conversation, article by Sasha Grishin, Published: June 26, 2023. Review of Michael Stavros, Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane.
Stavros Michaelview full entry
Reference: Michael Stavros, Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane
Publishing details: QAGOMA, 2023 [catalogue details to be entered]
Ref: 1000
Lindsay Normabnview full entry
Reference: Venus in Tullamarine: Art, Sex, Politics and Norman Lindsay. Cameron Hurst, Jeremy George. “This collection of essays examines Lindsay’s legacy and current position in Australian art and cultural history. The authors’ opinions are erudite, varied, and often incendiary; few figures are as divisive as Lindsay.” (from blurb) With contributions from Ian McLean, Adrian Martin, Cameron Hurst, Jeremy George, James Nguyen, and Soo-Min Shim.

Publishing details: Melbourne: Index Books, 2023, 152 pages, black and white illustrations. Illustrated wrappers.
Ref: 1000
Stafford Georgeview full entry
Reference: Stafford, George. Melbourne, 1856. Melbourne, Engraved, Printed and published by De Gruchy & Leigh, [1856]. Engraving with arched top, 17 x 38 centimetres plus caption; tipped to mount.
The rare original printing. It was reissued in the 1880s by James Inglis & Co., with their imprint added and that of De Gruchy & Leigh
Strafford George see Stafford Georgeview full entry
Reference:
Thomas Edmundview full entry
Reference: Edmund Thomas. A set of the Melbourne views 5 tinted lithographs, each 22 x 34 centimetres with captions; framed and glazed. Some discolouration.
The Yarra Yarra; The Post Office, Melbourne; Collins Street; Williams Town lighthouse; and Prince’s Bridge. Rare as a complete set.

Publishing details: published by Huxtable & Co. in 1853:
Ref: 1000
Lycett Joseph of Hobartview full entry
Reference: LYCETT, Joseph. View of the country round Hobart Town, in Van Dieman’s [sic] Land. Reduced on zinc by G. Scharf, from a drawing by Lycet[sic] in the collection of Professor Buckland at Oxford. London, [1840]. Lithograph, hand-coloured, 23 x 83 centimetres; tipped to mount.
A very rare view, printed from a single zinc plate.
Hanley Gordonview full entry
Reference: HANLEY, Gordon K. Jewels of nature: the parrots. Volume one [all published].
Publishing details: Sydney, 2001. Elephant folio, with 60 coloured plates by Gordon Hanley; original green morocco with pictorial paper inset on the front board, in cloth carrying case with metal clasps and cloth handles, as issued.
Edition limited to 2000 numbered copies, with a retail price of $20,000. Not surprisingly, far fewer were completed and the projected second volume did not materialise.
Ref: 1000
Kannenberg B photographerview full entry
Reference: B Kannenberg 
Australia ((19th-20th Century)) 
Blue Lake, Mount Gambier 
Silver gelatin photograph, slight handcolouring
Provenance:
A handcoloured copy of this work is held in the Library of South Australia Collection
Dimensions:
Image: 23 x 72 cm
Cotton Oliveview full entry
Reference: STURT, Photos by OLIVE COTTON.
A photographic essay of the activities of the soon to be famous Sturt Workshops under the control of the Frensham identity Winifred West. Sixty six pages of the garden, surrounds and all age students engaging in crafts, photographed by Olive McInerney (nee Cotton).

Publishing details: Published by Olga Sharp for Winifred West, Sturt, Mittagong, 1946. Grey cloth cover.
Ref: 1000
Giacco Francisview full entry
Reference: Australian Galleries exhibition 2023
Publishing details: Australian Galleries m 2023
Ref: 1000
Giacco Francisview full entry
Reference: see John McDonald’s review of Francis Giacco’s Australian Galleries exhibition 2023 in Sydney Morning Herald 1.7.23, Spectrum, p9
Publishing details: [a copy in Francis Giacco, exhibition catalogue, recent works: Pictures at an Exhibtion’ in Schedin Library]
Giacco Francisview full entry
Reference: Philip Bacon Galleries catalogue, Catalogue of the exhibition held 13 May to 7 June, 2008, at the Philip Bacon Galleries, Brisbane.
Publishing details: Philip Bacon Galleries, 2008, [8] p. : col. ill.
Ref: 1000
Giacco Francis`view full entry
Reference: Francis Giacco, exhibition catalogue, recent works: Pictures at an Exhibtion (apologies to Mussorgsky) with selected works from the 80s and 90s’s, essay by Christopher Allen, biographical information p102-3,
Publishing details: Australian Galleries, 2023, pb, 104pp, with price list, inserted: ohn McDonald’s review of Francis Giacco’s Australian Galleries exhibition 2023 in Sydney Morning Herald 1.7.23, Spectrum, p9
Giacco Francis`view full entry
Reference: artist’s website francisgiacco.com.au
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: review of A narrative of nine months' residence in New Zealand, in 1827 : together with a journal of a residence in Tristan D'Acunha
p. 132-165 In The Quarterly review.--Vol. XLVIII, no. xcv (1832)
Review of: A narrative of nine months' residence in New Zealand, in 1827 / by Augustus Earle. London: Longman [et al], 1832.
Running title: Earle's Residence in New Zealand and Tristan d'Acunha.
Library's copy NK3819 separated from volume of issue.
Rex Nan Kivell Collection NK3819.
Series Rex Nan Kivell Collection ; NK3819.
Notes Caption title. NLA
Ref: 1000
Earle Augustusview full entry
Reference: A narrative of a nine months' residence in New Zealand in 1827 : together with a journal of a residence in Tristan D'Acunha, an island situated between South America and the Cape of Good Hope / by Augustus Earle
Publishing details: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman, 1832 
x, 371 p., [7] leaves of plates (2 folded) : ill.
Ref: 1000
Hopkins Eva teacher of Clarice Beckett p32 56-7 148view full entry
Reference: see 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,
Allen Mary Cecil p104-5 213view full entry
Reference: see 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,
Bale A M E 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Bell George various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Merioolaview full entry
Reference: Catalogue “Merioola” Rosemount Avenue – Woollahra, Catalogue of the magnificent collection of valuable pictures, fine glass and china, rare silver, Sheffield and electroplate, mahogany, cedar, walnut and rosewood furniture, a most important library of books and the household appointments and effects contained throughout the residence “Merioola”, … Woollahra … to be sold by public auction Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 24th, 25th and 26th February, 1942 … under instructions and as directed by the executors of the will of the late Arthur Wigram Allen. 1201 lots, illustrated wrappers with Elioth Gruner image on upper wrapper, illustrated with images after Norman Lindsay, Hans Heysen, Elioth Gruner, Rupert Bunny, Penleigh Boyd, George W. Lambert.
The significant collection of Arthur Wigram Allen, which included works by Arthur Streeton, Adelaide Perry, Dorrit Black, Ruby Lindsay, Lionel Lindsay, Thea Proctor, Dora Meeson, Cumbrae Stewart, Tom Roberts, Hilda Rix Nicholas, Margaret Preston, Nora Heysen, Norah Gurdon, Conrad Martens, Blamire Young, J. J. Hilder and others, as well as a complete collection of the etchings of Norman Lindsay, rare books and other antiques. The catalogue of prints was compiled by Sydney Ure Smith.
After Allen’s death, Merioola was used as a boarding house under the management of Chica Edgeworth Loweand, who encouraged young artists and Bohemians to reside there. The small group were known as the Merioola Group, also known as the Sydney Charm School, and included William Dobell, Russell Drysdale, Donald Friend, Lloyd Rees, Justin O’Brien, Jean Bellette, Paul Haefliger, David Strachan, Sali Herman, Eric Wilson, Mary Edwell-Burke, Margaret Olley, Roland Strasser, Peter Kaiser, Harry Tatlock Miller, Jocelyn Rickards, Adrian Feint, Arthur Fleischmann, Eileen Haxton and applied artists Wallace Thornton, Loudon Sainthill and Wolfgang Cardamatis. The mansion was demolished in 1955.

Publishing details: Sydney : James R. Lawson Pty. Ltd, 1942. Quarto, 84pp
Ref: 1000
Charm School Sydneyview full entry
Reference: see Catalogue “Merioola” Rosemount Avenue – Woollahra, CaAllentalogue of the magnificent collection of valuable pictures, fine glass and china, rare silver, Sheffield and electroplate, mahogany, cedar, walnut and rosewood furniture, a most important library of books and the household appointments and effects contained throughout the residence “Merioola”, … Woollahra … to be sold by public auction Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, 24th, 25th and 26th February, 1942 … under instructions and as directed by the executors of the will of the late Arthur Wigram Allen. 1201 lots, illustrated wrappers with Elioth Gruner image on upper wrapper, illustrated with images after Norman Lindsay, Hans Heysen, Elioth Gruner, Rupert Bunny, Penleigh Boyd, George W. Lambert.
The significant collection of Arthur Wigram Allen, which included works by Arthur Streeton, Adelaide Perry, Dorrit Black, Ruby Lindsay, Lionel Lindsay, Thea Proctor, Dora Meeson, Cumbrae Stewart, Tom Roberts, Hilda Rix Nicholas, Margaret Preston, Nora Heysen, Norah Gurdon, Conrad Martens, Blamire Young, J. J. Hilder and others, as well as a complete collection of the etchings of Norman Lindsay, rare books and other antiques. The catalogue of prints was compiled by Sydney Ure Smith.
After Allen’s death, Merioola was used as a boarding house under the management of Chica Edgeworth Loweand, who encouraged young artists and Bohemians to reside there. The small group were known as the Merioola Group, also known as the Sydney Charm School, and included William Dobell, Russell Drysdale, Donald Friend, Lloyd Rees, Justin O’Brien, Jean Bellette, Paul Haefliger, David Strachan, Sali Herman, Eric Wilson, Mary Edwell-Burke, Margaret Olley, Roland Strasser, Peter Kaiser, Harry Tatlock Miller, Jocelyn Rickards, Adrian Feint, Arthur Fleischmann, Eileen Haxton and applied artists Wallace Thornton, Loudon Sainthill and Wolfgang Cardamatis. The mansion was demolished in 1955.

Publishing details: Sydney : James R. Lawson Pty. Ltd, 1942. Quarto, 84pp
Bedford Scottview full entry
Reference: Black Australia
Black enamel paint on cut section of cardboard packaging box, 105 x 125 mm; titled and dated 29 – 6 – 22 verso in black Texta, signed by the artist in biro. From a series of text-based artworks by the noted Queensland artist: the literal meaning on printed packaging is transformed by redaction. With Douglas Stewart Fine Books, July, 2023.
Gough Craigview full entry
Reference: Craig Gough : survey 1980 – 1990
, by Patrick Hutchings

Publishing details: Castlemaine Art Gallery, 1995. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 32, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Juniper Robertview full entry
Reference: Robert Juniper, by Trevor Smith.
('This is the catalogue of the first major retrospective of Juniper''s work with 70 paintings and scultures that represented his 50 year old career. The essays are: the symbolist landscape: Perth 1951-1961; the Juniper House 1959-1967; zen & the art of whatever; lines of unbelonging.')

Publishing details: Perth, W.A. : Art Gallery of Western Australia, 1999. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, pp. 128, illustrated.
Bendigo Potteryview full entry
Reference: Bendigo Pottery : selected wares from 1857 to the present day From the library of art curator and author David Thomas, former Keeper of Pictorial Collections, National Library of Australia, and Director of the Newcastle City Art Gallery, Australian Gallery Directors Council, Art Gallery of South Australia, Carrick Hill, Adelaide,
Publishing details: Bendigo Art Gallery, 1989. Quarto, illustrated wrappers (a little rubbed), pp. x, 68, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Yang Williamview full entry
Reference: Friends of Dorothy
‘For over fifty years William Yang has photographed gay and lesbian life in Australia, documenting culture and subculture through the lens of his own Chinese-Australian heritage. This book is filled with his candid images of couples, parties and gatherings where diverse expressions of sexuality are explored and celebrated.’

Publishing details: Sydney : Pan Macmillan Australia, 1997. Quarto, illustrated wrappers, light handling marks, pp. 168, illustrated.
Ref: 1000
Art in Oceaniaview full entry
Reference: Art in Oceania : a new history
‘The arts of Oceania are astonishing: great statues, daunting tattoos, dynamic carving, dazzling woven and painted fabrics, intricately carved weapons, and a bewildering variety of ornaments, ritual objects, and utilitarian but beautiful things. This landmark book breaks new ground by setting the art of Oceania in its full historical context and capturing an up-to-date understanding of the field. From archaeological findings of prehistoric art to the impact of pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial historical processes, it explores influences such as migration, trade, missionaries, pacification, tourism, nationalism and contemporary market factors, offering abundant new interpretations and addressing significant gaps in other publications. Factors that have been largely neglected until now, including the role of museums, the significance of colonial photography, indigenous modernisms and contemporary Pacific art, are covered alongside the familiar canon. This beautifully illustrated volume will appeal to general readers interested in world art, collectors, university students, scholars and museum professionals in the field.’ – the publisher.

Publishing details: Thames and Hudson, 2012. Quarto, boards in dustjacket, pp. 536, illustrated.

Ref: 1000
Cohn Ola 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Colahan Colin various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Colquhoun Alexander various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Colquhoun Archibald 9 refs refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Colquhoun Elizabeth 6 refs refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Farmer John 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Conder Charles 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Figuerola Alma 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Folingsby George 2 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Frater William 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Hall Lindsay Bernard 10 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Harrison Henry Bromilow ‘Harry’ 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Leason Percy numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Leason Isabella 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Longstaff John 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
McCubbin Frederick various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
MacDonald James Stewart various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
McInnis William Beckwith 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
McNally Matthew James 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Meldrum Max numerous refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Minogue James various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Monstalvat various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Roberts Tom various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Shore Arnold various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Skipper Mervyn various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Streeton Arthur various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Sweatman Jo 4 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Syme Evelyn 3 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Twenty Melbourne Painters various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Victorian Artist’s Society various refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Withers Walter 6 refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Young William Blamire refsview full entry
Reference: see 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,
Rodius Charlesview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, one page article on upcoming exhibition on Charles Rodius at State Library of New South Wales, with 4 illustrations and a reference to Australiana article on Rodius February 2020.
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Scrimshaw articleview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Scrimshaw - real of fake?’ by Colin S. thomas. p7 11, illustrated.
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Designing a Nationview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Australianaview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Temple Peter furniture makerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Gibson Marlene painterview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Godfrey Lewis John 1834-1919 wood workerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Eustace Arthur W 1820-1907view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Webb Piggott Frank glass artistview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Mitchell Gordon carverview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Forsythe Suzanne ceramicistview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Fritzlaff Robert designerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
McCann Paul designerview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Pittock Kenny view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, ‘Australiana - Designing a Nation, Bendigo Art Gallery 18 March to 25 June, 2023’, by Emma Busowsky, illustrated. p12-26
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Kerr William 1838-96 silversmithview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, article ‘The workshop of Sydney silversmith WQilliam Kerr’, p30-44, illustrated.
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Ballarat and artview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, article ‘A turbulent town, Ballarat and the Eureka Stockade’, by David Senior,p45, 49, illustrated,
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Gill S T and Ballarat view full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, article ‘A turbulent town, Ballarat and the Eureka Stockade’, by David Senior,p45, 49, illustrated,
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Eureka Stockadeview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, article ‘A turbulent town, Ballarat and the Eureka Stockade’, by David Senior,p45, 49, illustrated,
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
framingview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, article ‘I’ve been framed’, by R. A. Fredman, p50-3, illustrated.
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
tokensview full entry
Reference: see Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2, book review by Peter Lane of Tokens of Love, Loss and Disrerspect, edited by Sarah Lloyd and Timothy Millett, Paul Holkberton Publishing, 2022, 360pp.
Publishing details: Australiana magazine, May, 2023, vol, 45, no. 2,
Tokens of Love, Loss and Disrerspectview full entry
Reference: Tokens of Love, Loss and Disrerspect, edited by Sarah Lloyd and Timothy Millett,
Publishing details: Paul Holkberton Publishing, 2022, 360pp.
Ref: 1000
Rodius Charlesview full entry
Reference: Charles Rodius, exhibition at the State Library of New South Wales, 17 June, 2023 - 12 May 2024, curator David Hansen. Illustrated.
Publishing details: SLNSW, 2023, pb, 27pp
Ormella Raquelview full entry
Reference: Raquel Ormella: She Went That Way
Keehan, Reuben (ed). Essays: She Went That Way by Reuben Keehan, Words and Symbols are Dangerous by Lisa HAvilah, Walking the Styx by Ann Stephen. Interview with Ormella by Lizzie Muller. documentaion, list of works, biographies & acknowledgements.
Publishing details: Artspace Sydney 2010. 106pp. B&W and colour illustrations. Softcover with French flaps. .
Ref: 1000
Baseline: Remnant Grassland Of Weereewa/Lake Georgeview full entry
Reference: Baseline: Remnant Grassland Of Weereewa/Lake George New Works By Beth Hatton & Christine James
McCracken, Gillian & Beth Hatton & Christine James (artworks). Exhibition catalogue. Essays, reproductions, artists biographies.
Publishing details: Craft & Design Centre Canberra 2008, 28pp, colour illust, staplebound wraps,
Ref: 1000
Hatton Beth view full entry
Reference: see Baseline: Remnant Grassland Of Weereewa/Lake George New Works By Beth Hatton & Christine James
McCracken, Gillian & Beth Hatton & Christine James (artworks). Exhibition catalogue. Essays, reproductions, artists biographies.
Publishing details: Craft & Design Centre Canberra 2008, 28pp, colour illust, staplebound wraps,
James Christine view full entry
Reference: see Baseline: Remnant Grassland Of Weereewa/Lake George New Works By Beth Hatton & Christine James
McCracken, Gillian & Beth Hatton & Christine James (artworks). Exhibition catalogue. Essays, reproductions, artists biographies.
Publishing details: Craft & Design Centre Canberra 2008, 28pp, colour illust, staplebound wraps,
Hatton Gillian ? view full entry
Reference: see Baseline: Remnant Grassland Of Weereewa/Lake George New Works By Beth Hatton & Christine James
McCracken, Gillian & Beth Hatton & Christine James (artworks). Exhibition catalogue. Essays, reproductions, artists biographies.
Publishing details: Craft & Design Centre Canberra 2008, 28pp, colour illust, staplebound wraps,
Kempson Michael view full entry
Reference: Seen/Unseen A Survey Of Prints By Michael Kempson
Howard, Ian, Abdullah M.I Syed, Roohi Ahmewd & Michael Kempson (artworks). Exhibition catalogue includes essay, interview with the artist, biography & list of exhibitions.
Publishing details: Published by V.M. Gallery Karachi Pakistan 2010 (limited edition of 500), 2010, 56pp, colour illust, buff wraps with french flaps,


Ref: 1000
Cherel Janangoo Butcher view full entry
Reference: see Groundwork : Janangoo Butcher Cherel, Mick Jawalji, Rammey Ramsey, catalogue produced in conjunction with an exhibition showcasing the work of three important Kimberley artists.
Publishing details: Melbourne : The Ian Potter Museum of Art, 2011. Exhibition catalogue. Octavo (210 x 145 mm), pictorial wrappers, pp. 36, colour illustrations
Jawalji Mick view full entry
Reference: see Groundwork : Janangoo Butcher Cherel, Mick Jawalji, Rammey Ramsey, catalogue produced in conjunction with an exhibition showcasing the work of three important Kimberley artists.
Publishing details: Melbourne : The Ian Potter Museum of Art, 2011. Exhibition catalogue. Octavo (210 x 145 mm), pictorial wrappers, pp. 36, colour illustrations
Ramsey Rammey view full entry
Reference: see Groundwork : Janangoo Butcher Cherel, Mick Jawalji, Rammey Ramsey, catalogue produced in conjunction with an exhibition showcasing the work of three important Kimberley artists.
Publishing details: Melbourne : The Ian Potter Museum of Art, 2011. Exhibition catalogue. Octavo (210 x 145 mm), pictorial wrappers, pp. 36, colour illustrations
Origins & New Perspectivesview full entry
Reference: Origins & New Perspectives: Contemporary Australian Textiles, by Glenda King. 79pp. B&W and colour illustrations. Softcover. Good+ Catalogue for an exhibition mounted for 9th Triennale of Tapestry in Lodz, Poland. Essay, list of works & brief biographies.
Publishing details: Published by Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery/ Craft Australia 1998,
Ref: 1000
textilesview full entry
Reference: see Origins & New Perspectives: Contemporary Australian Textiles, by Glenda King. 79pp. B&W and colour illustrations. Softcover. Good+ Catalogue for an exhibition mounted for 9th Triennale of Tapestry in Lodz, Poland. Essay, list of works & brief biographies.
Publishing details: Published by Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery/ Craft Australia 1998,
In & Outview full entry
Reference: In & Out Contemporary Chinese Art From China & Australia 2000, by Binghui Huangfu. Group exhibition catalogue includes critical essays and artists' biographies.
Publishing details: Lasalle Sia College of the Arts Singapore 2000,, 87pp, b&w and colour illusts,
Ref: 1000
Contemporary artview full entry
Reference: see In & Out Contemporary Chinese Art From China & Australia 2000, by Binghui Huangfu. Group exhibition catalogue includes critical essays and artists' biographies.
Publishing details: Lasalle Sia College of the Arts Singapore 2000,, 87pp, b&w and colour illusts,
Sydney Architectureview full entry
Reference: Sydney Architecture, by Graham Jahn. Includes biographies of the significant Sydney architects. Includes index. This book lists over 500 of Sydney's colonial, victorian, arts& crafts, modern and contemporary buildings with their historical, architectural and anecdotal notes and brief biographies of their architects. It has house plans, location maps and suggested tours.
Publishing details: The Watermark Press Sydney 1997, 256pp, b/w Illusts, paperback
Three Coloursview full entry
Reference: Three Colours: Gordon Bennett & Peter Robinson, by Harper, Jenny, Tobias Berger, Jill Bennett et al. Catalogue for a joint touring exhibition by Australian inigenoius artist Gordon Bennett and New Zealander Peter Robinson. Essays, biographies and bibliographies.
Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art Vic 2005, two staplebound catalogues on a plastic slipcase,
Ref: 1000
Bennett Gordon view full entry
Reference: see Three Colours: Gordon Bennett & Peter Robinson, by Harper, Jenny, Tobias Berger, Jill Bennett et al. Catalogue for a joint touring exhibition by Australian inigenoius artist Gordon Bennett and New Zealander Peter Robinson. Essays, biographies and bibliographies.
Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art Vic 2005, two staplebound catalogues on a plastic slipcase,
Robinson Peter view full entry
Reference: see Three Colours: Gordon Bennett & Peter Robinson, by Harper, Jenny, Tobias Berger, Jill Bennett et al. Catalogue for a joint touring exhibition by Australian inigenoius artist Gordon Bennett and New Zealander Peter Robinson. Essays, biographies and bibliographies.
Publishing details: Heide Museum of Modern Art Vic 2005, two staplebound catalogues on a plastic slipcase,
Limits To Growthview full entry
Reference: Limits To Growth, Burns, Aileen, Charlotte Day et al & Nicholas Mangan. Exhibition catalogue includes essays, artist's commentary, biography and bibliography.
Publishing details: Sternberg Press Australia 2016, 246pp, colour illust, softcover in French flaps,
Ref: 1000
Bennett Gordon view full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
Berkowitz Lauren view full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
Gertsakis Elizabethview full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
Graham Anne view full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
MacDonald Fiona view full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
Wedge H J view full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
Wolseley John view full entry
Reference: see Seven histories of Australia : Gordon Bennett, Lauren Berkowitz, Elizabeth Gertsakis, Anne Graham, Fiona MacDonald, H.J. Wedge, John Wolseley / curator Clare Williamson. Description of exhibition of works by seven artists; provides through visual interpretation, mulitiple histories of Australia; Indigenous artists are Gordon Bennett and H.J. Wedge; biographical details of all artists incuded; some photographs of exhibition.
Publishing details: Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, 1995, 28 p. ill. (some col.), ports
Scheding Steve robiticistview full entry
Reference: from DAAO: Senior Lecturer, Australian Centre For Field Robotics
Roboticist at the University of Sydney who has collaborated with interactive installation artist Mari Velonaki. Initial Record Data Source: Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth
Velonaki Mari view full entry
Reference: from DAAO - entry for Steve Scheding: Senior Lecturer, Australian Centre For Field Robotics
Roboticist at the University of Sydney who has collaborated with interactive installation artist Mari Velonaki. Initial Record Data Source: Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth
Velonaki Mari view full entry
Reference: from DAAO: Artist (New Media Artist), Artist (Installation Artist)
Artist and scholar based in Sydney whose work focuses on interactive installation and robotics. • Associate Professor - National Institute of Experimental Arts, College of Fine Arts, UNSW, Sydney, NSW
• Co-director - Centre for Social Robotics, Australian Centre for Field Robotics, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW. Initial Record: Biennale of Electronic Arts Perth.
Gotch Thomas Cooper visited Australia 1883view full entry
Reference: Thomas Cooper Gotch was a painter of portraits, landscape and allegorical and realistic genre. Studied at Heatherley's School; the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Antwerp; the Slade School, and in Paris under JP Laurens. Visited Australia in 1883. Lived first in London, then settled in 1887 at Newlyn, Cornwall, where he belonged to the Newlyn School of plein-air painters. Exhibited at the Royal Academy, and in Munich, Paris and Chicago from 1880. Founder of the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists, 1887 and President 1913-28. Retrospective exhibition at the Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle in 1910. Alleluia was purchased for the Tate Gallery by the Chantrey Bequest in 1896.
Mott Tonyview full entry
Reference: Every Picture Tells a Story, by Tony Mott. Shots & Stories from our rock photographer extraordinaire. English born Australian rock photographer, Tony Mott, began photographing bands after seeing Sydney band the Divinyls live in 1983. He documented Sydney’s live music scene in the 1980s & 1990s.
Publishing details: Syd. ABC Books. 2003. 4to. Col.Ill.wrapps. 150pp. Profusely illustrated in colour and black & white.
Ref: 1000
Unflinching Gaze Theview full entry
Reference: The unflinching gaze - photo media & the male figure / catalogue contributors: Dr Christine Dean, The Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG, Dr Peter McNeil FAHA, Richard Perram OAM. Includes bibliographical references. [To be indexed]
Publishing details: Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, 2017 
100 pages : illustrations (some colour)
Ref: 1000
Thresholds of toleranceview full entry
Reference: Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Ref: 1000
Ah Kee Vernon view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Albert Tony view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Bell Richard view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Herd Jennifer view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Cattapan Joan view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Gough Julie view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Cattapan Joan view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Christanto Dadang view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Hoffie Pat view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Rasdjarmrearnsook Araya view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Mel Michael view full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Gembelview full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Padi Taringview full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Culture Kitchenview full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Herd Jenniferview full entry
Reference: see Thresholds of tolerance / [edited by] Caroline Turner and David Williams.
The exhibition features contemporary artists from Australia, Indonesia, East Timor, Thailand and Papua New Guinea. It examines links between art and human rights.
Notes Curators, Caroline Turner and David Williams.
Artists exhibited: Vernon Ah Kee, Tony Albert, Richard Bell, Jennifer Herd, Joan Cattapan, Dadang Christanto, Julie Gough, Pat Hoffie, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Michael Mel, Gembel, Taring Padi, Culture Kitchen.
Exhibition held at the ANU School of Art Gallery 10 May - 5 June and the National Museum of Australia 6 June 2007.
Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing details: Humanities Research Centre and School of Art Gallery, Research School of Humanities, Australian National University, 2007 
80 p. : col. ill., maps, ports.
Bateman Edward La Trobe view full entry
Reference: see Letters of Charles Joseph La Trobe. [’Published in the centenary of his death, this collection of the correspondence of Charles La Trobe (1801-1875), who was from 1839 Superintendent of Port Phillip District and from 1851 the first Lieutenant-Governor of Victoria, is absorbing and illuminating reading for anyone interested in the early colonial history of Victoria. La Trobe’s encouragement of and support for religious, cultural and educational institutions ensured that he became a hugely influential figure in the development of Melbourne, in particular.’]
Publishing details: Government printer, 1975. Series: Victoriana series no. 1. Royal octavo pale blue cloth over boards, in pictorial dust jacket pp ix, 96; illustrated with numerous plates (some colour)


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